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Josh Hamilton

#32 / Center Field / Texas Rangers

6-4

235

L

L

May 21, 1981

G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Josh Hamilton 128 517 83 154 29 4 29 116 52 101 7 0 .298 .362 .538

Ladies and Gentlemen: Glen Perkins

That was the guy we've been looking for.

On Friday night the Minnesota Twins opened the second half of their season against baseball's most potent offense.  Leading all of Major League Baseball in runs scored, team OPS, hits, doubles and batting average, the Texas Rangers are a formidible ballclub in that on any given night they'll throw up six or seven runs while taking a nap.  Last night however, Glen Perkins just put their offense to sleep.

Staying aggressive for the duration of his six innings of work, Perkins went after the Ranger hitters, big and small alike.  With Texas tied for first in the American League in strikeouts, the former Gopher was the benefactor of some aggression, which led to a number of brief plate appearances.  He averaged just 14 pitches through his first five innings before slowing down in the sixth, where he managed to work himself out of a jam with Michael Young on third base and two outs.

In fact, that was the most impressive part of Perkins' start.  After walking Young on eight pitches with one out, a wild pitch allowed the Texas shortstop to advance to second base.  Josh Hamilton followed that up with a ground out to the right side, moving Young to third.  With the Twins leading just 1-0 at the time, Perkins attacked Milton Bradley with seven consecutive fastballs, largely staying away before finally walking him on one inside.  Marlon Byrd stepped in with runners on the corners, and again Perkins played the predator.  Seven more fastballs were fired through the strikezone, until Byrd finally rolled over on who and grounded out to second base.  It was the type of inning, and the type of reserve, that we haven't seen too often from Glen Perkins--but he stepped up his game last night.

Perkins credit part of his success to a new pitch--a slider.  With his previous breaking ball, which could have been called a bit of a slurve sometimes, breaking 12-to-6, Glen felt he needed to mix in something different.

"There's things I'll try to do now that I wouldn't have tried a month ago," Perkins said. "The biggest thing is throwing the ball inside. I wasn't big on that in the minor leagues — it's a lot easier to miss over the plate. But if you stay in there, you get guys out and make guys uncomfortable."

He worked right-handed hitters inside with fastballs and sliders, recording a few outs on the new pitch.  He also used his slider to break away from left-handed hitters while still using the fastball to jam them inside.  Perkins changed his speeds and mixed his pitches better than I've seen him do it this year, and having that extra weapon in his arsenal certainly didn't hurt.

The offense gave him his support as well, although it took Jamey Wright to enter in relief of Kevin Millwood before the flood doors finally opened.  With Millwood in trouble in the seventh, Wright entered and allowed three inherited runners to score along with one of his own.  All of this before he finally induced a ground ball double play.

Alexi Casilla collected three hits, and Justin Morneau added one of his own--an impressive double.  Once again it was the second half of the batting order coming through however, with Jason Kubel (also with a double), Delmon Young, Brian Buscher and Brendan Harris all notching multi-hit games.  The four combined to go 10-for-16, collecting all six of the Twins RBI.

Stars of the Game

#3:  Delmon Young  (4-for-4, 4 singles, RBI, SB)
#2:  Alexi Casilla  (3-for-5, R, nice defense)
#1:  Glen Perkins  (6 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 1 K)

11 comments | 0 recs

Justin Morneau Wins Home Run Derby

It may be an afterthought in the national spotlight thanks to Josh Hamilton's exploits, but in Twins Territory we're all about our Canadian first baseman.

In the first round of Monday's Home Run Derby, it was the Josh Hamilton show.  Last to step to the dish in the field of eight contestants, he needed to hit seven home runs to move onto round two.

He hit 28.

Shattering the record set just a couple of summers ago by Bobby Abreu, sphere after sphere jumped off the bat of Hamilton, as he rained down a shower of balls into the right field seats.  As his turn dragged on for over ten minutes, it wasn't boredom that set in throughout the stadium.  It was awe.  Fans and All-Stars alike took to their feet as one after another, baseballs disappeared into the New York night.  Majestic, powerful and impressive arcs scorched the skies, and when all was said and done, the Ranger outfielder had written a place for himself in the history books.

With eight home runs in round one, which tied him for second most in the round with Lance Berkman, our own Justin Morneau made the cut to the final four.  With totals from the first two rounds being combined, it meant there was only one spot available in the finals between Morneau, Berkman and Milwaukee's Ryan Braun, who had hit seven in the first round.  Josh Hamilton's 28 assured him a place in the finals.

Berkman managed another six before using his outs, meaning Justin had to hit seven in round two.  He hit nine.  This meant Braun would need 10 to tie and 11 to make it to the finals, but he fell a few short.  Last to take to the plate in round two was Hamilton, who really didn't need to hit at all.  But he did, and he dropped another four balls into the seats before calling it a round after just four outs.  Justin Morneau was heading to the Derby finals with Josh Hamilton, who had just out-homered him nearly 2-to-1...with six fewer outs.

