Showing posts with label George Sherrill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Sherrill. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Colletti Poised And Ready To Give Money, Prospects Away

When I read the dodgers.com headline, "Colletti willing to deal, but targets uncertain," I couldn't help but reverse the headline and think, "Targets uncertain, but Colletti willing to deal." And so here we are, at the trade deadline, with Ned getting anxious:

Wednesday's non-waiver Trade Deadline is approaching quickly and Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti is locked and loaded with an itchy trigger finger.

Only one problem -- he's having trouble finding a target.

Oh, no.

Another focus could be a right-handed middle reliever, but Colletti has said he has his doubts how much of an upgrade is out there. The Carlos Marmol experiment is still a work in progress judging from early returns.

I don't think the late returns are going to get any better.

Colletti has repeatedly shown a reliance on vets over kids with almost annual in-season trades for veteran relievers -- Elmer Dessens, Scott Proctor, George Sherrill, Octavio Dotel, Randy Choate and [Brandon] League.

But to get those guys, we gave away Odalis Perez, Wilson Betemit, Josh Bell and Steve Johnson. Randy Choate came over with Hanley Ramirez, at the cost of Nate Eovaldi and Scott McGough. League came over for Leon Landry and Logan Bawcom, which might not have been so bad in itself, except it led to a $22.5M deal a blink of an eye later.

And then there's Dotel, who came at the cost of James McDonald and Andrew Lambo. Ouch.

Somehow, I have this sinking feeling that Brian Wilson is imminent.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Braves Believe Breezy Isn't Flat Yet

According to Buster Olney, former Dodger George Sherrill, who was non-tendered earlier this month, is off to Atlanta next year, after a one-and-a-half-year Dodgers tenure that included ups (2009) and downs (2010):

Reliever George Sherrill agreed to a one-year, $1.2 million deal with the Atlanta Braves, a source told ESPN The Magazine's Buster Olney on Wednesday. The deal is pending a physical, which will take place within the next 48 hours.

The contract also includes $200,000 in incentives.

Sherrill, 33, is coming off the worst year of his seven-year career. He had a 6.69 ERA in 36.1 innings over 65 games with the Los Angeles Dodgers last season. He has a career ERA of 3.76.

Sherrill joined us mid-year in 2009 and was automatic, with a 0.65 ERA in 30 games. His ERA+ was an otherworldly 621. That's SIX HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FRICKING-ONE, for pete's sake. A WHIP of 1.084. He faced 111 batters and only 19 got hits. He was awesome.

And then, in 2010, not so much. The 6.69 ERA doesn't even tell the tale of how lost Sherrill looked out there, as if he wasn't sure what was wrong or why he was on the mound. There were signs early on, in spring training, that Sherrill was going to be shaky; he said his spring statistics were always dodgy and he'd be fine when the season rolled around. But he wasn't. And it was clear he needed a change of locale next year.

Thanks for a great 2009, George; good luck to you.

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

At Least One Pitcher Came Off Good Tonight

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Flat Breezy Gone with the Wind

Dodgers Place George Sherrill On Outright Waivers (Eric Stephen, True Blue LA)

Monday, June 07, 2010

Monday Notes, Highly Anticipatory Edition

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Wednotesday

@MEavesFSWest shares this picture of Maury Wills and Jackie Robinson.

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Separated at Birth

I bet Mr. The Merciless would keep his ERA under 7 and look less awkward in a Dodgers cap.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Game 6 Thread: April 11 @ Fins, 10a

Charlie Haeger (0-0, -.--) vs. Anibal Sanchez (0-0, -.--).

Gameday

COMMENTS: Last night. At a bar. Dodgers highlights come on the TV. "I wonder if they came back from 4-3?" Then: Ethier RBIs! Bison HR! Woo hoo! But...Sherrill...cue the theme from "Jaws." Oh no. DAMMIT. "Bartender!"

Incredibly, the Dodgers still have a chance to salvage a 3-3 road trip if Haeger's knuckleball can dance in the Florida humidity. Scoring runs doesn't seem to be the problem — it's like the opposite of 2003.

Monday, April 05, 2010

Post-Game 1 Thread: Divorce Talk, Anyone?

PIRATES 11, DODGERS 5

Ladies and gentlemen, your 2010 Dodgers.


This happened twice today.

