Showing posts with label Bo Porter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bo Porter. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Wednesday Morning Hot Links

The Astros were incredibly frustrating last night and I really don't want to relive it, yet here we are and here we go.


The Astros are not worried about this game 1 loss.

Alex Bregman was picking himself apart for his postseason play so far, and it sounds as if he's sleeping with his bat tonight.

An Astros fan got a fairly unique Jose Altuve tattoo.

Does the record mismatch between these two teams matter at this point?

Mattress Mack will not stop betting money on the Astros and I've typed this before seriously bro calm down someone take his debit card away from him.

Now let's talk about the elephant in the room: the Taubman/Osuna/Reporters debacle.

We have a piece up on Astros County right now that doing some pretty impressive numbers on this topic. It's worth a read.

Do the Astros just not get it?

The Astros discredited the report, but it turned out to be true and is being investigated by the MLB. Could the Astros be seriously penalized?

Taubman apologized, but...he didn't do a really good job.

Oh, and speaking of Osuna, he has been nominated for reliever of the year. Not related, but yeah.

The 2019 World Series is now otherwise known as The Bo Porter Series.

Joe Buck is laughing at his haters on the Internet, which is fair because Joe Buck is actually very very good at his job and it is silly to think otherwise.

An Astros fan lost 150 pounds after realizing that she couldn't fit in the seats at Minute Maid.

Friday, February 9, 2018

Friday Morning Hot Links

Happy birthday to my wonderful wife. It's incredible that she's let me do this bolg for going on ten years. She's amazing, and The Absolute Best.

*The Chronicle has five things to watch for at Spring Training.

I'm unveiling my own Spring Training slogan for the Astros:

Spring Training 2018: Don't get hurt.

*The training camp for unsigned players will be led by Former Astros Great Bo Porter.

*Carlos Correa used Jose Altuve as a weight.

*Jon Heyman's latest Inside Baseball column wonders what statement Carlos Beltran is making if not going to the White House isn't about the president.

*Those zany Fresno Grizzlies are at it again, playing a game this season as the Zamunda Lions in a tribute to Coming to America.

*So there was a thing called the Houston Sports Awards last night, and the Astros - as you can imagine - did pretty well.

*Check out the new food options available at Minute Maid this season.

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Sunday Morning Hot Links

This is the happiest I've ever been for a winning season to be over. I'm glad it's done, or at least I'm glad today is the last day of the season. I have no idea what the offseason plans are for the Astros. You have to think they address the rotation. First base. Outfield. The crazy thing is there are just as many holes now in this team as there were last offseason, they're just different holes (maybe not so much at 1B). I'm ready to not see the Astros for a little bit. I'll watch the postseason with moderate interest, but it's more likely just to piss me off. Because the Astros should be in there.

Hat-tip to David Laurilia at FanGraphs:
It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring when everything else begins. It blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings. And then, as soon as the chill rains come, it stops. It leaves you to face the fall alone. 
-A. Bartlett Giamatti, "The Green Fields of the Mind."

On to the links:

The Astros actually beat the Angels last night, giving them their 41st road win of the season - the first time they've actually posted at least a .500 record on the road since 2004. So to recap the Astros/Angels season series: Astros win 11 of first 12, lose four of final six - three of the first four in must-win games - heading into the season finale.

*McHugh pitched well, holding the Angels to three hits in what Hinch essentially said was a go-through-the-motions game:
What a great performance when it's kind of hard to pitch on a night like tonight. Both teams are out of it, a little bit of speed-up rules, guys are swinging early. 

McHugh went 6-0 in his final eight starts of the season. The Anti-Fister.

*Altuve went 2x4, ensuring that he'll win his second batting title in three years, and the Astros held a champagne toast for him after last night's win. Hinch:
I wanted to make sure that he got recognized in front of our team. Very rarely do you get a batting champion in front of you...the team was excited to celebrate him, so we raised a glass to a really remarkable season that continues and can get even better tomorrow. But even if it stops, it's one of the best seasons I've been around.

That's cool....but "even if it stops?" Does Hinch have some card up his sleeve in which math is rendered irrelevant and the Astros make the playoffs? Stay tuned...

Altuve also stole two bases to get to 30 for the 5th consecutive season. We'll have a full look at Altuve's 2016 season in the coming days...

*Brady Rodgers will get the start in the last game of the season, today at 2:05pm Central. Hinch:
He got off to a rough start when he got here, and he's our Minor League Pitcher of the Year and he's earned the right to get a look at the last day for sure. 

*Carlos Correa was not terribly pleased with how this season went. Correa:
It was an OK year. Obviously not what I was hoping for, not the expectations that I had for this year... defensively it was a great year. Offensively, last year I thought it was better. But obviously, next year is going to be a different year and that's what the offseason is for, to get better.

*Joe Musgrove is excited for 2017 Spring Training and is firmly in the mix for one of the final two rotation spots. Hinch:
He's definitely in the conversation. A lot is going to happen between now and the spring as to how our roster shakes out. He's done enough to enhance his position. 

