Sunday, April 21, 2013

Tammy Says Mariners are Hard to Watch; I Can’t Argue…by Mark Arnold



    T
his Sunday morning my wife Tammy and I were sitting around enjoying our coffee and the conversation turned to the Mariners. I should tell you that Tammy, after being married to me for so many years, has become quite knowledgeable about baseball and a fan in her own right. I used to go to games with her from time to time back in the early ‘90s and she developed as a fan along with that team that had Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Jay Buhner and Edgar Martinez. It was a great time to get introduced to baseball. I knew she had arrived as a fan when I came home from work one Friday night and Randy Johnson was scheduled to pitch at the old Kingdome. She’d left a note on the kitchen counter:

 
Tammy
        “Gone to the game…make your own dinner.”
it said.

          I had to laugh.

        Well, that old Mariners team has come and gone and here we are now with this new edition that has been building for the last several years. I had missed the last two games of this Texas series they are playing this weekend and so was catching up on the scores on my computer. The Mariners, I discovered, had been shut out in the game Friday and also in the game on Saturday. That meant that, including the last two games of the recently concluded home stand, they had scored a grand total of 3 runs in 36 innings. I looked at Tammy…

          “God this team is frustrating” I said, my angst clearly showing. “I can’t believe it! Do you realize they have just been shut out twice in a row and that in the last four games they have scored 3 runs?! Geeez!”

          Tammy looked back at me sympathetically.

          “I won’t watch the Mariners!” she said. “It’s too difficult. Why should I waste my time when I can spend it on more productive things?”

          No sane person could argue that point. Judging from the attendance at Safeco Field during the last home stand most people in Seattle agree with Tammy. For the next few minutes she continued to expound on all the better ways she could spend her time than watching the Mariners. Since I was already on my computer, as she talked I took the opportunity to look up how the Tacoma Rainiers were doing. The Rainiers are the Mariners AAA affiliate and the place where most of the players we should eventually see in the Big Leagues hone their chops to get ready. When the Mariners are really sucking I tend to spend more time looking at the players we have on the horizon who could potentially help. It raises my spirits. Lately, therefore, I had been spending a lot of time on the Rainiers website studying stats. Tammy had stopped talking for the moment and I decided to inject a hopeful comment into the conversation…

          “You know, Tammy,” I said, “down in Tacoma we have a second baseman named Nick Franklin. He is currently hitting .333 with an on base percentage of .450…we also have shortstop named Carlos Triunfel hitting .314 with an OBP of .347!
Nick Franklin

          “And your point is…?” Tammy inquired.

          “Well,” I said, “our current second baseman Dustin Ackley is hitting .150. Ditto our shortstop Brendan Ryan. I realize it’s still early, but I’m thinking maybe we should bring these Tacoma guys up for a look see. What’ve we got to lose?”

          Tammy thought about it for a second.

“Yeah…” she said, “but there is a big difference between minor league pitching and Big League pitching. You know that.”

          “True”, said I, “But sometimes you catch lightning in a bottle…we’re due for that. You remember Alvin Davis don’t you?”

          “Oh yeah!” Tammy said, smiling. “Mr. Mariner! Who can forget him?!”

          I laughed at how far Tammy had come as a fan. There are current Mariner fans who don’t know who “Mr. Mariner” is. I switched websites on my computer so I could check out Alvin’s stats.
 
Alvin Davis
          “You may not remember this”, I said, “but when Alvin first came up in ’84 he lit it up from the start. He hit over .280 with 27 home runs and was Rookie of the Year that season. He drove in 116 runs for God sakes! I’d take some of that about now.”

          “Wow!” Tammy said, obviously impressed.

         She came over to look at my computer screen and check out the stats for herself. While she was doing that I wandered over to the TV to see how the Mariners were doing in their game against Texas. It was the top of the second and Seattle had a 1-0 lead. Maybe they could start turning things around now. Kelly Shopach led off the inning with a ringing double past the Texas left fielder. With a man on second and no outs, my hopes for a big inning were definitely surging. Up steps the next Mariner hitter, he of the .150 batting average, Dustin Ackley. What does Ackley do? Unbelievably, he lays down a sacrifice bunt. Doesn’t he know that Shopach is already in scoring position on second? If it was the eighth inning of a tight game that would be one thing, but this is the second inning; we need a hit in this situation, not a bunt! We want a big inning and here is Ackley giving up an out. Long time Mariners announcer Mike Blowers is speculating that Ackley decided to bunt on his own and talked about the advantage of advancing the runner to third and what a great bunt it was.
Dustin Ackley

          “What a bunch of bullshit!” I said, muttering to myself. “Blowers has to say that…he works for the Mariners!”

