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March 12, 2008

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GATOR: He had a strange career, Mike Greenwell did. He arrived relatively unheralded but was a .300 hitter almost from the get-go, and quickly wrestled the left-field job away from Jim Rice. He finished second in the MVP voting to Jose Canseco in 1988 and seemed poised to . . . well, if not live up to the Williams-Yastrzemski-Rice tradition of Red Sox left fielders, at least not disgrace it. But his game never progressed from that point, and as the Sox slid under .500 in the 1990s he was seen as part of the problem and not part of the solution. His eventual departure in 1996, bathed in the controversy of he and Roger Clemens cleaning out their lockers in the final week of the season while the team was still in postseason contention, soiled his reputation, as did his sniping at then-general manager Dan Duquette. He's been gone for a long time now, and it didn't seem like he was missed.
But time really does heal all wounds. There's been some fence-mending in recent years, culminating in Greenwell's recent election to the Red Sox Hall of Fame. And yesterday he returned to what he calls "the family.'' Joe McDonald recounts Greenwell's visit to City of Palms Park and his candid and frank comments on many things Red Sox, including the possibility of steroid use by his ex-teammate and (we assume) still-friend Roger Clemens. And he had many candid and frank comments about himself, including his internal debate as to whether or not he should use steroids.
He'll be at Fenway this season for the first time since that controversial final week in September of '96. It'll be good to have him back.
THE DAILY UPDATE: McDonald reports Josh Beckett's ailing back felt better yesterday, but the Boston Globe thinks it's unlikely Beckett will make the trip to Japan.
STOP MAKING A MOUNTAIN OUT OF A MOLEHILL: Chad Finn would be more worried if Beckett had a blister. (touchingallthebases.com)
THIS YEAR'S BECKETT: Beckett, as the saying goes, took his game to another level in 2007, and it's one of the reasons -- maybe the main reason -- the Red Sox won the World Series. SI.com's Tom Verducci identifies five pitchers who might make similar improvements this year. No 2 on his list: Daisuke Matsuzaka.
ELSEWHERE ON THE MEDICAL FRONT . . . McDonald reports Julio Lugo and Coco Crisp are making progress, Lugo moreso than Crisp.
SUN RISES IN EAST, DOG BITES MAN . . . and Jonathan Papelbon looks impressive. (projo.com)
LOOKING AHEAD: Jason Varitek can't catch forever -- it just seems like he can -- so McDonald talks to Theo Epstein and Terry Francona about the Sox' plans for the post-'Tek era.
THERE'S MAGIC IN THE AIR: Today's the final spring meeting between the Red Sox and Twins and the Mayor's Cup is on the line. (projo.com)
NOT HAPPENING: The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reports that the Brewers shot down an "Internet rumor" that the Sox were interested in Chris Capuano.
HAPPENING? SI.com's Jon Heyman quotes an unnamed GM as saying the Red Sox will be one of the teams lining up for free-agent-to-be Mark Teixeira.
PHASE TWO: The performance-enhancing drugs scandal, which baseball hoped would end with the issuance of the Mitchell Report, could have a second act. New names may surface in an investigation whether a California doctor illegally wrote prescriptions for patients, including major league baseball players. (New York Times)
BEEN THERE: On his Hacks with Haggs blog, Joe Haggerty links to McDonald's story on Rocco Baldelli and says he sympathizes with Baldelli. Several years ago Haggerty contacted Lyme Disease and knows what it's like to have an ailment that doctors can't identify.
CLEARING THE AIR: The St. Petersburg Times reports Baldelli ''is expected to provide clarity on his playing status and reveal at least some details of his mysterious medical condition today.'' The story also says Baldelli will announce today that he won't be ready to start the season.
ROUND TWO: The Yankees and Rays meet today for the first time since their war of words last weekend, and the question is: Will hostilities resume? Newsday says no. The New York Daily News says maybe. The St. Petersburg Times' Gary Shelton says he hopes so.
WELL, HE DID ALWAYS SAY HE WAS AN AN IDIOT: Everyone feels the Rays are poised to take a giant step forward in 2008, though how big a step they can take in the fast lane of the A.L. East is an open question. But Johnny Damon probably went one step too far when he declared Tampa Bay ''may be the team to beat in our division.'' (St. Petersburg Times)
NEW TEAM, NEW HOME: SI.com's John Donovan reports on the Rays' attemtps to build a new ballpark.
GO AHEAD: Speaking of ballparks -- old ones, not new -- ESPN.com reports the Yankees have no problem with the NHL hosting the last athletic event to be held at the current Yankee Stadium. Peter Abraham, however, disagrees.
