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The Changeup for January 8, 2020

January 08, 2020 by Joanna Cornish


As if there wasn’t any more proof why one shouldn’t scroll through Reddit at two in the morning.

That cuts deep.


Ryu

I was happy when the Jays signed Ryu Hyun-jin to a four-year deal in December.

It will probably be disappointing, but no more disappointing than any other deal involving a human being. We are fallible creatures. We disappoint.

Beyond just thinking that Ryu is talented and has the potential to be a key part of this team going forward and also just being happy that the Blue Jays did something, I love it when a Toronto sports team remembers that Toronto is a truly global city. In 2011, there were  64,755 Koreans living in Toronto, a small city’s worth of people.

The potential here, just from a marketing perspective, should excite the Rogers people to no end.

I already suggested what Sportsnet should be doing:

I'm just going to gift you content, Sportsnet. Send Ryu to Koreatown with a camera crew. Have him explore. Talk to people. Toronto is multi-cultural city. Show it.

— Joanna (@HumandChuck) December 23, 2019

Over here, giving ideas away for free.

By the by, Daniel Kim is a great follow for your Korea and baseball crossover needs.

As expected, yesterday’s press conference at Roger Centre was biggest news of the day in Korea! #BlueJays #mlb @bluejays #toronto pic.twitter.com/vnJ2IUolvX

— Daniel Kim 대니얼 김 (@DanielKimW) December 28, 2019

My favourite bits from the media day were Mark Shapiro and Ross Atkins looking vaguely disquieted when Ryu’s agent, Scott Boras, pointed out that the Blue Jays are owned by one of the richest owners in baseball. The calls were coming from inside the house.

Boras on #Bluejays owners, Rogers Communications: “I think it’s really about winning. The wealthiest ownership group in baseball sits right here.”

— Rob Longley (@longleysunsport) December 27, 2019

This follows Boras calling out the Blue Jays at the GM meetings in November 2018:

"Toronto is a wonderful city, it’s been a great franchise, they’ve drawn three million fans," said Boras. "They’ve lost near a third of their fan-base due to the ‘Blue Flu’ of not bringing attractive players that their fans find interesting to their market."

The other was Boras grooving (if it can be called that) to Charlie Montoyo just wailing on the bongos.

What do you get when you mix K-pop with bongos? pic.twitter.com/xKuJE9nhuO

— Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays) December 27, 2019

Turns out being rich AF doesn’t buy you rhythm.


Cheaty-Cheats

If there is one thing that is contributing to the ennui I feel in writing about baseball, it might be this. It is sort of odd that a cheating scheme that involves multiple teams and multiple methods doesn’t excite me, because normally I would eat the intrigue up, but here we are.

The Athletic reported this week, using three anonymous sources, that the Red Sox used the video replay equipment to steal signs.

According to the report, players would wander into the replay room during games to decipher sign sequences. That information would be relayed to a runner on second base. The runner would signal to the hitter whether the incoming pitch was a fastball — right foot off the bag first — or an off-speed offering — left foot first. This system only worked with a runner on second or sometimes first.

The 2018 Red Sox were a juggernaut that won 108 games and the World Series. They were scary good.

Sign stealing, of course has a long history. I have no real issue with the practice if it involves just human observation of behaviour. I do draw the line at using technology to do it.

It is hilarious, however, that this involves tech that MLB inserted into the game. They put video rooms just off the dugout and didn’t anticipate that teams would use the ready-available information to gain an edge? Put the video stuff in another part of the stadium. Or in a truck in the parking lot. MLB did put an in-person attendant for the post-season in 2018 and that practice continued into the 2019 season.

It will be interesting to see what this does to Alex Cora, who is now involved with both the Astros’ cheating scandal (where he was the bench coach in 2017) and now the Red Sox. I don’t know if his managerial dynamo reputation, earned by winning the World Series in his first year as a manager, will be tarnished.

Per Tara Sullivan of The Boston Globe:

For someone who prided himself on building his playing career from the streets of Puerto Rico through hard work and smarts, and turned that into a growing reputation as a manager, it would be a tough badge of disgrace to wear.

It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. As the Sullivan piece points out, the Red Sox have a new GM and ticking clocks are often put on managers who were hired by the old regime. The Red Sox stood pat this offseason (which was atypical in the face of a surging New York Yankees) and their big power move has been to hold on to Mookie Betts. For now.