          With my hopes now fleeing our next .150 hitter Brendan Ryan steps to the plate and strikes out. I don’t even remember how the following hitter got himself out; just that he did, leaving me sitting in my chair fuming. Once again the Mariners don’t score.

          “Geeeeez Tammy!” I said, turning my head to look towards where I had last seen her at my computer. I intended to pour my frustration out to her, but she wasn’t there. She had gone off to do one of those “more productive things” she had been talking about.

          I flicked off the Mariners and went back to studying Nick Franklin and Carlos Triunfel stats on my computer. Considering the circumstances I thought it the most productive thing I could do.

          I have a feeling we may be seeing both players soon and I want to be ready.


Copyright © 2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Felix Masterful…M’s Offense Disasterful…My Take on the Seattle Mariners Two Weeks In…by Mark Arnold


                    
  W
ell…I was going to write my next Mariners blog giving you my impression of things two weeks into this young season. But watching Felix Hernandez pitch tonight against the Tigers has changed things. Across 8 innings thus far against the best hitting team in the American League King Felix has given up four hits and one measly unearned run while walking none and striking out 12. Tonight we have been treated to vintage Felix. Unfortunately we have also been treated to the typical Mariner offensive performance whenever Felix pitches. That offense through 8 innings consists of 6 hits, 1 run and couple of walks. And when I say typical I do mean typical. Through the ten previous consecutive Felix starts the Mariners have generated a total of something like 21 runs in support of him, an average of about 2 runs per nine innings. The Mariners offensive struggles over the last few seasons are well known but when Felix pitches they take on legendary proportions. As I write this piece the Mariners are hitting in the bottom of the ninth with the game tied 1-1. Felix did not pitch the top of the ninth so is in line for another no decision in this game. Kendrys Morales led off the inning with a clean single and Mike Morse walked putting men on first and second with no one out. Raul Ibanez stepped up and promptly ripped the guts out of the budding rally by hitting into a double play. With 2 outs and the winning run parked at third Justin Smoak then struck out. The game is now moving into extra innings.
Felix Hernandez

          Since we are on the subject of the Mariners offense let us take a look at how it is faring so far this season. The Mariners thus far rank 16th in runs scored, are a paltry 27th (of 30 teams) in team batting average (.219) and 26th in on base percentage (.285). With stats like that it is not surprising that the M’s are already 3 games under .500 and 5 games out of first in the AL West. As far as individual players are concerned Dustin Ackley stands out as the most beleaguered. He is something like 5 for 47 on the season and seems to have forgotten how to hit. He either gets it going soon or he will have to be sent down to get straight in the minors. Justin Smoak is barely hitting .200 with no homers and Brendan Ryan, after a decent start the first week of the season, has now reverted to his .190 batting average form from last season. Though hitting a bit better average wise Jesus Montero is still sub .250 and also has no homers. Ditto Kyle Seager. The Mariner hitters showing promise thus far are Michael Morse with his 6 home runs and a .290 average, Franklin Gutierrez and Kendrys Morales. Michael Saunders was also coming on until he tried to occupy the same space as the right field wall last week and sprained his shoulder.

Franklin Gutierrez
          You may recall during the off season when the Mariners announced they were bringing the fences in at Safeco that I said it would do no good. Most of the Mariner hitters so far this season are proving me correct with their futility. Whatever the M’s hitters were doing this spring in the dry Arizona air when they led the Cactus League in home runs seems to have been left in the desert when the team came north to start the season. And by the way, tonight’s game is now in the top of the 12th inning and is still tied at 1-1. The Mariners have already blown several scoring opportunities during the extra frames. We’ll see how it turns out.

