Applications Google
Menu principal

Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Ponson vs. Hochevar."

35 Comments -

1 – 35 of 35
Blogger Clint said...

as much as I enjoy seeing Ross Gload go away, I think I'd kill to see Ponson and Ramirez disappear along with him.

April 2, 2009 at 12:26 AM

Blogger tookee said...

Awesome post Rany -- and I couldn't have put it better myself. You'd think getting out of the gate in April would be the number one on DM's to do list. Hochevar hasn't just earned the 4 slot, he needs to be there for the fans -- we want to root for the well-groomed farmhands. Not tubby vets with attitude problems. It isn't Hochevar's face DM slapped -- it was ours. I think as much as DM and the team have travelled, it still feels like there's insecurities dragging them down. And sticking with Ponson off-sets wise moves like getting rid of Gload. There had to be 20 better pitchers available over the past 3 months if you were really worried Hochevar wasn't going to cut it. Instead, Tubby gets a couple WBC starts (and you got to wonder about the level of competition there) and you'd think DM saw another Koufax. But I'm not going to lose my lunch over this, especially when there's much more evidence that things are going right for the team for the first time in many years. I'm looking forward to next week (except Friday's home opener).

--tookee

April 2, 2009 at 12:32 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Was disappointed to see that Ponson is starting the home opener. The good news for me is I have standing room tickets in front of the water spectacular in right field. Me and my friends should get three or four home run balls to take home each!!

Chris

April 2, 2009 at 12:45 AM

Anonymous AxDxMx said...

Rany,

The schedule lines up so that the Royals get about 5 Sidney starts and 2 HoRam starts. Now Sidney's contract says he has to be here by May 1 or released, so just putting him on the team to begin with and see just exactly what they have is an acceptable move I think. He gets #4 to get regular work. HoRam gets #5 and token starts to fulfill the promise we made to him. He'll be gone or on bullpen duty by mid-May.

Since Davies won the #3 job, Hochevar and Banny are better served by regular starts in Omaha and getting in their work. Not sitting around and being a 5th starter or bullpen guy.

I absolutely hate that Ponson is pitching the Home Opener. I want to sell the tickets I have because of it. But I can see how this move is better for Hochevar in the short term. He'll be back in May as #4 or #5 with regular work. AND we get him for another year of team control.

The only thing I see bad about this, is if Sidney continues to pitch like he has in ST. It's hard to keep fans in your brand new ballpark when you are losing by 5 runs in the 3rd inning.

April 2, 2009 at 1:14 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The biggest long term issue for the Royals is seeing values in players like Gload, Bloomquist, Horacio, and even Jacobs.

As has been documented before, the trade to acquire Jacobs not only cost Jacobs salary but the salary to replace the player traded.

It's not remotely difficult to see how the Royals could have signed Adam Dunn and Pedro Martinez and had a similar or lower overall payroll. For a team otherwise on the right track, it's crazy how this team wastes money.

April 2, 2009 at 1:18 AM

Blogger Phil said...

I don't like the fact that Ponson is our starter. At all. However, I'm honstely holding out hope that he returns to form (or something worth having at least) and we trade him a la Octavio Dotel. We can't always assume that Dayton's motives are no deeper than the first 10 games of the season. I believe you, Rany, said pitching is the currency of baseball. If that's the case, maybe the Royals found some cash laying on the ground.

It's granted that no one likes Ponson, but lets be honest, we have a very slim chance of winning the division (or even placing in the top two) in 2009. Can we stop being mad at Dayton for not putting all his eggs in this year's basket? His job is to plan for the worst and hope for the best. I take that as plan for 2010 and hope 2009 goes well. It's Dayton's second full year as a GM and Trey's second full year as a major league manager.

This Ponson move will either work or be forgotten in 12 months. In the future I suggest the following topics instead of another "Dayton screwed the pooch" post:
-Division rivals
-Minor league system
-Trade possiblities (not who we will get, but who we will trade away)
-Slugerrr
-New stadium
-Mike aviles (no one seems to have a clue how this guy is going to turn out)
-Spring training power
-Tim scott

To Anonymous who wants Adam Dunn:

Adam Dunn is:
a. playing in DC (huge east coast market)
b. making 10 million a year.
Math: $1.5 million (the portion of Gloads contract we are eating) + $3.25 millon for Jacobs does NOT equal 10 million dollars, chief.

