October 13, 2008
Pre-order the 2009 AnnualThe 2009 Hardball Times Annual, to be shipped in early November, is ready for preorder. This year's Annual will, once again, be the best yet. We're beefing up our articles to include 40 prominent writers, such as Craig Wright, Rob Neyer, Joe Posnanski, Don Malcolm, Tangotiger, MGL, and many others. Please support THT and order it directly from ACTA today. If you can't afford to purchase from ACTA, then please order from Amazon with this link. ![]()
Rich Barbieri John Barten Sal Baxamusa John Beamer Brian Borawski John Brattain Craig Brown Matthew Carruth Derek Carty Alex Eisenberg Mike Fast David Gassko
Brandon Isleib
Chris Jaffe Josh Kalk Chris Neault Dave Studeman Steve Treder Bryan Tsao Tuck! John Walsh Geoff Young And here's the full roster.
Or you can search by:
THT's ToolboxStubHub is where fans buy and sell Yankees Tickets, Red Sox Tickets, White Sox Tickets, Mets Tickets and all other baseball tickets. If you are looking for World Series Tickets, ALCS Tickets or NLCS Tickets, you can find them at StubHub! More hot selling tickets include: Cubs Tickets, Astros Tickets, Dodgers Tickets, Angels Tickets and Detroit Tigers Tickets. Gear up for baseball season with Chicago White Sox tickets and New York Yankees tickets. LA Angels tickets, Houston Astros tickets, and Atlanta Braves tickets are hot sellers! You can get Boston Red Sox tickets, San Diego Padres tickets or Chicago Cubs tickets for your favorite baseball fan. Coast to Coast Tickets has the best MLB tickets like Minnesota Twins tickets, LA Dodgers tickets, Milwaukee Brewers tickets, New York Met tickets and St. Louis Cardinals tickets.
All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a
Creative Commons
License.
|
Piazza, Hall of Fame Catcherby Dave StudemanMay 24, 2008 The legendary sabermetrician Craig Wright publishes a semi-regular baseball column called The Diamond Appraised (subscription required). In his most recent issue, he recounts the career of the great Mike Piazza and includes stories of his time with the Dodgers when Piazza was establishing himself in the minors. It's a fantastic read and easily worth the subscription price. Here are a few of the highlights... Wright discusses how scouts were skeptical about Piazza's swing, and shares his own thoughts: I remember my own first time seeing Piazza hit and having two distinct thoughts. One, that he must be incredibly strong in his wrists and forearms to make that swing work, and, two, this guy isn’t going to get hit by too many pitches. (He ended up never being hit more than 3 times in a season, and his overall hit-by-pitch rate during his career was less than half the normal rate.) I don't want to give away the entire story, but Wright began to champion Piazza after the catcher's 1991 season in the California League. I personally started to get excited about Piazza’s big league prospects during his 1991 season in the California League. He made gigantic strides in his command of the strike zone and led the league in slugging percentage. When I park adjusted his numbers, he really stood out as being in a class by himself as the best power-hitter in the 10-team league – and he was doing this while playing the most physically demanding position on the field (5th in the league in games caught). When I expressed my excitement about Piazza that off-season to general manager Fred Claire, I was very surprised to hear that the assessments of Piazza by our scouts and player development people were very mixed, and the consensus was, at best, lukewarm about his prospect status. Some felt he would never be more than a “minor league hitter,” and some also thought he would never make it as a catcher and would have to move back to first base. Claire eventually saw the light and essentially handed the 1993 starting job to Piazza by releasing Mike Scioscia. The rest is history. Craig's column includes his thoughts about Piazza's defense and the issue of scouting and drafting young catchers. As I said, it's a fantastic read. Dave is the manager of the Baseball Graphs website.. Comments about this article can be sent to him through the miracle of e-mail. Do you have a general question or comment for one of THT's writers? Send it in to our weekly mailbag We also welcome unsolicited op-ed pieces of approximately 500 words for consideration. We reserve the right to edit for length, clarity and consistency of style. Please include your whole name and location to be considered. If you have a comment about this specific article, please email the writer. |