          The simple truth about the Mariners is that they will go nowhere until they as a team acquire the plate discipline necessary to get good pitches to hit, not swing at the bad ones and instead be willing to take their base if necessary.  Baseball at the Major League level is a hard game and I know that it is tough to do that. But the Tigers as a team do it. All but 3 of their position players have on base percentages above .300 and as a team they were hitting .305 going into tonight’s game; a figure which is higher than any individual Mariner player. Based on the stats I presented above twenty five Major League teams get on base better than the Ms. When that condition starts to change for the better so will the lot of the Mariners. It’s not rocket science.  
Miguel Cabrera

          And now sports fans…back to the game. It’s the top of the thirteenth inning at Safeco with the Mariners and Tigers deadlocked in a 1-1 tie. The Tigers have Torii Hunter at first with 1 out and last year’s American League Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera at the plate….anyone want to bet on who will win this thing? Wait a minute…Charlie Furbush just struck Cabrera out….Damn…I’ve got to go watch this…will let you know who won tomorrow!

Copyright © 2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Monday, April 1, 2013

Its Opening Day, 2013 : I want a World Series in Seattle! ….by Mark Arnold



  H
ello Mariner Fans! Well here it is once again…opening day of the Major League Baseball season. Thirty-seven years ago, in 1977, our Seattle Mariners played their first game ever at the now blown away Kingdome. Born out of a lawsuit stemming from the rip off of the old Seattle Pilots following their one season in Seattle back in 1969, the Mariners had 15 seasons of futility before recording their first winning season in 1991. With the arrival of Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Lou Piniella and the rest our fortunes began to turn and for a few seasons we could look forward to a summer of thrilling play and tight pennant races and even the prospect of a World Series right here in Seattle. Those seasons in the mid’90s at the old Kingdome are what saved baseball in Seattle and ultimately brought us the magnificent Safeco Field we enjoy today. An ironic footnote to those years is that Lou Piniella actually started his playing career when he was with the Pilots briefly at the start of that ’69 season. The Pilots traded him to Kansas City where Lou went on to become American League Rookie of the Year for 1969. Sound familiar? You can add Lou’s name to the long list of bad Seattle trades; a tradition that you more recent Seattle baseball fans can now see was just continued by the Mariners, not started by them.
                                                                                                         
Safeco Field
          Speaking of Lou Piniella, I really miss that guy. You want to know why? It’s simple…Lou wanted to win…and I don’t just mean win games or a pennant. Lou wanted it all. He wanted to get to the World Series and he wanted to win it. Lou wore his passion on his sleeve, as many umpires found out while being forced to dodge spittle and infield dirt during one of his legendary protests at their errant calls. There was never any doubt with Lou; you knew where he stood. To date the only Mariner teams to make it to the playoffs were teams managed by Lou. He took the team to the American League Championship Series in 1995, 2000 and 2001 and the playoffs in 1997. He goaded that 2001 team to an astounding and record breaking 116 win season and the ALCS despite losing all three Mariner superstars (Randy Johnson, Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez) between 1998 and 2000! 
 
Lou Piniella: passion on
 his sleeve
    Lou left the Mariners following the 2002 season and since then the team has once again descended to sub mediocre status. Attendance even at the beautiful new ball park has fallen to half of what it was during the glory days of the mid ‘90s through 2001. We fans have endured nearly a decade of bad front office and bad team performance on the field. It is time for things to change and it starts by realizing why this team is here and why the game is played. It starts by realizing what the goal and purpose of the Seattle Mariners should be. For Lou Piniella that was an easy one. It is for me too: I want to see a World Series in Seattle and I want us to win it.  I love good baseball. I will turn off my TV in disgust at bad baseball. I want winning baseball, a great team and a World Series…nothing less
Kendrys Morales
will suffice for me. With the Jack Zduriencik GM era now entering its 5th year we have a rebuilt minor league system with good, young players already arriving in the “Bigs” and on the horizon. We have a “Randy Johnson-like” ace in Felix Hernandez and a team manager who shows some of that “Lou-like” passion in Eric Wedge. We have a team now stocked with talented and proven Big League hitters like Kendrys Morales and Mike Morse and veteran leadership from Raul Ibanez. I see no reason why this team cannot go out this season and make a serious run at it…I really don’t. They have the talent… they just need to rally around the goal and take us all on a ride this summer we will never forget.

          OK! You Seattle Mariners and the rest of you fans now know where I stand at the start of this new season. To the Mariners I can only add one last thing…Go get me that World Series! 