FIGHT THE MADNESS: Abraham also rails against those -- like Mike and The Mad Dog -- who think Joba Chamberlain should stay in the bullpen because he pitched so well in those 24 innings of relief last year. Chamberlain, he writes, ''was brilliant as a starter in the minors last season. Not good, brilliant . . . You need to get 27 outs to win a game. You want him on the mound for 21 of those or three?''
SAME OLD, SAME OLD: Besides, the Yankees are covered at the back end of the bullpen. (New York Post)
BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR: A lot of them couldn't wait for the team to fire him. But now that they actually have to go to battle without him, some Yankee fans are wary about life after Joe Torre. (New York Sun)
IF ONLY 'OL BLUE EYES WERE HERE TO SEE IT: Torre and his new team, the Dodgers, are headed to China for an exhibition series with the Padres. Some of the squad, however, is hanging back in Florida and 80-year-old Tommy Lasorda will manage the holdovers in seven games this spring while the varsity is away. His first one was yesterday, and he gave the fans their money's worth. (yahoo.com)
MIDSEASON ANGST: The Tao of Steib knew things were going too smoothly for the Blue Jays.
A REAL NUMBERS GAME: Every day, it seems, there are stories about the statistical revolution in baseball. The Boston Globe profiles Bill James, whose Baseball Abstracts in the 1980s were the catalyst for the movement, and more and more we see traditional baseballists responding to the Brave New World. Like the Mets' David Wright, who says ''I don’t even know what half the stuff is, but whatever.'' (New York Daily News) Like Braves manager Bobby Cox, who warns that Brewers manager (and ex-Brave) Ned Yost ''is into the stats . . . look out.'' (Atlanta Journal-Constitution) ESPN.com's Tim Keown examines the landscape between the pro- and anti-stats folk and concludes ''neither side thinks much of the other. Sides have been taken and courses have been stayed. We're looking at a long battle.''
NOT THAT LONG, IF THIS SKIRMISH IS ANY INDICATION: As long as the pro-stat side has the folks at Fire Joe Morgan on their side, they're well-armed. FJM took a look at the the pro-Dusty Baker/anti-stat analysis screed in the Cincinnati Enquirer the other day and blew it into a thousand pieces.
RUN THAT BY ME AGAIN: Ichiro Suzuki is 0-for-21 this spring, which is strange enough. But he compounds it by claiming that it's ''kind of fun . . [It's] something I haven't experienced this time of year, and I get to experience that right now. That is something that is great for me." (Seattle Times)
THE RIGHT MOVE: Mike Hargrove, who resigned as manager in midseason last year, is spending a week with the Mariners as a special instructor. And he says he has absolutely no regrets about his decision to retire. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
ON THE MONEY: Lenny Dykstra, investment adviser? (Philadelphia Inquirer) What's next? Bobby Knight, international diplomat?
STILL, IT'S NOT AS MUCH AS A-ROD AND MANNY GET: The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reports Bud Selig was paid $15.06 million for the fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 2006.
HEY, THEO, I THINK HE'S TALKIN' ABOUT YOU: Tigers first-base coach Andy Van Slyke hates the rule that mandates helmets for base coaches and opines, ''I guess some of the new general managers, the Ivy League ones, believe it solves something.'' (Detroit News)
GOING GREEN: MLB wants its teams to be more enviornmentally conscious. (mlb.com)
WHISPERS: Now that teams are getting a feel for their strengths and weaknesses, trade rumors are becoming more prevalent. Our Belo cousins, the Riverside Press-Enterprise, reports the Angels have been fielding lots of calls but nothing interests them yet . . . The Mets have asked about Blue Jays outfielders Shannon Stewart and Reed Johnson (New York Post) . . . A Yankee scout watched Joe Blanton's last start (San Francisco Chronicle), though the New York Post blog says the scout wasn't there just for Blanton . . . The Rangers are turning down inquiries for Gerald Laird. (mlb.com)
OLD FRIENDS: Johnny Damon has a bruised right foot (New York Daily News) . . . Bobby Howry is pitching away his chance to be the Cubs' closer (rotoworld.com) . . . The Mets declared themselves to be ''ecstatic'' after Pedro Martinez' four-inning simulated game on Tuesday. (New York Daily News) Martinez, incidentally, says he has no qualms about relinquishing the No. 1 spot in the rotation to Johan Santana (New York Post), a move he wasn't as happy about when Curt Schilling joined the Red Sox in 2004 . . . The Tigers' Todd Jones, who has a 24.55 ERA so far this spring, is working on building his arm strength (mlb.com) . . . A sore shoulder has put Joel Piniero's availability for Opening Day in question (St. Louis Post-Dispatch), and prompted the Cardinals to inquire about Kyle Lohse.
-- ART MARTONE
Posted by Art Martone
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