So you have to figure that - barring some monster trade - Keuchel, McHugh, and McCullers are locks for the rotation. In the mix for the final two spots: Chris Archer, Joe Musgrove, David Paulino, Chris Devenski, Mike Fiers, Brady Rodgers.

*What's at stake for the teams still in the playoff hunt on the last day of the season.

*The Braves interviewed Bo Porter for their managerial position this weekend. My affinity for Bo Porter is well-documented, but I think he'd be a great fit for the Braves.

*Here's a remarkable story about Scott Boras and his "in case of death" file on Jose Fernandez.

*The Mariners are optimistic about the future.

*I'm so sad that it's Vin Scully's last game.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Thursday Morning Hot Links

*We'll talk more about it once it becomes official, but it's apparently only a matter of time for Doug Brocail to become the next Ramgers pitching coach. This upsets me. Brocail will replace Mike Maddux, who is now Dusty Baker's pitching coach in Washington.

*Bo Porter, who deserves another chance managing a team, is happy for the Astros.

*The Fresno Grizzlies were named MiLB's "best team." 1B/DH contender Tyler White was named "Best Offensive Player."

*Lance Berkman felt "digital persecution."

*A Senate report notes that the Astros took $25,000 in 2013 to honor troops. Reid Ryan said the Senate was lying.

*We should be getting an update on the cheatinass Cardinals soon.

*From last week, the overall financial health of the Fresno Grizzlies is...not good.

*Here is David Roth being all excellent: Three Days At The End Of The World (Series).

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Wednesday Morning Hot Links


*Lance McCullers' 2015 was a "whirlwind."
You blink an eye and you pitch 22 regular season starts in the big leagues, and then you pitch in the first postseason the Astros has (sic) had in 10 years. It was a whirlwind.

*Ivy-League white guys are *finally* getting a fair chance in MLB executive-level positions. It's about time those dudes caught a break.

*The Stacey & Bo Porter Foundation will honor Dave Winfield in Houston on November 19. Porter interviewed for the Marlins' managerial spot this month and also has ties to the Nationals, who need a manager. I know Porter was a divisive figure among Astros fans, but I do hope he gets another chance  to manage - he wasn't given much of one in Houston.

*A.J. Hinch finished 2nd to Paul Molitor in the AL Manager of the Year awards, as tallied by the Sporting News and selected by Major League managers. This Twins/North Midwest Bias is getting out of control.

Friday, October 2, 2015

The playoffs start tonight



It comes down to this, Astros fans. The Astros have to win this series at Arizona in order to play the Yankees in a one-game series on Tuesday. So let's check out what happened last night:

*The Rangers beat the Angels, 5-3.

*The Twins beat the Indians, 4-2.

The Yankees and Rangers both clinched playoff spots last night so the only thing left to decide is the AL West/2nd Wild Card, because. Here's where we stand:

Clinched playoff spot: Blue Jays, Yankees, Royals, Rangers.
Still alive: Astros, Angels, Twins

AL West
Rangers (87-72): -
Astros (84-75): 3.0 GB
Angels (83-76): 4.0 GB

AL 2nd Wild Card:
Astros (84-75): -
Angels (83-76): 1.0 GB
Minnesota (83-76): 1.0 GB

With the next win by the Rangers, they will clinch the division because the only point of baseball is to make you as miserable as possible. But the Wild Card is up for grabs. Obviously, if the Astros win out, they're in. There are three teams fighting for one playoff spot, and three games remaining in the season.

FanGraphs gives the Astros a 1.2% chance of winning the division (which seems high) and a 73.3% chance of holding on to that Wild Card spot.

If the season ended today:

Things would be much easier to deal with, emotionally. The Astros would head to New York for the Wild Card game on Tuesday and the winner would then head to Toronto for the ALDS.

Tonight's games:

7:00pm: Angels at Rangers. Jered Weaver vs. Martin Perez
7:10pm: Kansas City at Minnesota. Chris Young vs. Ervin Santana
8:40pm: Houston at Arizona. Dallas Keuchel vs. Rubby de la Rosa.

Arizona

The Fighting' Goldschmidts are coming off a sweep of the Rockies entering the final weekend of the season. They're 3rd in the NL West at 78-81 and are 38-40 at home this season. The D'Backs are 7-3 in their last ten games, 12-8 in their last 20, and 15-15 in their last 30 games.

The Astros will face Rubby De La Rosa tonight, who is 14-8 with a 4.56 ERA. In five September starts, De La Rosa has thrown 24.1IP, 25H/14ER, 17K:9BB, allowing 4HR. This includes his September 12 start where the Dodgers rocked him for 9H/6ER in 2IP.

The Astros will throw Dallas Keuchel tonight, Collin McHugh tomorrow, and Lance McCullers or Mike Fiers on Sunday in an effort to keep Scott Kazmir the hell away from any semblance of an important outing.

Links

*Bob Nightengale writes that clinching a playoff spot in Arizona would be pretty BAWSE for A.J. Hinch:
The last time he put on a uniform in this city, A.J. Hinch was openly mocked in his own clubhouse, ridiculed locally and nationally, and fired in a managerial experiment that went horribly wrong. 