Copyright © 2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Seattle Mariner Spring Training Report: Day Three…Our last day in the desert… batting practice, Erik Wedge, King Felix and another Mariner win …by Mark Arnold



  T
ime, as the saying goes, flies when you are having fun; and fun is definitely what Chris, Tim and I have been having during our brief weekend down here in Arizona at Seattle Mariners Spring Training. All too soon, it seems, we have arrived at Sunday…our last day in the desert. It has truly been a magnificent experience. One of my goals for the trip, besides enjoying the baseball with my good friends, was getting some great photos of Mariner players in action.  Specifically I wanted shots of Dustin Ackley, Kyle Seager, Raul Ibanez, Felix Hernandez, Kendrys Morales, Mike Morse and Jesus Montero.  I also wanted a shot or several of team Manager Eric Wedge. Going into Sunday I had accomplished them all except for Felix and Wedge, so wrapping up those two was my first priority. Oddly, through the first two days of games and practices we had seen neither, but it was our intention that on Sunday all that would change.

          I woke up on Sunday morning, as I had the prior two mornings, to the smell of coffee. Tim had taken it upon himself to ensure that I had a cup ready for me on Friday and Saturday mornings and Sunday was no different. I was the last to bed the prior two nights due to staying up late completing these Mariner reports and therefore was also the last to rise. The morning coffee, both smell and drink, definitely helped to speed the process. Since we were leaving for Seattle later in the afternoon we had the added chore of packing and checking out of the hotel and still wanted to get to the Mariner practice in Peoria by 9AM. We had heard that King Felix was going to pitch a minor league game in the early afternoon and we wanted to see the team taking batting and fielding practice. We also still fancied the idea of getting some autographs plus wanted to see the last of the four games we had tickets for. You can see we had a lot left on our battle plan.

          We had breakfast, checked out of the hotel and were on the road to Peoria by 8:40AM. By now Chris had more or less mastered the route to the sports complex and by 9:15 we were walking out into the Mariners practice area. We could see the minor leaguers working out in the distance off to our right, but today was definitely going to be a big league day. Hopefully we would get the chance to see Wedge and the boys and get some autographs.

Kyle Seager (L), Kendrys Morales (bending),
Eric Wedge (hatless) and Franklin Gutierrez (R)
at batting practice 
          By 10AM, nothing much was happening but a short while later the entire team came out for batting and fielding practice. Due to it being March 17th, St. Patrick’s Day, all of the players and coaches had green baseball caps on; a nice touch I thought. The players divided up in groups of about 5 a piece for batting practice and each player would take about eight or nine swings and then give way to the next player in his group who would do the same. The group would cycle through in this fashion about 6 times so each player got 60 or so swings. The first group we watched had Kyle Seager, Kendrys Morales and Raul Ibanez among others and the second group featured Dustin Ackley, Franklin Gutierrez and Justin Smoak. Having played baseball up to the high school level I have some concept of what hitting is like. Watching these guys hit, however, is something else again. They make such great contact and generate such phenomenal power. Seeing them up close like you do at these practices is a very special treat to a baseball fan and you get an appreciation for the feats of skill these guys can perform.

          For instance, I watched Kyle Seager deliberately hit pitched balls, first to the left side, then up the middle and then to the right. He could hit the ball where he wanted at will. I then watched Kendrys Morales take what appeared to be a nice easy swing and launch a baseball nearly 400 feet into the distance. Once, when Dustin Ackley was hitting, he powered a pitch over the 385 foot sign on the outfield fence at the exact time a pick-up truck was driving down the road just beyond the fence. As the ball disappeared over the barrier all of our eyes, both player and fan, were watching to see if Ackley’s shot would drill the truck. An audible, group gasp was followed by joyful laughter when the ball just missed.

Manager Eric Wedge with
Raul Ibanez at batting practice
          In the middle of batting practice Mariner manager Eric Wedge finally made his appearance. If you watch Mariner games on TV you will get the impression that Wedge is a bit on the stern side; you don’t see him smiling and laughing much. (Of course the way the Mariners played the last couple of years could explain that.) Because of this, seeing Wedge laughing and joking with the players and assistant coaches while the players took their swings presented a whole new aspect of him to those of us watching. The guy was definitely loose, as were the players and coaches around him. It was apparent they all were having a great time.