April 2, 2009 at 3:21 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Steak, I'm not the anonymous that you responded to, but I believe he was referring to the varous pieces of mediocre (or worse) crap that Moore signed this season. Instead of acquiring several pieces of crap, Moore could have brought in a couple of genuinely good, affordable players. Here's some math for you, chief:

Olivo $2.7 million
Farnsworth $4.25 million
Ramirez $1.8 million
Bloomquist $1.4 million
Jacobs $3.25 million
TOTAL $13.4 million

For that money, the Royals could have signed Pedro Martinez and Adam Dunn (who is making $8 million this year by the way). Or the Royals could have signed Burrell and Pedro. Or the Royals could have signed Orlando Hudson and Pedro. Or they could have signed any of several other genuinely good players instead of a handful of overpaid crap.

April 2, 2009 at 3:47 AM

Blogger Kila-Ton said...

Steak,if you wanted to see those topics go to the royals home page. This blog is for the hardcore Royals fans, the kinds of which are now lamenting over our #4 starter. If you want to see a forecast on Mike Aviles check out a fantasy site. As for me, I want Rany's input on Shin Jin-Ho.

April 2, 2009 at 4:21 AM

Blogger Phil said...

Kila, the post was mostly facetiousness in that I would rather hear about these other overdone topics than lament (nitpick) over transactions that will be non-issues in a year's time (I really do want to see a divisional write-up though). Does that qualify as hardcore? Perhaps I should just write posts about how much I don't like Guillen, Farnsworth, and Ponson. Or perhaps I could complain about Nefi Perez and whine about OBP. Surely then I would be hardcore.

And second anonymous, I don't disagree that I would rather have Orlando or Dunn or whomever; however these parts aren't simply interchangeable. Free agent signings are not as linear as saying "lets sign Dunn and Pedro instead of Farnsorth, Olivo, Jacobs, etc." I think (hope) if Moore had the choice, if he had a single moment in time where all the free agents were available and their final pricetags were laid out on a table, he would go with Dunn/Hudson/et al. However, free agent signings happen over a multi-month period where prices change and other teams stir the pot (not to mention a player has to want to come here).

Sincerely,

Almost Hardcore Fan

April 2, 2009 at 6:49 AM

Blogger Robert said...

When I watched Ponson pitch against the Dominican Republic, I figured somebody was going to look at his numbers from that game/the WBC and actually pay him to fail this year. I then convinced myself that the Royals 4th and 5th spots were in good enough shape that I didn't need to spend any time worrying about MY team being the idiots that did it. Now I have two thoughts...

1) Oops
2) Dammit

April 2, 2009 at 7:41 AM

Anonymous Unknown Royals Fan said...

So far, I've yet to see any indication at any level that Hochevar is ready to be a Major League pitcher. In fact, I'm seeing more indication that he's just another great selling job by Scott Boras. Barring a tremendous collapse by the 4-5 slots in the rotation, I'd be perfectly delighted to let Luke stay in Omaha long enough to win 15. Jimmy Gobble never learned how to win at the professional level, because he was rushed up. Same deal with Hochevar. I do think it sucks that Ponson will pitch the home opener, but what are you going to do? That's the 4 starter's slot, and our 4 starter is going to be mediocre regardless.

Of course, what do I know? I was only advocating for Mike Aviles' promotion early in 2007.

April 2, 2009 at 8:29 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Steak, that is exactly how Dayton Moore screwed up. Instead of waiting to see how the free agent market shook out, he rushed to acquire mediocre and sub-mediocre players for more than their performance and production is worth. Sure no one knew that good players could be had so cheaply, but that doesn't excuse rushing to overpay crap like Farnsworth and Ramirez and trading talent for the privilege of giving millions to Jacobs. He doubly screwed up.

April 2, 2009 at 9:55 AM

Anonymous Dave said...

So who is the prospect you hear we are getting for Gload, Rany?

April 2, 2009 at 10:04 AM

Blogger kcghost said...

With the exception of the Cruz signing GMDM has had a dreadful off-season. Trading for Crisp was nice until he rushed out and overpaid for Farnsworth. Signing Bloomquist and Ramirez was beyond comprehensible. Trading for Jacobs when you had Kila will end up being an overall bad move that will be hidden by comparing Jacobs performance to Royals 1B's did last year.