Wow. For those who like to overreact (i.e., like, a lot of us), an entire off-season of optimism just got wiped out in five innings. Vicente Padilla, proud owner of a 14.54 ERA, give up two home runs to Garrett Jones and was charged with seven earned runs over only 4 1/3 innings, while Ramon Ortiz (13.50 ERA) helped pour gas on the fire by allowing a bases-loaded double to Ryan Church in the fifth.

The hits didn't stop there: George Sherrill (40.50 ERA) gave up a three-run homer to Ryan Doumit in the eighth, and the Dodgers committed two errors and wasted opportunities at the plate, stranding ten men on base.

On the plus side, Manny Ramirez and Matt Kemp each went 2-for-5, and Casey Blake and Blake DeWitt each went 2-for-4. Russell Martin, despite getting caught in a rundown in the fifth, scored two runs. Carlos Monasterios and Russ Ortiz each threw a smooth scoreless inning of relief. Also, we had a nice crowd in our first Game Thread of the Year, Padilla hit only two batters and Martin's groin did not burst into flames.

Fun note: Eric Stephen of True Blue LA estimates the Dodgers' Cory Wade/Russ Ortiz switcherdoodle saved them $3,551.92. Flowers for Jamie!

And lastly, thanks to @jay_jaffe for this exchange, which started when the Dodgers scored two runs in the top of the first:

@jay_Jaffe
I really like the Dodgers' chances to keep this 2-runs-per-inning pace all year long

@sosgsosg
Offense or defense?

@jay_Jaffe
Yes.

UPDATE: From Eric Stephen at True Blue LA:

Andre Ethier didn't have an extra-base hit in 94 plate appearances against left-handers on the road last season, yet laced a double off southpaw Zach Duke in his first plate appearance of 2010.

photos by Keith Srakocic/AP

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Psycho & Flat Breezy

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Psychological Price of Arbitration

The Dodgers pulled some late-inning hustle to reach agreements with their remaining arbitration-eligible players yesterday, signing deals with Jonathan Broxton and Andre Ethier for two years, and one-year deals with Russell Martin, James Loney, George Sherrill, and Hong-Chih Kuo. Coupled with the news earlier this month that Matt Kemp and Chad Billingsley also signed agreements with the Dodgers (two years and one year, respectively), and Jason Repko was signed ages ago, the Dodgers avoided arbitration with all nine players whose salary fates would have been left to an independent panel.

All of them got a big step up in salary, most notably Kemp (jumping from $467K in 2009 to $4M in 2010 and almost $7M in 2011), Billingsley ($475K in 2009 to $3.85M in 2010), and Loney ($437K in 2009 to $3.1M in 2011). Broxton's two-year deal for $11M total is also notable (he earned $1.825M in 2009). Sherrill and Martin got pay increases of $1-2M each, Hong-Chih Kuo doubled his salary to come in around the $1M level, and Repko treaded water at $500K plus some performance bonuses. (Thanks to Eric Stephen over at TBLA and Cot's Baseball Contracts for the data.)

No player got more than two years. Neither Broxton nor Ethier got the salary levels which they submitted to arbitration for their first year, but surpassed that level for their second year. So I have to think that most of these nine players are pretty happy, considering the general ranges of the salary increases, the job and income security (particularly amidst a precarious financial situation with ownership), and the prospect of keeping together a core group of talent with playoff experience and (IMHO) unrealized potential.

Ownership has to be happy, given the short duration of the deals and the relatively conservative salary increases. Management has to be happy that they're getting some continuity and stability. Dodger fans are happy that we'll be seeing most of the players we've watched grow up and take our team to October baseball.

Vin Scully is happy he doesn't have to learn a set of new names. The guy who sews the letters on the backs of jerseys is happy that we're retaining players like Kemp and Kuo rather than going after Jarrod Saltalamacchia. Bill Plaschke is happy he gets to recycle his "Chad Billingsley Is Not An Ace" article at least two, maybe three, more times next year. In fact, the only person around the Dodgers who might not be happy right now is Jamie McCourt, because she can't get her morning swim in anymore.

So this huge aura of happiness surrounds the Dodgers, which is great. Meanwhile, a second-tier team up north gives word that they can't reach agreement with their star player, who has just submitted a request for the largest salary ever awarded in arbitration. And that Lincecum's $13M ask is a country-mile apart from the $8M team offer. And that if the teams don't settle, this goes off to an arbitration panel next month to pick one of the offers, without the prospect of compromise.