Justin went first, and managed to launch five, pacing himself over his ten outs.  Because the final round numbers don't include totals from the first two rounds, it meant that Hamilton needed just six to take home the trophy.  Watching the contest, while you hoped that he had worn himself out in the first round it wan't much comfort after seeing his display of power.  But that's exactly what happened.  Hamilton managed just one home run by the time he tallied three outs; two homers through five outs; and three homers by seven.  After crushing the competition into oblivion in round one, Josh Hamilton could only manage three in the finals.

It was a fantastic contest, and if I'm honest, had a climax and finish that I did not expect.  Morneau finished the night with 22 home runs, six fewer than Hamilton hit in just the first round, but it was enough to win him the trophy.  Home Run Derby champions are few and far between for any franchise, and I'm proud to call Justin Morneau a Minnesota Twin.

Congratulations, Justin!  You won tonight, and you earned it!

Pics of Justin from the Derby after the jump!

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19 comments | 0 recs

All-Star Picks

We did it last year...so we'll do it this year!

To me, the All-Star game is more of a status symbol than it is a fun game to watch.  I know it stems from Selig and the team managers agreeing to call it a tie game--at which point baseball pulled a 180 and in a desperate attempt at "No, No!  It really matters, it really, really, totally counts!" decided to give an exhibition game some actual merit by granting home field advantage to the league that won the contest.  It went from fun...to flat-out meaningless...to an oxymoron.

But just because the league made a pair of bad decisions, it doens't mean we should punish the players.  Election to the starting lineup of the All-Star game is still an honor and a symbol of status and respect; exactly as it should be.  With that, I present my All-Star selections.

Joemauer_medium
Catcher:  Joe Mauer, Minnesota Twins
Age:  25
Previous All-Star Selections:  1 (2006)


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Joe Mauer 75 269 50 87 22 1 3 34 42 22 0 1 .323 .410 .446

No big surprise here.  Mauer has been the best offensive catcher in the American League and, arguably, the best defensive catcher as well.  He's on pace for nearly 40 doubles, walks twice as often as he strikes out and controls the strike zone like few others in all of baseball.  He's a suberb player in every sense of the word, not to mention a great guy, and he deserves this opportunity to represent the best of his league.

Runner-Up:  Dioner Navarro, Tampa Bay Rays

Kevinyoukilis_medium
First Base:  Kevin Youkilis, Boston Red Sox
Age:  29
Previous All-Star Selections:  0


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Kevin Youkilis 77 289 48 89 22 2 13 50 28 57 3 2 .308 .375 .533

I tried to justify going with Morneau over Youkilis, but in all good conscience couldn't do it.  Youkilis has a significant lead in slugging and extra-base hits, and even though Justin walks more and strikes out less, I couldn't award the position to Justin just because I wanted him to have it.  Youkilis is a fantastic player on both sides of the ball and deserves this nomination.  More than anything he's a great hitter, and any lineup would be happy to have him in it.  Besides, what pitcher isn't afraid of Leonidas?

Runner-Up:  Justin Morneau, Minnesota Twins

Iankinsler_medium
Second Base:  Ian Kinsler, Texas Rangers
Age:  26
Previous All-Star Selections:  0


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Ian Kinsler 82 349 73 113 27 4 13 50 30 47 23 1 .324 .380 .536

It's tough to deny a guy who's on pace for 90 extra-base hits.  After finishing seventh in Rookie of the Year voting in '06, Kinsler turned in a solid year in '07.  Neither of those seasons has compared to how he's belting in '08.  He's matched career highs in stolen bases and doubles already, as will likely smash career marks for hits, walks, home runs and RBI as well.  Kinsler provides the full package for a second baseman from the offensive side, and he's adequate in the field as well.  Do you think Arizona would have liked him to sign with them on one of the two seperate occasions where they drafted him?  Probably.  Luckily for Texas, he didn't.

Runner-Up:  Brian Roberts, Baltimore Orioles

Alexrodriguez_medium
Third Base:  Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees
Age:  32
Previous All-Star Selections:  11 (1996-1998, 2000-2007)


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Alex Rodriguez 64 237 45 75 17 0 16 44 30 48 11 1 .316 .399 .591

When you talk about the best players of all time, Rodriguez has to be in the conversation.  Any time a guy hits .316/.399/.591 and it's run of the mill, you've got something special.  He turns 33 later this month but, luckily for fans of spectacle, greatness and baseball in general, he's showing no signs of slowing down.  Alex deserves all the credit he gets and then some.  His similar batter comps include Ken Griffey Jr., Mickey Mantle, Jimmie Foxx, Mel Ott, Manny Ramirez and Frank Robinson.  When you get an opportunity to watch a player the caliber of A-Rod, even if you hate the Yankees, you have to appreciate the skill.