          As the batting practice wound down the infielders started taking fielding practice; Seager taking some grounders at third base and Ackley at second. New Mariner catcher Kelly Shoppach would get the throws coming in from the fielders and toss the ball to the coach who was hitting the grounders. After the infielders had been drilled the coach doing the hitting demonstrated his skill by actually drilling Shoppach on catching foul ball pop ups. Being able to do this is vital for any catcher, as two or three times during the course of a game he will be called upon to do just that. The coach would toss the ball into the air with one hand and then swing his bat upward in such a way as to hit the ball with a glancing blow that would cause it to go straight up in the air, just like it would in a game. Shoppach easily handled the first three or four foul pops hit for him but on the last one he either lost it in the sun or simply misplayed it, as the ball just clipped his glove on the way down and hit him square in the face. Feigning injury, Shoppach collapsed to the ground and lay there for at least a minute while the rest of the players and especially Wedge erupted in laughter. At last he hauled himself to his feet and sheepishly looked at his teammates; “Must be the green cap”, he said.

          Welcome to the Mariners Kelly Shoppach!

Tim and Chris in one of the electric shuttles
you can use for free
          Practice was over about 11:15 AM and the players left the field to get ready for the afternoon’s game against the Texas Rangers. Chris, Tim and I decided to head over to the stadium early to see if we could get some autographs from the players as they arrived and made their way to the team dugout. Also, for some reason Chris had gotten it in his head that he wanted one of the foot long hot dogs you could get at the concession stand. He’d heard somewhere that they were especially good and had been talking about getting one since Friday. (I was hoping he would so I wouldn’t have to hear about it anymore.) It’s a bit of a hike from the practice fields to the stadium, but one of the cool features the Mariners have in place is that there are a number of small electric motor carts that will haul you around for free. Seeing one of these available we hopped aboard and the driver had us at the stadium in no time. Once inside the park we worked our way down to the dugout and with a few other fans waited in the front row for the players to show so we could try for autographs. Chris took this opportunity to go get his much anticipated “foot long” and Tim didn’t want to sit in the sun and get more burned than he already was, so he went to find some shade. That left me sitting there enjoying the hot sun while looking out at this beautifully kept ball park that was spread out before me.

One of the beautiful Cactus League ballparks:
"...the geometry of the universe"
          There has always been something a bit magical to me about the configuration of a ballpark, especially the big league parks that are so well cared for. The green grass contrasts with the classic brown of the infield dirt and, on a nice day, the blue sky to create an amazing aesthetic that I really love. The lines and dimensions of the park add to this mix. Everything in a ballpark emanates out from home plate making it a kind of viewpoint; and when you stand in there as a hitter it is as if your action of looking out at the more distant points in the infield and outfield is actually making that space your own and thus, in a sense, your creation. There is something very fundamental about this that I find very, very appealing. It lends a kind of spiritual aspect to the game and may be the factor that inspires such movies as “Field of Dreams” and “The Natural” that play on this spiritual quality. There is definitely something about a ballpark and therefore baseball that aligns with the geometry of the universe it seems, and this may be what roots it so deeply in our collective psyche. Also, looking at a ballpark on a beautiful day always makes me remember the many such days I spent playing baseball as a kid and how much fun I had. All of that explains why I could simply sit there by myself and have a great time just looking at this beautiful Peoria ballpark.

          Presently my reverie was shattered by two things; Chris returning from getting his “foot long” and the arrival of Mariner players to the dugout. It was time to go for some autographs and Chris seized the moment. A number of fans had lined up by the dugout to do the same thing but Chris was undaunted. He crowded his way in and handed a baseball down over the edge to a player below and when it was returned to him Chris proudly made his way back to me to show me the signature. I took a look at it but there is no earthly way in hell I could tell who it was if not for Chris telling me that it was Dustin Ackley’s autograph I was holding. The writing on the ball just looked like chicken scratch. Anyone could have scrawled what I saw on the ball and said it was Dustin Ackley’s signature. I didn’t doubt Chris for a second that it was Ackley’s signature, but unless you knew that Ackley wrote that way there was no way to prove it. Of course my writing makes Ackley look like a penmanship master, as anyone who has seen it will tell you, so I have no room to complain.

          It was coming up on 1PM in the afternoon. The Mariners game against Texas was to start in a few minutes and the stands were starting to fill with fans. More important to us, though, was getting back over to the minor league fields where we had heard that King Felix Hernandez would be pitching the first three innings of a single A game just so he could get his work in. This was a rare opportunity to see one of the greatest pitchers in the game up close and personal. He would be pitching in a ballpark more suited to a high school team with bleacher stands on the first and third base lines that held no more than 200 people. There is no way we were going to miss Felix so Chris and I retrieved Tim from where he was lounging in the shade and caught one of the little electric shuttles back to the minor league fields arriving just in time to see Felix take the mound.