I haven't been able to find anything on the psychological impact of the arbitration process (in fact, if you search, you end up finding horrific tales of employment arbitration contracts like the second story here, or ridiculous term papers like this which are peppered with scholarly phrases like "So why does salary arbitration take the rap for all the problems in modern day baseball?" (emphasis mine)). But I have to think that the alternative of not reaching agreement with the players has to sow bad seeds of resentment either way.

If Lincecum wins, the franchise is (in theory) pissed, skyrocketing Lincecum a lot closer to Barry Zito salary levels (and even ahead of the questionable contract given to Aaron Rowand (5 years / $60M)). If Lincecum loses, one has to think that the two-time Cy Young Award winner feels grossly underpaid (who would be earning $10M less than Zito in 2010), and takes that frustration to work each day.

In fact, Lincecum may be dissatisfied even with his $13M offer in the first place; Keith Law over at ESPN.com (no link; insider only) wrote, "I'd like to see the arbitration brief that argues that Lincecum, a first-time-eligible, super-two free agent with two Cy Young Awards, should be paid less than Ryan Howard was as a first-time-eligible free agent with one MVP award. Not just less -- $2 million less. If anything, Lincecum's agents underfiled; his case was unprecedented and a number of $15-18 million would have been defensible." McCovey Chronicles breathed a sigh of relief that Timmah's offer wasn't in the $25M range that some had expected.

The San Jose Mercury News speculated that the $13M offer reflects that Lincecum's agent, Rick Thurman, expects the case will go to a hearing. Or perhaps this is all part of the big dance for Lincecum, who is seeking a long-term contract extension anyway (and would give the Giants the change to avoid three more arbitration opportunities with Lincecum). Irrespective, his future, long-term and immediate, with the Giants remains unresolved. And this could fester for another month.

From a comparative perspective, Ryan Howard got his (current record) $10M ask awarded by arbitration in 2008; he then finished second in the MVP race despite posting the lowest offensive numbers (BA, SLG, OPS) since his rookie year. The Phillies avoided arbitration with Howard next year, (he had asked $18M, the Phillies offered $14M) by signing him to a three-year, $54M deal and preventing salary negotiations from happening again until 2012. And in 2009 he posted much more solid numbers than in 2008. Coincidence?

I understand that the arbitration process is designed to avoid this very standoff; it is structured to encourage teams to reach agreement and settle (which happens the majority of the time), rather than duke it out in front of the panel. But I wonder if the intangible detriment of not reaching agreement--or even getting to this stage in the first place and letting wide monetary gaps in expectations become a public referendum--breeds a discontent with the player, the team, and the fans. Is there a psychological cost to not resolving uncertainty, particularly with your team's best player?

But that's the Giants' cross to bear for now. We Dodgers, and Dodgers fans, went nine-for-nine and have every reason to be settled and happy. Right?

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Four More Sign; Ethier Double-Dips

Report: Andre Ethier to sign two-year deal (Dodger Thoughts)

Reports: Loney, Kuo, Sherrill avoid arbitration (Dodger Thoughts)

If you were wondering what the Dodgers were saving their money for — or, indeed, if there was money left to save — here's your answer. The team's award-winning outfielders will be intact for the next two seasons, while Ned Colletti has been busy wrapping up pre-arbitration negotiations before agents start submitting their salary figures today. Two Dodgers are still eligible for arbitration: Russell Martin and Jonathan Broxton. That sound you hear is Kim Ng sharpening her adamantium claws*.

UPDATE: According to Dylan Hernandez, "The Dodgers have agreed to deals with all of their arbitration-eligible players." Here's what we know:

  • James Loney: $3.1 million
  • Hong-Chih Kuo: $950,000 (plus $150,000 in appearance-based incentives)
  • George Sherrill: $4.5 million (plus $150,000 in appearance-based incentives)
  • Andre Ethier: two years, $15.25 million plus incentives
  • Russell Martin $5.05 million
  • Jonathan Broxton: two years, $11 million

Meanwhile, Kim Ng sulks in a corner.

*Yes, I'm aware we made this joke last year.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

And Then There Were Six

Six arbritration cases left outstanding, that is, what with the contract agreements reached Friday with Chad Billingsley and Matt Kemp. That leaves Andre Ethier, James Loney, Jonathan Broxton, Hong-Chih Kuo, Russell Martin, and George Sherrill left, all six of whom filed their paperwork to commence the arbritration process:

The filings are procedural, reserving the players' right to have their salary determined by an arbitration panel if an agreement with the club is not reached. Players and the team exchange salary figures Tuesday and, should the case go to a hearing, the panel would select one number or the other, nothing in between. For that reason, the exchange of numbers generally frames the case and results in a settlement.