It comes down to GMDM spending a ton of money on guys we didn't need or whom we had much cheaper alternatives. Which would you rather have?? Bloomquist, Farnsworth, Jacobs, and Ramirez or Kila and $10M to spend on real players??

The Ponson thing is just beyond the pale. This guy couldn't pitch with the Yankees behind him and now we think he is going to produce for us?? The guy has no upside whatsoever. Hochevar does. Let's get on with it.

We should start an over/under pool on what day Ponson gets cut. My money says he never sees May.

April 2, 2009 at 10:14 AM

Blogger kcghost said...

With the exception of the Cruz signing GMDM has had a dreadful off-season. Trading for Crisp was nice until he rushed out and overpaid for Farnsworth. Signing Bloomquist and Ramirez was beyond comprehensible. Trading for Jacobs when you had Kila will end up being an overall bad move that will be hidden by comparing Jacobs performance to Royals 1B's did last year.

It comes down to GMDM spending a ton of money on guys we didn't need or whom we had much cheaper alternatives. Which would you rather have?? Bloomquist, Farnsworth, Jacobs, and Ramirez or Kila and $10M to spend on real players??

The Ponson thing is just beyond the pale. This guy couldn't pitch with the Yankees behind him and now we think he is going to produce for us?? The guy has no upside whatsoever. Hochevar does. Let's get on with it.

We should start an over/under pool on what day Ponson gets cut. My money says he never sees May.

April 2, 2009 at 10:14 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm sick and tired of hearing about the Jacobs trade and how it would have been better to play Kila. The guy is not proven! You have no idea what KK will do in the big leagues. Jacobs is a proven commodity who is tearing up Spring Training. Worst case scenario, the absolute worst case, is we deal him at the deadline when we are out of it and then let KK play. I think a lot of people are going to be suprised by Jacobs this year....

April 2, 2009 at 10:47 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Rany,
I think the honest answer from Dayton involves him admitting that we have no chance at the division in 2009, he's thinking more 2010 and 2011. Perhaps with that in mind, the idea of Hoch getting less time in the majors and the thought of him improving in the minors make more sense. We, as fans, think they have a shot in 2009, however the GM might feel very differently with realistic chances.

April 2, 2009 at 12:04 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

I think that AxDxMx has it exactly right. The only way to find out if Ponson can give you anything before his May 1 deadline is to make him the 4th starter so that he can pitch regularly. That would mean pitching Luke in the 5 spot and only getting two starts. So put him in Omaha until either Ponson has a very early flame-out or until they need a 5th starter on a regular basis.

April 2, 2009 at 12:32 PM

Anonymous Tommy Goodtimes said...

Rany and everybody else, sorry this isn't related to the current post.

I was thinking about closers today and how they and their "saves" are overrated. Just last year Frankie Rodriguez set the single-season saves record and was widely considered the best closer in baseball and many thought it wasn't close. However, just a cursory statistical evaluation proves otherwise. Look at this...

The Angels played in a horrible division and won more games than anyone, while the Royals finished 4th in the AL Central, thus K-Rod had many more chances to rack up saves. Let's look at the stats, give me a minute...

ERA G S SO IP H HR HBP BB K
K-Rod
2.24 76 62-69 68.1 54 4 2 34 77
1.60 63 42-45 67.1 39 5 6 19 66
Soria

Soria had a better ERA by .64 and only one less inning despite 13 fewer games, meaning he pitched longer per game and therefore provided more value per appearance.

K-ROD AVERAGED 2.70 OUTS PER APPEARANCE. LESS THAN ONE INNING EACH TIME HE CAME INTO A GAME. Soria averaged 3.2 outs per appearance, not Gossagian, but substantial over a full season, particularly when factoring in the other KC relievers who were largely horrible. Every extra out Soria could get was HUGE in the scope of the team's overall record.

Soria also blew only 3 of 45 save chances (OPPS) for a 6.23 BS% (blown saves/save chances) while K-Rod blew 7 of 69 chances for a 10.14 BS%. K-Rod blew 1 of 10 while the Mexecutioner blew only 1 of 15 chances.

Look at hits, and remember K-Rod managed only three more outs than Soria over the year.
K-Rod: 54 in 68.1 IP or 7.11 H/9 IP
Soria: 39 in 67.1 IP or 5.21 H/9 IP
The near-equality of innings means you can throw out any debate over sample sizes. The samples are the same!