It will be interesting to see where the Red Sox, the golden team of the first two decades of the 21st century, go from here.

As for how this all changes video replay in baseball remains to be seen.

Get rid of video replay all together. Life is messy, lean in.

— Drew (@DrewGROF) January 7, 2020

The Grand Old Game of Stealing Signs

Sniffing around for some information on sign stealing in baseball, I came across a column from a 1990 issue of Maclean’s that mentions Cito Gaston’s talent for stealing signs.

And then, warming to his task, La Russa confesses that when a team such as the Blue Jays gets a runner on second base, “they work hard to steal signs and that really irritates me.”

I will forever love Cito Gaston for many things, things which now include irritating Tony La Russa.


Ricky Romero

Alexis Brudnicki has been doing great work in her first year at mlb.com. Her latest is a catch-up with Ricky Romero, who talks about his time in Toronto and how it will always hold a place in his heart.

“But the best part I remember is warming up, not even the actual game,” Romero said. “It was completely sold out, when we walked out to warmup, people were already there, it was crazy. Friday night game, Toronto, it’s a big deal. J.P. and I looked at each other and were like, ‘Whoa, this is really cool.’”


Talkin’ Ball in the Bahamas

Just Bo Bichette talkin' baseball in the Bahamas. pic.twitter.com/uBXCQ2JjiC

— Play Ball (@PlayBall) January 6, 2020

“How smooth do you want to be in the field?”

“As smooth as you!”

Nick Ashbourne wrote about this event last year. Some expressed concern about the baseballs going into the ocean, which is a fair one. My basic and likely not at all helpful Google search indicates that a baseball (made up of a combination of leather, cork and rubber) is, at least in theory, biodegradable.

I could totally foresee this site just becoming a Bo Bichette appreciation site. He’s a sunbeam and so many other things are just dreck.

Serge Ibaka was joined by Bianca Andreescu, Bo Bichette, Penny Oleksiak and Paul "Biznasty" Bissonnette for a very special and entertaining holiday dinner!

Bo Bichette of the Toronto Blue Jays is a rookie shortstop who has already added his name to the record books. The 21-year-old is the hottest young player in baseball. Go behind the scenes as UNINTERRUPTED Canada follows the young slugger during his first day in the big leagues and sits down with him and his father, Dante Bichette, a 14-year MLB veteran.

It helps, of course, that Bichette has a chance to be a major star.

These new stats show that Bo Bichette, in only 361.2 finings, had four defensive runs saved. Among 136 shortstops, his DRS total ranked 14th. Of the #BlueJays regular infielders who finished the season, only Bichette had a DRS total above zero. https://t.co/xaBF93ghK5

— John Lott (@LottOnBaseball) January 8, 2020

Pitcher Turned Lawyer Takes MLB to Court

Another issue that is currently facing baseball is what is going to be done about minor league baseball. Arguments about paying them fairly have transformed into MLB suggesting that

A story came out today about Garrett Broshuis, a former minor league baseball player, who became a lawyer and is taking 22 MLB teams to court over lost wages for MILB players.

On being told in 2009 by the Giants that he was no longer a prospect:

“It was definitely in some ways heartbreaking,” Broshuis said by phone last month from his St. Louis office. “It’s a failure, but at the same time it’s a beautiful failure because you put everything you had into it, and there are beautiful things to do if you come up short.”


Today's Walk Up

Pony (Release Date: March 22, 2019) Spotify: https://u.subpop.com/2LxyV4M Sub Pop Mega Mart: https://megamart.subpop.com/releases/orville_peck/pony Orville Peck available via Royal Mountain Records in Canada https://www.royalmountainrecords.com/orville-peck Subscribe to Orville Peck's channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi3DjKw4R7Pz8pfPLH-L4wQ Orville Peck https://www.orvillepeck.com Facebook https://www.facebook.com/orvillepeck/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/orvillepeck Twitter https://twitter.com/orvillepeck Sub Pop https://www.subpop.com/artists/orville_peck Bandcamp https://orvillepeck.bandcamp.com #OrvillePeck #DeadOfNight #Country Sub Pop Records http://www.subpop.com

Orville Peck sings songs like a honky-tonk on Twin Peaks. This song sounds like a cover to me, but apparently isn’t.

It’s haunting. And not just because he always wears a mask.


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January 08, 2020 /Joanna Cornish
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