The Dodgers, in fact, are already discussing two-year deals with Broxton and Ethier. A two-year deal was discussed with Loney, but is less likely than for the other two. Broxton, Kuo and Loney are eligible for salary arbitration for the first time.

So Sherrill, Kuo, and Martin (who claimed he was interested in signing a long-term deal after the 2008 season--his second All-Star season in a row--but didn't sign a deal, and then saw his numbers fall off precipitously in 2009 (his .680 OPS was 100 points less than any of his three prior seasons) are not on the short list? Are we prioritizing these correctly, SoSG readers?

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Charlie Manuel Sure Knows How To Instill Confidence

So my boss called me into his office today, and he told me that I've got the best photocopying and collating skills that he's ever seen. And whenever we have a big print job, he's making sure that I'm working the copy room and I'm making sure the staples are going in the right corner and we're not out of cyan toner. And just to make his point, he sent out a memo and TPS report and told everyone that I'm his guy.

And then, he pulled me out of the copyroom once one of the machines had a slight paper jam. And even though the print job still had plenty of room to finish on time, he gave the job to Tony, my colleague, to finish up. Dejected, all I could do was rest my head in my black-toner-powdered hands, not knowing what my boss thinks of me at all.

At least, that's how Brad Lidge must feel in his workplace environment:

"When I say he's my closer, I don't tell lies, and I don't like to go back on nothing," [Phillies Manager Charlie] Manuel said. "But the team and the game is bigger than my heart and is bigger than anything else, if you want to know the truth. Winning a game, that's why I manage and that's what comes first, and it was real tough for me to do."

That led to the obvious question: If there's a save situation on Wednesday, is Lidge still the closer?

"He could definitely be," Manuel said. "I'm definitely not going to get away from him. We're going to work with him and get him back to where he can get consistent and go out there and save games. I'm not saying that he'll close tomorrow, the next day or whatever, but I look at him as a closer. I don't look at him as a seventh-inning guy; I don't look at him as an eighth-inning guy."

"He could definitely be"? Wow, that was pretty reassuring. Jonathan Broxton has had some tightrope-walking moments as a closer this year, converting 34 of 39 of his save opportunities. But Joe Torre definitely worked a tricky situation delicately back in late August, swapping Broxton and Sherill for one game. Since then, Broxton has no blown saves and seven saves in nine total appearances, with an ERA that has sunk from 2.95 to 2.53. In that same period, George Sherill has had one blown save and two holds in eight total appearances, his ERA has sunk (albeit slightly from 1.87 to 1.82), and his Dodgers ERA remains a crazy-low 0.50.

I know Manuel and his Phillies dispatched us last year, when Lidge was firing on all cylinders. But it seems to me that Torre is doing a better job this year of making sure our key relievers are managed well both on and off the field. And in those roles, confidence is everything--maybe even more so than for me, in the copy room.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Friday, August 21, 2009

George Sherrill Signing

I just happened to be in the Burbank area today and noticed through Vin Scully Is My Homeboy that George Sherrill was signing at Staples. I thought I actually saw Roberto leaving - red car, right? There was a good number of people already there and we jumped in line. The line moved quickly though. I heard from other people that they actually did NOT have pens for him to sign with for the first 50 people. Mind you this is STAPLES, the Office Superstore. Just go down aisle three and rip open some pens, guys! I met some great people in line too. One guy takes pictures at games and had this great shot of Loney sliding home against the Cardinals from this past series. Also met JR from JR collectibles, who was really nice.

Sherrill was really nice (and he wasn't wearing his MC Hammer pants). I asked him if he liked Los Angeles and he said he did. He actually seemed pretty nervous and was shaking when signing my ball. Outside, they had the Dodger ticket truck and a pitching net with a Russell Martin cutout in the back. The truck was all pimped out inside with a leather Dodger chair and and Xbox with two TVs on the outside. I asked where Snoop Dogg was and the security guy said that HE was actually the first person to drive the truck. Finally, I saw Jon SooHoo there and made sure to tell him that he takes absolutely great pictures - to which he smiled and said thanks. Overall was a fun (and hot) time. Hope Sherrill doesn't get a cramp from all the autographs - we may need him tonight! Go Blue!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Five Character Guys

We worship ballplayers who put up big numbers, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to find those who don't let on-field success go to their heads. In an era when players regularly disappoint us and themselves, a few players stand out for their character:

1. Curtis Granderson, Tigers. Humanitarian. Blogger. All-around great guy. How can you not be a fan of Curtis Granderson?