BB
K-Rod: 4.48/9 IP
Soria: 2.54/9 IP

Since Soria was better in both H/IP and BB/IP this one's obvious, but for the record:
WHIP
K-Rod: 1.29, very very tough
Soria: .86, Mexican tough

Batting Average Against
K-Rod: .216
Soria: .169

Slugging Percentage Against
K-Rod: .316
Soria: .255

K-Rod does get one category...
K-Rod: 10.14 K/9 IP
Soria: 8.82 K/ 9 IP

but remember all those walks?
K-Rod: 2.26 K/BB
Soria: 3.47 K/BB

Soria wins all but two major statistical categories, arguably the two least important. Save is an arbitrary definition of holding a lead after a certain point in a game, and strikeouts, though important, aren't as important as simply recording outs. Hitters were more successful and had a higher percentage of extra base hits off of K-Rod than they did off of Soria. The sample sizes are nearly identical, and they both play in the American League, facing the DH and similar opponents.

There is overwhelming statistical evidence that Soria was the more effective reliever last year. Fewer hiters reached base either by hit or walk, fewer hitters got extra base hits, fewer runners scored, his ratio of K/BB was higher, he blew a lower percentage of save chances, and he recorded more outs per appearance.

We have every reason to believe that had K-Rod and Soria switched places, Soria would be the saves record holder. The only difference is that the record would likely be 65 rather than 62.

I knew K-Rod (and his save record and saves in general and closers overall) were overrated, but I can't believe the total statistical dominance of Soria over him.

If saves can't even tell us who's the more effective closer within one season, how can they possibly be used as an indicator of reliever performance between decades or for Hall of Fame conisderation?

April 2, 2009 at 12:59 PM

Anonymous Unknown Royals Fan said...

For those who are ripping DMGM's offseason, I have a few questions:

1. If he's had such an awful offseason, are you then predicting the Royals will be better or worse this year? By how many wins each way?

2. Have any of you considered that a player's willingness to sign here might still play a role in who we get and don't get?

April 2, 2009 at 3:37 PM

Blogger Kila-Ton said...

Steak, I didn't mean to sound elitist, we're all Royals fans here, and I apologize. That being said, I don't think you understand how big an issue Ponson being the #4 is. It means he will throw the first ever pitch at the new Kauffman stadium. When Royals stadium was opened in 1973, Paul Splittorff pitched a gem to open the stadium. Now, for the newly renovated Kauffman, lard-butt Sidney Ponson will go in the history books. That is a disgrace.

April 2, 2009 at 3:50 PM

Anonymous Sean said...

The back of KC's rotation is going to be a problem no matter who they throw out there. Hochevar a possible exception, and would be worth the shot though and I feel he earned it. I hope he keeps his confidence up. Other than that GMDM left it alone this off season for some reason. How can you really think a cast of HoRam, Ponson, Banny, etc would get it done on a consistant basis. None of these guys eat innings or avoid bats. I'm hoping for the best but once again today...one of the guys that "earned" the 5th spot (4th spot yesterday w/ Ponson) is getting ripped. I realize it's only spring training but c'mon. At some point, it matters. I'm scared frankly. Turning down a look at Pedro might have been foolish. I much rather have rolled the dice on him than Ponson, HoRam, Bale, Tomko and all these other guys that we force into the rotation and hope for lighting in a bottle.

April 2, 2009 at 4:16 PM

Blogger Shelby said...

Tommy Goodtimes:

Awesome.

Especially the blog-within-a-blog factor. Bloguette?

April 2, 2009 at 4:27 PM

Anonymous Juancho said...

I do not want to see the Royals lose with a bunch of old overpaid hacks like Sidney Ponson. That was the problem with the non-exploding Gload in the first place.

If we're going to lose, let's lose with home-grown players like Hochevar or fan favorites like Banny. And I think we're less likely to lose as much with those two as starters than with HoRam and Sir Sid.

Ponson will be cut by June, assuming he doesn't get injured by then anyway, and HoRam will be sent to the bullpen by July. Where he will probably do quite decently as Gobble's replacement as LOOGY.

Looks like this year I'm rooting for Mr. Work Ethic, Hiram Davies (only three-year-olds are named Kyle) to be a bit of a surprise and show he can be a real big-league pitcher, as he did at the end of last season. Gotta be optimistic about something, and Hiram's potential, Prozack's proven talent, and Meche's professionalism could mean a core of three good starters. That's about as good as anyone else in the Central.