"The King" Felix Hernandez
          What a sight it was to watch Felix that close and I can only imagine what the minor league hitters he was facing were thinking. “My God!” they must have thought, “Here I am facing Felix Hernandez! The guy who threw a perfect game last year! Shit!” After watching a few of the hitters take their “at bats” however, it was obvious they were not intimidated and it was equally obvious Felix was not sharp. He hit a batter and gave up several long doubles allowing one run in the process. None of that really mattered to us; this was Spring Training after all. I stuck my camera lens through the chain link fence and snapped picture after picture of Felix during different stages of his wind up and delivery. We all had a blast watching him pitch.

          After Felix pitched his innings we grabbed another shuttle and went back to the big stadium to catch the rest of the Major League game. We got there in the bottom of the second to find the Mariners trailing one to nothing. Our starter Blake Beavan got us through the top of the third unscathed and then in the bottom of the frame Raul Ibanez brought the crowd to its feet with a long home run to right giving us a 2-1 lead. From that point on Beavan pitched magnificently going six innings and only giving up the one run. The Rangers scored two runs in the 7th inning taking a 3-2 lead thus setting the stage for more hitting heroics from new Mariner Kendrys Morales.  Get used to it M’s fans, for I have a feeling you will be seeing Morales do often what he did in this spring game against Texas, and that is launch what proved to be the game winning two run home run in the bottom of the eighth giving the Mariners a 4-3 victory.

          Unfortunately for us we missed Morales’s shot because, needing to return our rental car and get to the airport for our flight back to Seattle, we had to leave in the 7th inning. We didn’t find out about the win, which gave us a 3-1 record for the weekend, until we touched down in Seattle and got a chance to get some sports news. For me personally, having seen firsthand this resurgent Seattle Mariner team across three glorious days of baseball and sun in the desert, I was not surprised to hear of Morales’s game winning home run. Also certain is that this is not the last time that the intrepid trio of Chris, Tim and Mark will be spending quality Spring Training time in the Arizona desert.

          All I can say is the “Salty Senorita” better be ready!


Copyright©2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Seattle Mariner Spring Training Report: Day Two… Morning practice and a great game at Salt River Fields…another Mariner win plus a foul ball for Chris…by Mark Arnold



 
ello again baseball fans! We have just completed day two of our Seattle Mariner Spring Training odyssey and it is time to update you on the latest baseball news from the desert. It was another beautiful day in Peoria with a slight morning haze burning off by 10:30 AM to reveal a beautiful blue sky that stayed that way the rest of the day. The morning temperature was in the ‘70s but as the sun made its full appearance it started to climb fast. To us Seattleites this is summer weather. I heard it was raining and 50 in Seattle. I feel for you guys up north.

Raul Ibanez in
batting cage
          We made it to the Mariners morning practice in time to get some good autographs we thought, but for some reason not many of the big leaguers showed. I got the chance to get to know some of the other fans visiting, a guy named Ray from San Diego and a guy named Bill from Kirkland, Washington. Ray is an avid autograph collector and Bill just seemed to be hanging out taking in anything that might be happening. They both were older gentleman, older than me even, and we had a great time talking baseball and sharing our observations about things. Finally some of the Mariners regulars made it to the batting cages to take some swings. The cages are shut off from the public so players can get their work in but there are some holes through which you can peer. By sticking my camera lens through these holes I got some good shots of Jesus Montero, Kendrys Morales and Raul Ibanez at batting practice. Alas…despite our arriving early enough there was no chance for autographs.

          While I was talking to Ray and Bill, Chris and Tim wandered off somewhere and I finally found them sitting in an area that had a sign guarding it that said “Authorized Personnel Only”. Knowing these two were definitely not “authorized”, I took the opportunity to take a picture for evidence but could find no one to report them to. We got a laugh out of that.