2. Jimmy Rollins, Phillies. If nothing else, this video shows Rollins and teammate Ryan Howard have a great sense of humor.

3. Clay Zavada, Diamondbacks. His path to the majors alone contains more hardship than some players encounter in their entire careers.

4. Joe Beimel, Rockies. I know, Joe Beimel? We had a front-row seat for his troubles, but his turnaround has been heartening.

5. George Sherrill, Dodgers. Yes, the Dodgers have a character guy. See what Dodger broadcaster Eric Collins has to say about him and see if you don't agree.

(hat tip: Big League Stew)

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Bullpen, Dugout Goings-On

George "Brim Reaper" Sherrill pitches in last night's game against the Brewers.


Guillermo Mota and Ramon Troncoso visit the White Memorial Hospital yesterday.


Junior Seau (with clubhouse manager Mitch Poole) was an honorary batboy on Tuesday. I'm guessing Junior didn't have to pick up any dirty uniforms.

Sherrill photo by Jill Weisleder/Dodgers; Mota/Troncoso photo by Amber Matsumoto/Dodgers; Seau/Poole photo by Jon SooHoo/Dodgers

Monday, August 03, 2009

Stark Grades the Dodgers Positively at the Deadline

Sorry, this is a little bit old (Aug 1), but I thought Jayson Stark's espn.com article on trade deadline winners gave a grounded viewpoint that the Dodgers did well by (largely) standing pat:

They didn't get the top-of-the-rotation starter they were stalking (Halladay or Lee). And they missed out on Heath Bell in one final pre-deadline buying spree. But there was only one impact bullpen arm who changed teams this week (George Sherrill). And it was the Dodgers who reeled him in -- without dealing away any prospect who figured in their short-term or middle-term plans. Sherrill is precisely what this bullpen needed. He can pitch the eighth inning. He can pitch the ninth. He devours left-handed hitters (who are batting .133, with precisely one extra-base hit and no homers, against him). And he could be a huge weapon in October if the Dodgers meet the lefty-loaded Phillies, who went hitless in three appearances against him this year.

"The first thing Sherrill gives them," one scout said, "is that their bullpen is worn out. So he'll be fresher than any of those guys. And if they see the Phillies down the road, he's one of the best left-on-left relievers there is."

Such a nice contrast that a national sportswriter of repute gives, relative to the bombastic delivery of our own resident columnist. (Not only is the hypothesis incorrect that a lack of a major move, from the two teams with the best records in their respective leagues, an incredibly faulty argument; but grouping the Dodgers with the Angels--who made ZERO moves this deadline--is simply unsound and ridiculous.)

And even if the lack of the big arm comes back to bite the Dodgers in the ass come October, it sounds like Toronto's reluctance to consider a reasonable market-based offer was so absurd, Colletti's unwillingness to "do a deal" only means that we correctly did not raid the coffers (or roster) to sign Roy Halladay. (Toronto, btw, ends up in the "Five Losers" area of Stark's aforementioned column.)

Friday, July 31, 2009

Post-Game 103 Thread: Welcome to the Dodgers

DODGERS 5, BRAVES 0

Welcome to the Dodgers, George Sherrill, a.k.a. Flat Breezy, a.k.a. Death to Lefties. You and your back-to-the-plate delivery were impressive in your debut in Dodger Blue, coming in with two on and no out. Three strikeouts (with a walk to Chipper Jones mixed in) got the team over the seventh-inning hump.

Welcome to the Dodgers, the Jason Schmidt We Never Knew Existed. Six scoreless innings, 87 pitches, one hit, three strikeouts? All while never breaking 90 mph (according to Gameday)? On a day when the Dodgers didn't acquire a new starter, they may have learned one was with them all the while.

Welcome to the Dodgers, the Andre Ethier Who Hits Home Runs on the Road. Of your 21 home runs, five have come on the road — including tonight's three-run blast in the fifth inning. You ended up going 2-for-5 with four RBIs, especially helpful since Manny (1-for-4) is in a slump.

Other heroes: Matt Kemp, with a superfine catch in the ninth, and James McDonald, with two innings of scoreless relief.




Sherrill photo by Jon SooHoo/Dodgers; all other photos by John Bazemore/AP