April 2, 2009 at 4:32 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Once a team falls either 10 games under five hundred or 10 games back in the standings, IT'S OVER!

In the last 15 years, the Royals have usually been 10 back or 10 under by June 1st! In other words, the hope is gone and there is no reason to go to the ballpark in June, July, August or September! School's out ...season's done!

April 2, 2009 at 5:37 PM

Blogger Daniel Wesley said...

Rany, I got to hear the first 30 seconds of your interview on 810 this evening before I had to get out of my car... could you post a quick synopsis of what you talked about?

April 2, 2009 at 8:03 PM

Blogger Jared Launius said...

whichever anonymous mentioned GMDM looking to 2011 might not be that far off. he's made enough noise in free agency and through trades to emanate the idea that he is concerned with winning this year, but a lot of the signings/trades have been at positions that lend to the idea that they are only keeping the seat warm while the prospects get reps in A-ball (i.e. Jacobs for Kila, Ponson and Ramirez for Hochevar and Bannister, Bloomquist for Giavotella). The fact that the Royals are apparently ok with eating 8 starts by Sir Sidney/Ramirez in order to give Hochevar and Bannister some time in the minors only augments the idea.

As for Jacobs, I posit this: when you look at a trade, you ultimately grade it based on what you gave up, and what you got in return. I know that VORP and other stats will evaluate it in a more detailed fashion, but that's ultimately the idea. The Royals gave up a right-handed middle reliever to get a player that hit over 30 home runs LAST SEASON. I'm not so ignorant as to believe that 30 home runs will single-handedly turn us into a .500 team, but when you take in the idea that the royals surrendered only a right-handed middle reliever to acquire him, it's hard to dislike the deal. throw in the fact that they were able to replace nuñez with Cruz for relatively cheap and it gets even tougher.

great post Rany!

korkedbats.blogspot.com

April 2, 2009 at 10:05 PM

Anonymous Walt said...

First of all, the non-sequitor statistical comparison of Soria vs. K-Rod was right on the money. Soria is one of the three most desirable closers in baseball, along with Paps and Nathan.

As for the Ponson and Ramirez situation...

As stated before in a previous comment, Greinke and Meche were among the league leaders in quality starts last year with 23 and 21 respectively. Assuming it will take about 85 quality starts to compete in the division... and optimistically assuming 18 from Davies and repeat performances from ZG and GM, that leaves KC needing about 23 quality starts from the back end of the pen.

Cleary, there is no way to defend the fat prince of Aruba and Horacio rag arm as the source of 23combined quality starts. Dayton clearly must recognize this, since for all the (I believe unfair riddicule) he receives from Rany and the rest of this group, I think all would agree he is an above average major league GM. (The Meche and Soria moves alone make him at LEAST and average GM.)

So it seems the most logical explanation is that Banny and Hochevar have issues to work out and these issues are best addressed in the minors. For example, Hochevar cannot get left handed hitters out. He never has, really at any level above the independent league. My understanding is that McClure is working with him on off speed pitches to throw to lefties but that he has not yet mastered the pitch. As for Banny... his performance over the last 12 months speaks for itself. So Dayton has replaced them with two guys he HOPES will be nearly equivalent to the 2008 versions of Hoch and Banny while trying to improve the 2009 versions in AAA.

Seems reasonable to me, although I agree it will be emotionally distasteful to see fatso and lefty wearing the once-proud Royals uni.

Finally, I would like to predict at least one more trade before the deadline. I believe that either Teahen or Butler... along with Buck will get shipped somewhere either for pitching directly (e.g. Butler, Buck and a prospect to SF for Matt Cain... or Teahen and Buck to NYY for Melky Cabrera and a prospect) KC has too many (mediocre) C and too many young power hitting 1B. (Never thought I'd say that last part). If Dayton can turn his surpluses into a power arm, certainly he will do so. But even if he only succeeds in unloading the salaries of Teahen and Buck for prospects, he will have freed up enough money to pay 3-time Cy Young award winner Pedro Martinez to come to KC with the modest intention of getting 14 or 15 quality starts out of him. In either case, this Ponson/Ramirez discussion will be quickly forgotten and the rest of the league will be worrying more about how to score on KC's solid top 4 starters and solid bullpen rather than worrying about who might emerge as the fifth starter.