*Brian T. Smith has sunshine, rainbows, and chocolate sprinkles coming out of his butt.
If you can blend a stubborn puppy dog with a relentless bumblebee, that's the 2015 Astros.

*Jason Lisk writes that September results are not a predictor of October success.

*Dallas Keuchel and Carlos Correa are finalists for the Players Choice awards, which will be won by Taylor Swift.

*Bo Porter has interviewed for the vacant managerial position with the Marlins. My appreciation and respect for Bo Porter is well-documented, and I think he is well-suited and better-equipped to return to the manager's chair. He has earned the right to start the Marlins turn-around before they inevitably and systematically dismantle their team out from under their fans and their manager.



Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Jed's Back II (or: Revisiting the Worst Baseball Article of 2014)

(Not Hank) was was quick to report the news back on December 15, so this article isn't really focussed on Jed's return to the fold.  Rather, this article revisits the histrionics around the Jed Lowrie-Paul Clemens early-season "beanings", mostly because some of the trash written at the time was kind of priceless (and only accumulated in value with the passage of time).  Reflecting upon it lends itself to the idea that progress has been made, and will continue going forward.

We should start by briefly revisiting the Clemens-Lowrie incident in general terms, which this video does quite well.  The Astros were in the midst of a miserable start to 2014, having lost six of seven games during one stretch and six in a row in an entirely separate stretch.  On April 19, the Astros were well down early after Jarred Cosart lasted only one-third of an inning.   Jed Lowrie was up for the second time in the first inning with the A's up 7-0 when he unsuccessfully bunted against the shift for an attempt at a base-hit.  In Lowrie's next at-bat, Paul Clemens appeared to throw at him, but missed, with the ball going between Lowrie's legs.  Lowrie flew out to end that at-bat, then stood near first base and asked Jose Altuve whether the attempted leg-beaning was, in fact, an attempted beaning.  Bo Porter... uh...  "intervened" and politely "asked" him to stop talking to the Astro players, and "respectfully suggested" that he grab his glove and cap and return to his position on the other side of the second base bag.

The events of April 19 received some attention, but the incident was mostly forgotten after the Astros headed north to Seattle and took the road series there (partly because of the first of a number of strong pitching performances from Dallas Keuchel and Collin McHugh).  They darn near swept Seattle, but for Josh Fields giving up a go ahead jack to Corey Seager in the midst of a horror early-season stretch.  The Astros then returned to Houston for a return series against the A's.  Scott Kazmir hit George Springer in the first inning (with a two-run lead and two on) which kind of made no sense, all while Brett Oberholtzer was struggling - eventually allowing 6 earned runs in three-and-one-third of an innings.  Paul Clemens relieved, and in the seventh inning, hit Jed Lowrie square on the rump.  Clemens was the victim of a quick ejection, and after the game Bo Porter largely refused to comment further.  The hitting-of-batters continued on to the next day, when Jason Castro wore one from ex-battery-mate Fernando Abad, who subsequently stayed in the game, which also made no sense.  We are deliberately ignoring the Brandon Moss HBP's here, because everyone knows that a significant proportion of Moss' body mass spends most of his at-bat in the strike zone.  To say he sets up near the plate is being kind.

Lots of opinionated rubbish was written, leading to a trio of defensive articles published on this site revisiting the whole incident.  And, importantly, remember that at the time the Astros were miserable (on pace for 119 losses, donchaknow!!).  This led to fans experiencing flashbacks to 2011, 2012 and 2013.

Which leads us to the article which I consider the Worst Baseball Article of 2014, written by Will Leitch, and published on Sports on Earth.  Please check it out.

So here are the points made in Leitch's article, in a nutshell:

1. The Astros are currently bad.
2. They hired bloggers, just like Will Leitch, so they might be cool!
3. But they bottomed out on purpose, presumably to get high draft picks.  Emphasis not mine.  That ain't baseball.
4. Their manager is upsetting the applecart and ruining all the positive blogger-related stories, mostly because he looks like a "reactionary, delusional idiot".
5. After all, Bo Porter broke a rule on substitutions in 2013!
6. Matt Dominguez made a baserunning error that led to Bo Porter looking angry and staying quiet during a press conference.  Perhaps he is losing his grip on sanity.
7. Jed Lowrie then broke one of baseball's unwritten rules, which is really not breaking a rule at all, because he was trying to help his team to score runs.
8. Bo Porter started screaming at Lowrie.  Hey, someone from the Diamondbacks got angry when the Dodgers went for a swim, too!  A parallel, involving another struggling organisation!!
10. Porter then made Paul Clemens throw at Lowrie later.

(Note is made, at this point, that the order of the events is blatantly factually incorrect.  Leitch's account is: Lowrie bunted, Bo screamed, Clemens attempted to bean a couple of innings later presumably at the behest of Porter, whereas the actual order is Lowrie bunted, Clemens unsuccessfully beaned.  Bo screamed at the end of the attempted-beaning at-bat after Lowrie apparently questioned the intent.  Never let the facts - or the order of the facts - get in the way of a good diatribe.  After all, if one were to promote the argument that Porter was losing it, having him order Clemens to bean him after earlier yelling at him makes for a better story, doesn't it??)