Salt River Fields,,,Spring home of the
Colorado Rockies
          With not much happening out at practice, we took off and caught some lunch and then headed out to Scottsdale and “Salt River Fields”, the spring training home of the Colorado Rockies. “Salt River Fields” is a baseball complex that the Rockies share with the Arizona Diamondbacks. The main stadium is absolutely gorgeous with the greenest grass contrasting with the classic brown infield dirt and all set against a bright blue sky. Beyond the outfield fence in all directions is a bright green, grassy rise that people can sit on and picnic while watching the game. If you like baseball and the ambience of it you would be in hog heaven at this place. Our seats for the game made things even more perfect. We were, as Bob Uecker says, in the “front row”, down the right field line just past first base. We were right on the field and, but for the rolled up tarp in front of us, could have easily leaned over the short wall and touched the playing field. Before the game started the Rockies players were passing right in front of us as they walked to the team dugout and often stopped to give autographs to the fans, one of whom was Chris, who got three player signatures on his game ticket.                                        
Rockies players signing
autographs

          At 1:15 PM the game got under way and once again the Mariners looked like a vastly improved team against last year’s edition. Our starting pitcher was Erasmo Ramirez and he showed that he is a strong contender for a spot on the regular season rotation. He pitched six strong innings, scattering eight hits while giving up two runs. Though he gave up several well hit balls that went for extra bases, he was extremely effective at limiting the damage and stranding the runners. Meanwhile the Mariners mounted a ten hit attack while winning the game by a 5-2 score. Continuing their newfound power this spring they got two more long balls, one from Kendrys Morales and the other from new comer Mike Jacobs. The Mariners have now hit 41 home runs this spring; a figure that I believe leads the Cactus League. Jesus Montero also had a double and a single as did Kyle Seager and Mike Morse got on base 3 times.
Kyle Seager hitting a double
vs Colorado Rockies

          Despite the Mariners offensive prowess, the highlight of the game had to be when Chris, with Tim’s help, got a foul ball. In the eighth inning Mariner center fielder Michael Saunders was hitting and scorched a ground ball just foul down the first base line. Chris had the glove on that I brought to the game for just such an eventuality. He was sitting on my right and Tim was sitting on my left. Chris had talked to me about getting a foul ball and now here was his chance. As the ball approached he dove forward from his seat, extended out and over the tarp and reached down with the glove blocking the ball’s progress. As Chris was doing this Tim leaped from where he was sitting on my left and also dove over the tarp. I stayed in my seat and was treated to the incredible view of Chris and Tim’s backsides while their heads and arms had disappeared, obscured by the tarp. Somehow between the two of them they corralled the ball and when Chris pulled himself back up from the tarp it was with ball in hand and a satisfied grin on his face. There is nothing like getting a foul ball at a baseball game!
Chris got a foul ball...with help
from Tim

          There you go fans…you now have your Day Two report. The Mariners are 2-1 in the games we have seen and they definitely look to this long time observer to be a much improved team. Tomorrow is our last day in the desert; our time here has passed all too quickly. In the morning we hope to get some autographs at long last and then will catch one more game before heading for the airport and back to rainy Seattle. Rest assured that Chris, Tim and I will make the most of the short time we have left in the desert.

          Signing off for now…your Spring Training reporter…Mark Arnold!


Copyright © 2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Seattle Mariner Spring Training Report: Day One…in which we arrive in Peoria, catch two ball games and survive a trip to the “Salty Senorita”…by Mark Arnold




  H
ello Sports fans! A few weeks ago my good friend Chris Finn and I were talking about making the trek to Peoria, Arizona where the Seattle Mariners have Spring Training every year. Though we had talked of going a number of times in the past, this time there was a steely resolve in Chris’s eye when he spoke of it. Having seen that look in Chris’s eye before, though it really was not in my schedule to go, I somehow knew this was the year I would wind up in Arizona in the middle of March. That being the case I was not surprised when Chris called me shortly after we discussed the idea informing me that it was settled; that we, along with our mutual good friend Tim Stoner, would all be going to Spring Training for a 3 day weekend of baseball and sun in Peoria, Arizona…and so here we are. As I write this I am sitting in our hotel room at 11:30 pm, on Friday, March 15. We have just completed our first day here at Seattle Mariners Spring Training…so I thought I would give you a report…


Tim Stoner and Mark Arnold at Angel
Stadium in Tempe, Az 
          Tim and I hit town late last night flying in from Seattle while Chris drove east across the desert to get here from San Diego where he had been on business. Chris picked us up from the airport and after taking several wrong turns we finally got to our hotel and to bed about 1AM. Got up bright and early and looked out the window at a clear blue sky and what looked to be a great day for baseball. The Mariners were playing a split squad game, which means they divide up the team and play two games. The first would be in the afternoon in Tempe against the Angels at their stadium and the second would be in the evening at the Mariners home stadium in Peoria. We hopped out to Tempe, which is very close to our hotel, and bought our tickets for the afternoon game and then dashed on out to Peoria to see if we could catch the Mariners at their morning practice before the game.

