They should fulfill his request, and send him down to the Minors. Even the outfielders for the miserable Orioles are hitting better than Francoeur this year.
And those “miserable” Orioles are now 8-1 since Buck Showalter took over.
The St. Louis stations are reporting (haven’t seen it teh web yet) that LaRussa and Baker both received two-game suspensions for the brawl, and that Cueto got a seven-game (two start) suspension. Meanwhile the Cardinals called up a minor league catcher for insurance because LaRue also got kicked in the ribs.
Not an error, but the Yanks blew that rundown between home and third. The announcers reefed on A-Rod for it but I blame Jorge Posada. His throw to third was late (not due to A-Rod being momentarily in his way) and he triple-clutched the ball before arcing it lazily to Jeter at third.
Yes, it’s on mlb.com. They’re also fining those guys plus Phillips, Molina, Carpenter, and (apparently for coming onto the field while on the DL) Russ Springer.
As for La Russa and Baker, I’m guessing at least one of them went into the brawl trying to get ejected, thinking, “Somebody’s going to get tossed out after all this—better me than one of my key players.”
Cueto will only miss his next start. I want LaRussa and Baker to duke it out. There’s no love lost between those two.
Hopefully the Redlegs will forget this series and plod onward, racking up as many wins as possible. We only face the Cards again one more time I believe, and the schedule starts tipping in our favor come September.
The wildcard doesn’t play its own division winner, does it? I don’t think so but am ready to be proven wrong. I suppose it doesn’t matter whom wins the division. If the Reds get the wildcard, they will play either the Padres or Braves in the 1st round, not the Cards. Unless I’m somehow off base here. Heh. “Off base”. Baseball humor.
No, you’;re right; the wild card may not play the winner of its own division in the first round.
If the wild card comes from the same division as the team with the best record in the league (which seems to happen a lot) then the wild card plays the division winner with the second best record.
If the season ended right now both leagues would face this situation. Tampa Bay would play Texas in the first round, not New York. San Francisco would play Atlanta, not San Diego.
Just got home from Petco Park, where i watched the Padres complete a 3-game sweep of the Pirates.
Jon Garland gave up a single hit through 6 innings, but his pitch count was high enough (on account of walks and some deep counts) that there was no point in letting him stay in any longer.
All the Padres’ runs were driven in by their new acquisitions. Miguel Tejada started the scoring with an RBI double, and after Adrian Gonzalez reached base on an error, Ryan Ludwick cracked a two-run homer.
Lovely afternoon at the ballpark, too. Perfect weather, as usual around here.
My Padres are visiting SF but it’s a big work-around-the-house weekend, so I’m not going to be able to go see a game. Still, I hope they keep this up–their last 3 games of the season are back here in SF so I’m hoping I’ll be able to see them as they’re on the doorstep of winning the division. Whoop!
Me: born and bred Dodger fan
Wife: born and bred Red Sox fan
Us: Padres all the way.
I consider it a moral victory to get her to root for a NL team in any way. (I won’t mention that the reason she likes the Padres is that she digs the mascot.)
The Texas Rangers, in first place, have reduced the cost of parking and concession items at Rangers Ballpark. The first day of this is the opening of a sold out series against the Red Sox.