11. A few days later, the Astros were down big again (they are useless, donchaknow), when Clemens hit Lowrie on the butt
12. Clemens said me made a mistake, and that it wasn't intentional.  Just tryin' to pitch inside!
13. Bo made cryptic remarks about "baseball taking care of itself"...
14. Which clearly indicates that this beaning was intentional the whole time
15. Throw in a couple of reactionary Lowrie quotes that reflect badly on the Astros.  The victim in the matter, after all, is bound to acknowledge his part in all of this, and view it all objectively.  He won't be at all defensive.
16. Porter is dangerous, people.  Like a toddler with a gun.  (Which is, of course, no laughing matter)
17. Perhaps all the losing has changed Porter's personality, or driven him insane.
18. Random Hitler reference!

Of course, the title of the article indicates that Bo Porter's priorities are merely misplaced.  He is more occupied with enforcing the unwritten rules of baseball, rather than addressing all the losing that the Astros are doing.  And if he straightened out his priorities and just concentrated on winning, things would be ok.  After all, that is how you wind up in a 7-0 hole in the first - by not concentrating on winning!!

Leitch is an interesting character, and this is also worthy of some comment here.  He is arguably most famous for his Deadspin days, where he positioned himself -  and the blog - as an outsiders' sports humorist.  He gained some notoriety by attacking the Rick Reilly's and Buzz Bissinger's of the sports-writing world, exposing lazy sports writing to the cynical masses, all while making the odd interesting sports scoop.  Throw in a little off-colour humour, and you have Deadspin.

The irony of this article lies in the degree of lazy hack-ery that Leitch uses here - something he used to eviscerate Rick Reilly for.  The narratives that are drawn upon, the series of events that was inaccurately portrayed, and odd reference that inevitably encourages the reader to draw an unconscious psychological link between Porter to Hitler are all examples of hack-ery in it's finest form.  The irony!

That said would hate to have to write for a living.  For a start, I would be very poor and hungry, such is the quality of my writing.  I imagine deadlines would be easy to meet when you write about an event - such as a game between the Astros and the A's - but opinion pieces would be much, much harder, and would not lend themselves comfortably to deadlines.  Sports on Earth is not about recapping games, but more about providing opinion.  So perhaps some slack needs to be cut here.  Writing for a living would be hard, and the more you write, the greater the chance of a clunker such as this being published.

And as an aside, Sports on Earth was always an oddly out-of-place button which always seemed to reside on various official MLB sites.  At the time that Leitch's article was written, it was part owned by USA Today and MLB Advanced Media.  However, USA Today pulled the pin in August due to a corporate restructure, and as a result, most of the writers were let go.  It is now run solely by MLBAM, and seems to act as a link between baseball websites and other sports in the offseason, while providing an... uh... offbeat commentary during the season.  Adding more to the irony, SoE was (at its launch) described as a intelligent addition to the MLB writing crew.  There isn't anything intelligent about this article, though - personally, I would prefer to read anything by McTaggart or Justice.  SoE continues to exist, albeit in a different form - and thank goodness, because without it we would never get "Gems" like this (which Leitch advanced as one of the examples of great creative sports-related writing on the site).

The sense of irony is only multiplied with the benefit of hindsight.  Firstly, it seems that Bo Porter was battling for his job, and his ability to communicate with his players seemed to be part of the reason why he had been put on notice.  I recall that some of the articles from around this time date the origin of the difficulties back to the off-season and early season, so perhaps Bo was under the pump when this incident occurred.  Note is made that this incident showed that he had no difficulty communicating effectively with the players on the other team.

Secondly, the Astros finished April at 9-19, sat at 12-27 on May 12, and was 17-32 on May 23.  From those three dates, the Astros recorded a 61-73, 58-65 and 53-60 record, respectively.  Nothing to write home about, but after this incident, numerous good on-field stories emerged, including Keuchel and McHugh's continued good work, Springer carrying the team for much of late-May and early-June, Carter's summer of power, Fields' change-up which he broke out mid-season, Altuve's batting title, and a solid late-season gut-check road trip against three contenders - Anaheim, Seattle and Oakland.  And it's not like everything went their way from May onward - they missed Springer and Fowler for extended periods, Crain and Albers either never arrived or were done, and large offensive black holes existed at first, third and left.

Third, and most telling, was that Lowrie returned to Houston as a free-agent in the offseason.  On a team-friendly deal.  As the leading middle infielder on the free agent market.  With multiple wealthy teams in need of solid middle infield bats.  With another Oakland A in tow (actually, following another Oakland A, but, as we have already established, never let the facts get in the way of a good diatribe).

So we get to end 2014 by looking at possibly the low point of the Astros season, at least on the field.  After a miserable April, they got much better despite missing a bunch of key players for extended periods of time, having awful production from key positions.  The post-April team was much more compelling and watchable, and the results of positive regression in a couple of areas, an improved 'pen, and some high-ceiling players on the farm arriving in the bigs will make the 2015 Astros even more watchable.  Which is great, because Texas / 5-state natives may actually be able to watch now.