Runner-Up:  Mike Lowell, Boston Red Sox

Michaelyoung_medium
Shortstop:  Michael Young, Texas Rangers
Age:  31
Previous All-Star Selections:  4 (2004-2007)


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Michael Young 81 345 57 99 22 1 7 44 28 52 5 0 .287 .339 .417

Young, having a down year, is the benefactor of the circumstances surrounding the position of shortstop throughout the American League:  all shortstops are having down years.  Peralta in Cleveland, Jeter in New York, Eckstein, Bartlett, Lugo...if they don't have glaring weaknesses they've missed time, and all-in-all it makes for a situation that we're not used to in the AL.  For years it was impossible to pick the one best shortstop, just like this year, but usually it was because there were too many options.  This season there aren't enough.  Young is the best of a weak list of finalists.

Runner-Up:  Derek Jeter, New York Yankees

Joshhamilton_medium
Outfield:  Josh Hamilton, Texas Rangers
Age:  27
Previous All-Star Selections:  0


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Josh Hamilton 82 331 52 102 19 3 19 80 30 59 4 0 .308 .361 .556

I don't know what happened to Josh Hamilton from 2003-2005, and part of me doesn't want to know.  I'd like to think he returned home to the planet Krypton, developed super powers, and then returned to earth to better mankind through baseball.  Actually, it was suspension due to violating baseball's drug policy, which makes his transformation intriguing to say the least:  prior to 11 games at triple-A Louiseville last summer, he'd had no success past high-A ball.  At any rate, the Rangers made a stellar pickup in the off-season with Hamilton, and now he's hit his way into my All-Star lineup.  Also, I'm sticking with the Krypton story.  Hamilton is the third, but not the final, Ranger to make my list.

Gradysizemore_medium
Outfield:  Grady Sizemore, Cleveland Indians
Age:  25
Previous All-Star Selections:  2  (2006, 2007)


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Grady Sizemore 81 322 51 84 18 3 19 45 48 64 19 3 .261 .366 .512

Nice headshot, Sizemore you freak.  Think the Expos/Nationals would like to reverse this trade?  In June of '02, the Expos sent Sizemore (stud), Cliff Lee (having a stellar year in Cleveland), Brandon Phillips (serviceable with the Reds) and Lee Stevens (out of baseball) to the Indians for Bartolo Colon (on the DL with the Red Sox) and Tim Drew (failed pitching prospect, last heard from last season with the Independent League).  At any rate, Sizemore is an absolute stud.  He hits for power, gets on base, steals bases and is an extra-base machine.  In addition he's a superior defender, and took home a Gold Glove award last year.  As far as center field candidates are concerned, Sizemore is head and shoulders above the competition.  Even hitting an mediocre .261, he's still productive at the plate.

Jermainedye_medium
Outfield:  Jermaine Dye, Chicago White Sox
Age:  34
Previous All-Star Selections:  2 (2000, 2006)


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Jermaine Dye 78 299 50 90 18 1 18 50 22 58 3 2 .301 .352 .548

While he isn't as spectacular as he was in '06, Dye continues to stave off decline and is on pace to have the third-best offensive season of his career.  Age hasn't hinted at sunset so much this season, and even in the field Dye continues to be a more than adequate defender.  As one of few White Sox hitters who have been effective across the board of offensive achievements, if Chicago takes their run at a division title into September they'll have a lot to thank their right fielder for.  Also, Jermaine Dye has been 34 since 2003.

Runners-Up:  Nick Markakis, Baltimore Orioles; Johnny Damon, New York Yankees; Maggio Ordonez, Detroit Tigers

Miltonbradley_medium
Designated Hitter:  Milton Bradley, Texas Rangers
Age:  30
Previous All-Star Selections:  0


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008 - Milton Bradley 71 243 50 78 21 0 16 49 49 64 4 2 .321 .440 .605

I'm not sure anyone in their right minds could have seen this performance coming.  Across the board this is simply a stunning, MVP-style season from a guy who's always been a good player...but he's never shown that he could be this good.  Whatever the case may be, the Rangers picked up another diamond in the rough last winter in Bradley, a guy who many teams steered away from because of his makeup.  If the Rangers do decide to sell at the deadline, they'll likely sell Bradley, who would be the quintessential example of selling high.  Bradley's services may never be as profitable as they are right now--at least as far as a competetive team looking for a blockbuster bat is concerned.

Runner-Up:  Hideki Matsui, New York Yankees

The Batting Order, which courtesy of Baseball Musings' Lineup Analysis tool, says this team could average 6.817 runs per game:

1-Milton Bradley, DH
2-Alex Rodriguez, 3B
3-Kevin Youkilis, 1B
4-Josh Hamilton, OF
5-Ian Kinsler, 2B
6-Jermaine Dye, OF
7-Grady Sizemore, OF
8-Michael Young, SS
9-Joe Mauer, C

4 comments | 0 recs


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