Chris Finn with Jose, a young
Nicaraguan pitcher
          By the time we got to Peoria, which is a ways from Tempe as well as our hotel, the practice was almost over but we got familiar with where the team holds its practices in the morning so we will be able to see them on Saturday and Sunday. We also got to see a bunch of the Mariners Minor League players at practice. They are a very personable bunch and very willingly stop to talk with you or to sign autographs when they are done with their work or are walking to different practice fields. We met one young player in particular, a young pitcher from Nicaragua whose name was Jose (I did not get his last name), who stopped and answered some questions and talked with us. Jose is a great guy…he is living his dream of making it to “the show”, but he has had some bumps along the road. Though only twenty one he has already had some arm trouble and required “Tommy John” surgery to repair his elbow. He showed us his scar. Jose says his arm is great now and that he can still hum his fastball at 94 miles an hour. We wished him luck and shook his hand and I got a great picture of Chris with him. (Tim was originally in the picture too but his eyes were shut in the picture so I cropped him out. If Jose turns into a star Tim will regret that)

Justin Smoak congratulated after
homering vs Angels
          We then took off to catch the game at Tempe against the Angels. The Mariners showed that propensity for home runs that they have displayed all spring hitting three more dingers while winning the game 8 to 5. Justin Smoak went yard hitting a 3-2 pitch for an opposite field home run…he definitely looks improved from what I can see. Despite Smoak’s homer, the hitting star of the game was a relatively unknown player, at least to me, named Julio Morban. Julio hit two long two run homers, one in the second inning and one in the eighth. The Mariner starter was Jeremy Bonderman. He went four innings if I recall correctly and except for the second inning when he gave up two runs he looked good. His curve ball especially looked sharp.

The "Salty Senorita"
          After the game we went back to the hotel, grabbed a nap and then took off to Peoria to catch the evening game. Like I said, it is a bit of a drive to get to Peoria and when we got there it was twenty minutes before game time. We hadn’t eaten dinner and decided to forsake the first couple of innings of the game to go sample the fare at that famous Arizona Spring Training watering hole located hard by the Peoria Sports complex…The Salty Senorita. I had heard Mariner announcer Rick Rizzs conducting a show from their once a couple weeks ago and you could hear the crowd buzz in the background. Even over the radio the place sounded wild…but it doesn’t really prepare you for the real thing. The best way I can describe The Salty Senorita is that it is a cross between a 1980s “pick up” bar, a Wild West saloon and the cantina scene from “Star Wars”. The place was packed and the service slow but no one cared. When our waitress finally appeared Chris decided he wanted to get her to pose for a picture between Tim and himself. The waitress, who was quite pretty, took one look at Chris and, obviously mis-reading his intentions, muttered something under her breath and fled the scene. I told Chris not to worry; that, except for this blog, what happens at The Salty Senorita stays at The Salt Senorita. Fortunately for us the waitress wasn’t blown off for good and still brought us our food. My steak burrito was delicious.

Carlos Puegero belts a double
          We finally made it to the stadium during the bottom of the second inning. The Mariners were playing the Netherlands national team that is currently involved in the World Baseball Classic. The Netherland team was already ahead three to one when we got there; a lead that expanded to six to one by the eighth inning. Contrary to the afternoon game, in this game the Mariners did not hit well. Dustin Ackley had a 2 for 4 night with an RBI double and Carlos Peguero launched a ringing double in the 5th inning I believe, but that was about it for the offense. Pitching wise John Garland started and was roughed up in the first for three runs, his toughest outing of the Spring thus far. Mariner reliever Lucas Luetge was sharp in the two innings that he pitched. I also was able to get a number of great photos of the players in action, which I always love.
                                                                                     
Peoria Sports Complex...Spring Training
home of the Seattle Mariners
          While the game was not that good, the atmosphere at the stadium was fantastic and the weather absolutely perfect. A new moon hung over the stadium the whole game, lending its aesthetic to the evening’s proceedings. Tim, Chris and I had an absolute blast and look forward to tomorrow; our second day at Seattle Mariners Spring Training. We intend to make it to practice this time, hopefully seeing Felix Hernandez work out in the bullpen.

          Signing off for now from Peoria…your Spring Training reporter…..

Mark Arnold! 
Copyright © 2013
By Mark Arnold
All Rights Reserved