Happy New Years, everyone.  With the arrival of 2015, we are now in the same calendar year as the 2015 baseball season!!

Celebrate safely, and my regards to both the readers, and the other AC staff.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Astros fire Porter and Trembley on Labor Day: Part II

Interesting day in Astros baseball.  As an Astros fan, I am kind of getting sick of interesting, and would take a boatload of boring right now.  Just boring winning, that is all I want.  A boring 100-win season would be great, right about now.

Bo Porters firing has attracted a lot of attention in the Ultimate Astros part of the Chronicle, with a dozen separate articles or photo essays dedicated to either the outgoing manager and coach, the incoming replacements, or future potential replacements.  Since I wrote the brief synopsis this morning, Sports Illustrated has written an article with some opinion, and some various other articles have appeared around the web.  I imagine more will be posted tomorrow as the staff at Fangraphs, BPro or Baseball America come back from their long weekends.

Some have spoken of the curious timing of the firing, with a month to go in what is essentially a lost season and all.  As I wrote earlier, the firing happened on the first off day after the Rosenthal article broke, and that may explain the timing.  That would mean that something happened in the last week or two to make Porter's position untenable - either a single incident or an accumulation of incidents - and the Astros were just waiting for an off day to make it official.

I am always a little suspicious when big news is released on a bank holiday, when media outlets tend to be a little understaffed.  I know that a lot of news around the world that people want hidden is released right before Christmas, for example, when the people who would analyse this would be expected to be taking holidays.  Labor Day may, or may not, be significant.

The Astros were also fortunate to announce the firing on the day that J.J. Watt got paid, and the Phillies combined for a no-hitter.

The opposite explanation, however, is that only a horrible cynic would read too much into the timing.  Who knows.

In bullet-point form, some other thoughts:

Well, I guess we know who is in charge... If there ever was an arm-wrestle between Jeff Luhnow and Bo Porter, we know who has the ear of Jim Crane.  Luhnow wins, hands down.  Interesting, Cliff Corcoran's take is that the firing of Porter may weaken Luhnow et al's position, as it "removes a layer of insulation" - or eliminates a fall-guy - for the future.

Luhnow's meta-message better not get lost in translation...  Cool article on Jeff Luhnow's career prior to baseball, and his work as a management consultant for McKinsey.  The project / grand experiment that Luhnow has steered the Astros toward is all about acquiring elite baseball talent.  The meta-message behind all of that is that everyone needs to be paddling the canoe in the same direction, sending the same message, emphasising the same things, because tiny little things may be the difference between winning and losing.

I would imagine that Luhnow's career would mean that he is highly attuned to who is on board with "the plan", and who isn't.  As Lindsay Naegle answered when someone asked her what she actually produced: "Synergy, and books on how to cheat at Bridge".  Luhnow needs synergy to make this work, and he has spent a career producing it.

Check your egos in at the door...  Also in the previously linked article, much of the decision making seems to be left to computer algorithms.  Or at least, the algorithms influence the timing of the decision / promotion / whatever.  I imagine that there would be considerable resistance to the removal of the "human element" from across the game of baseball, as boatloads of scouts, coaches and cross-checkers in the industry would be proud of the fact that spent a lifetime honing their skills, and really believe in their ability to identify and rank talent.  Being told that your "opinion" is one of a number of data-points that are being assigned relative weights inside a computer  would be potentially crushing on the ego, I would guess.  So one could easily anticipate some tension between the number-crunchers and the subjective human analysts who pride themselves on their skills, gut-feel and nose for the game.  Luhnow doesn't want that tension.

Bo's position was always going to be hard...  Partly because of the losing, partly because of the fact that he was the lubricant between a proudly analytical front office and the human beings running around on the field.  It would be easy to anticipate constant friction between the new and the old, or the numbers and the players.  I would think that in some cases, Porter was simply on a hiding to nothing attempting to manage that friction.  It isn't about whether there is anger and discontent in the clubhouse or not, but rather how much anger and discontent there is, and if it disrupts anything else.  Good luck handling that.

Some gormless sports-writing has attempted to identify the moment...  One article sort-of-kind-of wondered whether the Wesley Wright pitching change in May last year (when Wright was removed prior to throwing a pitch) was a vital data-point in Bo Porter's firing.  Others have talked about the Jed Lowrie incident, which I doubt was significant, because Bo was (in my opinion) just trying to protect his players.  The Mark Appel bullpen incident seems to have gotten a bit of air-time.

But Richard Justice's and Brian McTaggert's articles - granted, which are both from MLB.com, who have a massive vested interest in promoting the game of baseball - both downplay the role of individual incidents (such as the Appel one), and seem to hint (or even overtly state) that Porter's communication style with both his superiors and the players was clumsy or inappropriate at times.  The extension of this thought is that his communication difficulties were perhaps identified early, and he was given an opportunity to redress this, but problems continued.

