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