Results tagged ‘ Cole Hamels ’
Craig Calcaterra Misses The Mark on Rob Dibble’s Comments
Craig Calcaterra at Hardball Talk is good. In fact, he’s really good.
But in response to some comments made by former Reds‘ closer/”Nasty Boy” Rob Dibble he just took the Golden Sombrero in my opinion.
The former big league closer was asked on Philly’s CBS Sports Radio what he thought about the whole Cole Hamels/Bryce Harper/Mike Rizzo fiasco and to nobody’s surprise, he had zero issue with Hamels plunking the young player.
That led Calcaterra to write this:
You know what I do whenever a controversial topic comes up? I ask myself “I wonder what Rob Dibble thinks of all of this?”
…
Dibble, not surprisingly, is a fan of mayhem. He said that if Cole Hamels wants to throw at someone “that’s Cole Hamels’ deal.” And added, “I kinda dig it.” Dibble also said that he approves of the whole “welcome to the big leagues” Old Time Baseball thing of throwing at a guy simply because he’s a rookie, noting that he did the same thing to Jeff Bagwell back in the day
Craig then went on to cite some Baseball-Reference.com stats provided by one of the sites users in the comments section about how Dibble never actually hit Bagwell and how he was “full of baloney” and so on.
Except for one BIG OL’ IMPORTANT POINT…
He never said he HIT Bagwell. He said he threw at him. And that Bagwell being the old school kind of guy he was just got back up and lined out in a rocket to SS on the very next pitch.
If someone is being “fact checked” the very least people should do is be clear about which facts are being checked, otherwise you come out looking like the tool you’re claiming someone else is.
In fact if you actually took the time to listen to the interview he talks about protecting teammates, sending messages to younger players, but most of all he just says Mike Rizzo needs to stay the hell out of it.
He very correctly points out that Nationals, for all of their young talent have a roster that is still loaded with some quality, tough nose veteran players who can (and will) handle it, leaving no room or need for the GM to get involved.
Dibble is a usually a bit of an asshat by most accounts…but not on this one.
Nationals GM Calls Hamels “Fake Tough Guy” (Then Presumably Cries Himself To Sleep)
Adam Kilgore of the Washington Post called Nats GM Mike Rizzo this morning. And Rizzo unloaded on Cole Hamels like a freakin’ battleship bombarding the coastline:
Nationals General Manager Mike Rizzo responded to Cole Hamels’ admission he drilled Bryce Harper on purpose last night in harsh terms, saying MLB should suspend Hamels and calling out Hamels as “fake tough.”
“Players take care of themselves,” Rizzo said after I called him this morning. “I’ve never seen a more classless, gutless chicken [bleep] act in my 30 years in baseball … It was a gutless chicken [bleep] [bleeping] act. That was a fake-tough act. No one has ever accused Cole Hamels of being old school.”
“Cole Hamels says he’s old school? He’s the polar opposite of old school. He’s fake tough. He thinks he’s going to intimidate us after hitting our 19-year rookie who’s eight games into the big leagues? He doesn’t know who he’s dealing with.”
First of all…
Just shut the f*** up Rizzo. Seriously, just shut the f*** up.
You drafted a highly talented player with a truckload of baggage, as I have documented several times.
First there was this from Baseball Prospectus before Harper was drafted:
“It’s impossible to find any talent evaluator who isn’t blown away by Harper’s ability on the field, but it’s equally difficult to find one who doesn’t genuinely dislike the kid.
“One scout called him among the worst amateur players he’s ever seen from a makeup standpoint, with top-of-the-scale arrogance, a disturbingly large sense of entitlement, and on-field behavior that includes taunting opponents.”
“He’s just a bad, bad guy,” one front-office official told Baseball Prospectus. “He’s basically the anti-Joe Mauer.”
AFTER you draft the kid that was basically considered the biggest douche bag baseball has seen in decades (and that is saying quite a friggin’ bit) your organization does very little to rein his punk ass in.
The first sign you needed to do so was last spring training, where it was heard that the kid was rubbing some veteran teammates the wrong way. The sentiment was “he thinks he has actually already earned his way to the big leagues & he couldn’t be more wrong”.
Then there was an incident in the minors where the young phenom hit a towering home run off an opposing pitcher then not only admired his handy work, but was arrogant enough to blow a kiss at the man standing on the mound.
This was in the minor leagues…as a supposed f***in’ professional. This isn’t just about holding stuff against him he did in junior college, it goes well beyond that.
In yet another incident, Harper and the opposing pitcher exchanged words after Harper took a called third strike.