Porter, if he had a fault that I could see, was a bit full on...  He seemed a little like the Rainer Wolfcastle in the all-night Gym - shouting slogans while Homer was using the abdominator.  I remember cringing a little when I saw a photo of the inside of the Astros' clubhouse, and Bo Porter had put his own quote on the wall.  I thought that was.... odd, especially given how many inspiring quotes from baseball and non-baseball greats would have been available.  Richard Justice confirmed that he seemed to come on a little strong in his article, with the mirrors in the lockers, and the chair-turning and so forth, and that some of his ideas seemed a little infantilising.

I am going to miss Bo's genuine delight when his players succeeded...  If Bo had a strength, it is that he really, really cared for 90% of his players.  Or cared for all his players 90% of the time.  The caveat is in there because he did throw his players under the bus at times, but it seemed infrequent and more out of frustration than anything.

Regardless, Bo seemed to genuinely celebrate Chris Carter's recent hot streak, Jose Altuve's excellent 2014 season or and Dallas Keuchel's filthy May run and breakout season in the video that I saw of many of those highlights.  He always acknowledged the hard work of the coaches and playing staff, and pointed out that the success of the player was well deserved.  I didn't get the impression that he celebrated those exploits because he looked better in winning the ballgame or anything like that - he seemed to have a genuine passion in his players succeeding in the top levels of the game, and being rewarded for their effort and hard work.

I am going to really miss how every other sentence at a post-game press conference started with the phrase "that there... "  Can't really add to that.

I know nothing about this firing, and why it occurred, and this is all just speculation...  The Astros seemed to handle this very cleanly and uncontroversially - at least at this stage.  Porter is obviously upset, but everyone (including Porter) seems to have handled this with class and professionalism to this point.  Perhaps something more specific will come out, perhaps it won't, but at least there has not been weeks of speculation and innuendo, and the parting seems to have been almost surgical.

Please, just make the PR nightmares stop...  I can handle a losing baseball team.  Over 162 games, there is normally enough to celebrate to keep a dedicated fan coming back.  I can't handle a team that is (i) constantly a punchline to a national joke because of the drama and disorganisation or (ii) can't get their own sh*t together.  Good year (thus far) for the Astros at the major-league level, but some big Correa-Appel-Aiken-sized hits elsewhere.  Some of these lie squarely in the laps of the front office, and some of these are random events.  But it is really hard to support a chaotic organisation, even if that is only the perception of the organisation.  Winning cures much, but it may take a while for the reputation of the Astros to recover after some of the cringeworthy events of the last few years.

Well, that got pretty long, didn't it...  I promised wordy, ill-informed analysis once the dust settled, and here it is!!

I am sure that the other Astros County writers are brewing some awesome articles up as we speak, so I will stand aside so that others can hear their thoughts...

Monday, September 1, 2014

Astros fire Porter and Trembley on Labor Day

The Labor Day bit just adds to the irony.

As of a few hours ago, the Astros announced that Bo Porter and Dave Trembley have been "relieved of their duties", and replaced with organisational managerial stand-in Tom Lawless and ex-player/roving instructor Adam Everett respectively.

The Front Office Press Release specifically stated that the firing was nothing to do with current record, but more to do with differing philosophies.  In fact, Luhnow specifically takes the blame for the win-loss record, while pointing out that perhaps Bo was not paddling in the same direction.  The press release provides no real further detail.

The shakeup comes on the first off-day after Ken Rosenthal's story broke that cited numerous anonymous sources that discussed "tension" in the front office.  The Chronicle Astros Blog commented on the story, seemingly pouring cold water on it.  Fangraphs, in an earlier conversation, detected no animosity or hint of difficulty between Porter and Luhnow.  Then this happened, and it appears that Rosenthal's sources were correct, and that the Astros may have been waiting for the off day to do the firing.

I may perhaps publish a long and rambling, overly wordy article on this later in the day, but my first thought is that this must relate to a relatively recent event or series of events that made Porter's position untenable.  As the interface between the number-inclined Front Office (all decisions made by a computer algorithm, donchaknow!) and the human-beings with thoughts and feelings running around on the field, there is always going to be some friction, and the job is more about how that friction is handled.  Handle it the wrong way, and the wrong message gets sent to the players; handle it right, and that is important in getting the buy in of everyone.

My second thought is one likely shared by most of you.  Man, the hits for the PR side of the organisation keep coming.  When do the Astros stop resembling a joke??  Winning is going to cure a lot of hard feelings (if it ever happens) but at the moment, the organisation looks chaotic and disorganised at times, with periods of relative calm in between.  The Ground Control leaks were bad, this is bad, Jarred Cosart's chip is bad, Bud Norris' earlier comments were bad... you get the point.  Sheesh, when will this all stop.

Finally, it seems that Bo Porter is the first casualty of the new regime.  He came in at the very bottom - at a critical time of the rebuild - and won't get to see the fruits of his labours, or the rewards for lots of losing.  That, to me, is sad.  Best of luck, Bo.

ESPN has a good early take which is very speculative here.  I am sure more ink will be spilt about this story in the next few days.

Enjoy Labor Day.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Monday Morning Hot Links

*"Jerome Williams has two arms and can throw a ball 60 feet, 6 inches, which makes him a perfect fit for the Phillies rotation."