Go Royals.

-WZ

April 3, 2009 at 1:20 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I couldn't believe what I was hearing when I heard that Hochevar was being sent down to the minors after the spring he had, which wasn't bad. Trey Hillman is lefty-crazy, I've heard him say before that you have to have AT LEAST 2 lefty's in your starting rotation to be a playoff team. Pardon Moi Trey, this is just false. A good right handed pitcher (Hochevar) is certainly better than a bad lefty (Ramirez). That being said, Hochevar needs to quit playing around with that 2 seam fastball/slider combo and get back to his 4 seam fastball and hammer curve. A 2 seam fastball and a slider look almost identical at the big league level. Whenever he runs the fastball away from a righty at his 91 mph he will get crushed. When he was drafted he could reliably hit 95, and had equally good stuff as Mike Pelfrey, who could top end in the high 90's. Now, sadly, he has tried to be less aggressive and more fine with his pitches. I don't know if he is scared to throw the ball over the plate without a lot of movement but you can make a mistake or 4 in a game and get away with it if its at 95 mph. He needs a renaissance.

April 3, 2009 at 1:22 AM

Blogger Brett said...

As depressing as most of this post is, it always makes me happy to see a new post here. Especially tonight. I'm in a cheap hotel room in Ohio (first leg of a trip that culminates in US Cellular Field on Opening Day), I can't sleep because of thin walls and loud neighbors, but I turn on the iPod Touch (shockingly, the cheap hotel has free WiFi) to find new posts by both Posnanski and Rany. That makes for a good night.

April 3, 2009 at 1:25 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

And they need to tell him that we don't care what Borass says, if he doesn't toe the company line and start making adjustments he won't be getting very far any time soon. That being said, he is far more preferable than Ramirez. What about Ramirez would make anyone on earth say "starting rotation talent"? I very much hope the Royals are keeping something quiet, like the fact that Hochevar will be in the bigs as soon as the Royals need a number 5 starter, but seeing as Hochevar should be our numero 4 starter, it looks dubious at best. GM's who try to out-think themselves drive me crazy. Take a step back and ask yourself what would someone else do. Would they allow for a turd like Ramirez to pitch in their rotation if they absolutely didn't have to? God help us if the answer is yes.

April 3, 2009 at 1:28 AM

Anonymous keith jersey said...

You guys complaining about DM's offseason are all going to look foolish if/when Jacobs has a big year this year. He is tearing it up (and walking) in spring training. Besides, everyone knows the Royals rushed all their prospects to the big leagues too fast, yet you all seem to think Kila will be an instant all-star. Remember he really has only had 1 good professional season so far. Lets see him do it for a little longer, then call him up midseason and trade someone to make room for him.

April 3, 2009 at 7:38 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you Keith, for being another voice of reason. KK has been in our system for 6 years now. How many people were excited by him before last year?? NOONE! He was an extra body, nothing more.

Now that he had a Phil Hiatt type year in the minors, everyone thinks he's just a starting opportunity away from instant stardom in the big leagues! How'd that work for Phil Hiatt?

Now, I'm not saying KK will flame out as quickly as Hiatt did, I'm just saying don't get rid of every other first base option you have to hand him the starting gig. Make the kid earn it with more than just one big season.

April 3, 2009 at 8:55 AM

Anonymous Justin Andrew Anderson said...

Fellow Royals Fans: Thanks for standing alongside me in supporting of our beloved team! It hasn’t been easy having last made the playoffs in 1985 and watching every team but Expos/Nationals reach them since, failing to finish even 2nd in our division since 1995 and only enduring one winning season in 14 years. Our time will eventually come – I hope. Cheers to hoping we erase all this in 2009!

April 3, 2009 at 7:26 PM

Anonymous The Edster said...

Rany, it's very unlike you to have missed the obvious reasoning behind this decision: the Royals can send Hochevar and Bannister to Omaha and keep them; if they try to send Ponson and HoRam to Omaha, they lose them. Now, I can guarandamntee you the Royals don't make it through the season without an injury to a starting pitcher. In this scenario, they call up Hochevar or Bannister. If they start the season with Hochevar and Bannister and let Ponson and HoRam go though, who do you turn to when the inevitable happens? Tejeda? Duckworth? This decision is more about organazational depth than anything else.

April 4, 2009 at 11:10 PM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

This blog does not allow anonymous comments.

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.