Harper hit a home run prior to the strikeout and seemed amazed the umpire dared to question his knowledge of the strike zone when called out. When the opposing pitcher reminded him where the bench was located at, the fuse was lit and it was “on”.
That type of behavior continued throughout the entire season, only ending when he was shut down for the remainder of the season with some minor, nagging injuries.
So how did your organization go about doing it’s best to get his head straight over the off-season.
How did the Nationals go about managing this dumpster fire waiting to happen?
You ignored the root of the problem you asshat.
Your big, bold move…was to make him shut down his Twitter account.
That’s it.
So don’t sit here & cry in my f***in’ ear about how “fake tough”, “gutless” and “chicken shit” Cole Hamels is when you can’t man up & grow a pair when dealing with your prized teenaged assclown.
Hamels did what pretty much everyone outside of the Nationals fan base or organization felt needed to be done. He let the kid know that kind of shit wasn’t appreciated & would not be tolerated at the professional level.
He didn’t go head-hunting, he buried one into his rib area and he did it in the National League, knowing full well that he was going to be the recipient of any retribution.
Not exactly what I consider to be the act of a “fake tough” guy.
Be thankful someone else had the stones to do what your little bitch ass couldn’t.
UPDATE: On a related note, Johnny Bench is right up there with me and thinks Hamels did nothing wrong, saying it is just part of the game. How do you detractors like dem apples?
List Of Top Young Pitchers Without Extensions
Ben Nicholson-Smith @ MLB Trade Rumors put together this great list of young pitchers who might be hitting the open market in the not-too-distant future.
MLB teams are working to keep their best pitchers off of the open market with contract extensions, and fewer elite arms are hitting free agency as a result of this emerging trend. In the past month alone, Matt Cain, Derek Holland, Jon Niese and Madison Bumgarner have signed long-term extensions that will postpone their free agency.
So who’s going to hit free agency? Fortunately for teams without pitching, some under-30 starters are not signed to long-term deals (minimum 2.5 wins above replacement in 2011 per FanGraphs). The list below includes pitchers who are going year to year through arbitration, and those who are headed for free agency this coming offseason:
Eligible For Free Agency After 2012
- Zack Greinke – 28 years old, 3.9 WAR in ’11, 7.057 years of MLB service through ’11
- Edwin Jackson – 28 years old, 3.8 WAR in ’11, 6.070 years of MLB service through ’11
- Cole Hamels – 28 years old, 5.0 WAR in ’11, 5.143 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Brandon McCarthy – 28 years old, 4.7 WAR in ’11, 5.122 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Anibal Sanchez – 28 years old, 3.8 WAR in ’11, 5.099 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
Eligible For Free Agency After 2013
- Matt Garza – 28 years old, 5.0 WAR in ’11, 4.149 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
Eligible For Free Agency After 2014
- Justin Masterson – 27 years old, 4.9 WAR in ’11, 3.108 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Matt Harrison – 26 years old, 4.2 WAR in ’11, 3.083 years of MLB service through ’11
- Max Scherzer – 27 years old, 2.8 WAR in ’11, 3.079 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
Eligible For Free Agency After 2015
- Rick Porcello – 23 years old, 2.7 WAR in ’11, 2.170 years of MLB service through ’11
- David Price – 26 years old, 4.7 WAR in ’11, 2.164 years of MLB service through ’11
- Jordan Zimmermann -- 25 years old, 3.4 WAR in ’11, 2.154 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Ian Kennedy – 27 years old, 5.0 WAR in ’11, 2.124 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Mat Latos – 24 years old, 3.2 WAR in ’11, 2.079 years of MLB service through ’11
- Doug Fister – 28 years old, 5.5 WAR in ’11, 2.058 years of MLB service through ’11
- Philip Humber – 29 years old, 3.5 WAR in ’11, 2.000 years of MLB service through ’11
Eligible For Free Agency After 2016
- Daniel Hudson – 25 years old, 4.9 WAR in ’11, 1.117 years of MLB service through ’11 (extension candidate)
- Ivan Nova – 25 years old, 2.7 WAR in ’11, 1.035 years of MLB service through ’11
- Brandon Beachy – 25 years old, 2.8 WAR in ’11, 1.014 years of MLB service through ’11
- Michael Pineda – 23 years old, 3.4 WAR in ’11, 1.000 years of MLB service through ’11
Many of the pitchers above will eventually sign extensions that delay their arrival on the open market. For now, however, it remains possible that they’ll test free agency.