*The Astros left runners on 2nd and 3rd in two innings yesterday, though the Astros could have cut a 4-2 deficit to 4-3 were it not for a ground-rule double. And Bo Porter is not a fan of the ground-rule double.

*George Springer opened up to ABC13's Greg Bailey in a nice little interview. Speaking of Springer, there is no timetable for his return to the lineup.

*OKC's Preston Tucker knows his bat is the key to making it to Houston.

*The Astros made a congratulatory video for a fan who turned 100 years old.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Wednesday Morning Hot Links

While we try to figure out what to write next, Czech out these lynx:

*#AstrosCatfish.

*Bo Porter is still pissed about the 2012 NLDS, and sees similarities between that Nationals team and the 2014 Astros.

*Grantland, and SI, on George Springer

*Anthony Bass is close to going on a rehab assignment, Jose Veras threw a bullpen session in Kissimmee, and a cable provider is looking to drop CSN Houston.

*Here is a fantastic article on how Brent Strom overhauled Shane Reynolds...in Venezuela in 1991.

*There will soon be more security measures in place at Minute Maid Park.

*Here is a newspaper that thinks David Carpenter still pitches for the Astros.

*Former Astro Carlos Pena signed a minor-league deal with the Rangers.

*Rough week in baseball. Here is a touching tribute to Richard Durrett. Rest in Peace, and pray for his family and friends.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Tuesday Morning Hot Links

*Jim Crane is negotiating left and right with anybody who'll listen about CSN Houston. The next "potentially significant" status update is in two weeks.

*Dexter Fowler talked to Evan Drellich about his approach at the plate.

*Here's a great profile on Bo Porter from Randy Harvey.

*George Springer was "playing on ice skates" until Bo Porter gave him the day off on May 3 in order to let him soak in the speed of the game.

*"What (the Astros) are doing, I think it's good and I respect it and I understand it." - Joe Maddon.

*The Astros are hosting an open tryout at Whataburger Field in Corpus on June 26.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Friday Morning Hot Links

#win the #watercooler and #rovell your #brand with your Friday morning hot links:

*The Orioles are a little butthurt over the safe Castro call at the plate last night.

*ESPN Stats & Info takes a closer look at George Springer. Scott Feldman says that Springer's run reminds him of Josh Hamilton.

*Bo Porter is going to keep the six-man rotation for now;

*Jesse Crain is looking at a late-June return.

*The headline is atrocious, but here's a great article from Jeff Sullivan on the month the Astros are having.

*Here is a longer story on Conrad Gregor's dad catching his first homer of the season. 

*Mark Appel is rejoining Lancaster this weekend. Scott Boras, Appel's agent, had this to say about Appel and the tandem pitching plan:

I don’t think there’s one approach for everybody. And in Mark’s case … He’d been pitching on a once-a-week schedule for a long time, dating back to high school, so that’s what he was used to. … It was just a cumulative thing, where after a few starts on the four-day (schedule), I don’t think it worked for him. They had a conversation about it.

*Hall of Famer, and Houston resident, Monte Irvin laments the lack of African-Americans in baseball.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Friday Morning Hot Links

Hear's youre kneed two no lynx (sorry, that won't happen again):

*Chad Qualls is helping Josh Fields with his mechanics while Luhnow notes that the bullpen would be better if the starters weren't throwing 100 pitches in five innings, and the starters would be better if the offense wasn't hitting .210.

*Bo Porter and Nolan Ryan went to see Tyler Kolek last night (but Silsbee's Brayden Griffin threw a complete game, allowed two hits and struck out ten).

*Jon Daniels, on the Round Rock-back-to-Astros affiliation:
You'd have to ask, 'What's in it for the Rangers?' I'm sure the Astros would like to get back in there, but why would we leave? The Austin area is a fast-growing market, and we've worked hard to establish a strong foothold there...We've made a lot of gains down there, and you can definitely attribute some of those (gains) to the affiliation with the Express. Of course, it helps that the Rangers have been a consistent winner.

Ohhhh. F that. RedHawks president Michael Byrnes:
I believe (the Rangers) intention is to stay there through 2018.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Luhnow answers Rosenthal's questions

I give Ken Rosenthal a lot of crap. I mean, A. Lot. Of Crap.  But I'll applaud him for going to Luhnow for clarification on items he has issues with.

It's well worth your time, but here are few items of note...

On Bo Porter, re: Lowrie:  
That's part of what makes him exciting and intrigues all of us about him - the emotion and the passion and the desire to win, that kind of football mentality...He believes in everything he's doing. I talk to him after (games), and he's typically very rational and convicted in what he does. He makes a lot of sense. At this point, I don't see any issue. 

On Appel going to Extended Spring Training:
It was really my fault. I made a decision to send him out to Lancaster to have him try and build up there, to try to catch up for the time he missed in Florida. He ended up pitching twice on a four-day cycle and then he skipped a start and pitched on an eight-day cycle. It wasn't like he was in the tandem for a month and couldn't handle it. 

On the Goatpen so far:
It's definitely a concern. We're underperforming relative to what I was hoping we would do. But I don't think it's time to press the panic button. We've got good, experienced major-league arms. And I think they will perform.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

On Bo and Beanings.

I was going to write only about Bo today.  Not about actually what he is doing at the moment, but how he seems to have changed compared to last year.  I always thought that Bo was the perfect manager for a rebuilding ball-club.  He seemed supportive, firm and fair, but was careful to ensure that whatever happened (hypothetically like, say, 110+ losses) there were lessons to be learnt.  Not only learnt, but internalised.  Lessons to be understood, but with the aim of improvement and upskilling.

This year, it has been a little different.  The 18 second pause (or 17 seconds, depending on whose articles you read) attracted a lot of press.  Then, in quick succession, #Buntgate (enough already!), a frustrating blown save (Qualls), a brief reprieve because the stories were positive about the Astros for two days, then another horrible blown save.  And now, #Beangate (actually, #Buttgate may be a better descriptor).  And the press is again overwhelmingly negative.

The first two games of the series have been brutal.  Brutal in the kind of eviscerating, frustrating and confidence-shattering way.  Losses that would be best described as a beat-down by someone much faster, stronger and more skilled then you.  But then, you claw your way back, and... it happens all over again.  Back to the pit of despair for you!

If this was 2013's version of Bo, I imagine that the lessons to be understood would be along the lines of the idea that baseball is nothing but a series of events, and a reminder to be in the best, most positive and relaxed frame-of-mind for each and every play.  Doesn't matter if you are down by 5.  Doesn't matter if you are winning by 1.  Treat it all as a bunch of individual plays all rolled together, do your best at each one, and remember that failure most of the time is often part of the game.  Zen-master Bo.

2014 Bo seems different.  He has an edge this year.  In 2013, Bo was thrown out of his first game on August 8.  In a brutal season - with offensive ineptitude, blown saves, entire series' where the team was not even close to winning, and culminating in a 111-loss season.  2013 was as bad as it is going to get, and Bo seemingly maintained a positive, upbeat and supportive stance.

This year, Bo has shown a lot more emotion.  He was thrown out tonight, most likely asking very reasonable questions of the home plate ump, the impressively tall Jordan Baker.  I think Ghandi would have been thrown out after Fernando Abad was not tossed for his contribution to #Buttgate.  It was an odd and un-understandable umpiring call, especially given the quick hook that Paul Clemens had been given the day prior.  Perhaps the umpires had dinner reservations, and didn't want another pitcher having to warm up.

Briefly, back to Bo before we head to the analysis of #Buttgate.  I don't know what is going on with Bo.  The only time I get to see Bo is on the rare occasions that I get to watch entire games on TV.  Most of my watching is highlight packages, and they (rightly) don't tend to concentrate on the managers.  I listen to him during interviews on the radio broadcasts, and he strikes me as focussed, supportive and articulate - articulate in a way that many baseball guys simply aren't.  Bo seems more than capable of making a subtle point through verbal communication, rather than 18 second press-conference pauses.

So, I don't know what is going on with Bo.  I think it is kind of like spotting an iceberg on a satellite image (like, for example the crowdsourcing attempts at finding MH370) and guessing the shape and weight of the whole iceberg.  You see a one dimensional image of the iceberg, only the tip is visible, and the conclusions that you draw must therefore be limited.  I see very little of Bo.  Goodness knows what is going on behind the scenes.  But I will say this: if he is under-pressure with his job, and gets fired, given this talent to work with, it would be an incredible shame.

In many ways, the 2014 Astros are worse than the 2013 Astros - at least the 2013 edition had some Veteran Goodness like Rick Ankiel and Carlos Pena to add some maturity and experience.  These guys have Dexter Fowler, Chad Qualls, Matt Albers, Jose Altuve, Scott Feldman and Jason Castro, and the latter two been injured most the the time.  Only the pitchers have even reached free-agency.  Most of the rest of the team are either practically or actually rookies.  This remains a seriously offensively-challenged unit, and given how fluctuant bullpens are, this years' more expensive and more experienced bullpen may be just as bad.  But that is a topic for another day.

Bo, hang in there.

These two games between the Astros and the A's have been significant for butt-beanings.  Nothing up around the head, thankfully.  The highest threatening pitch was the first HBP of Brandon Moss, which caught him on the jersey around his bicep.  Thank goodness no head-shots  - that would be really losing perspective.

The series started with George Springer being hit in the first inning by Scott Kazmir.  In isolation, this is the worst - the most obvious beaning of the lot.  Except, a beaning would have made no sense.  Runners on first and third, one out, first inning, up 2 runs, 0-2 count.  Kazmir had been having control problems... but goodness me.  Catcher set up low and outside, and Kazmir must have missed his spot by three feet.  Right in the knee.  If you were going to send a message by moving the feet or hitting the hotshot rookie, that pitch would have been perfect execution.  At least, on an 0-0 count, no runners on, up by 5, bottom of the 8th or something.  Who knows, I am not inside Kazmir's head, but I can't see a scenario where that is a deliberate beaning.  But if it was, it was brilliant.

The next inning, Brandon Moss was hit by an overthrown curveball on the upper arm from Brett Oberholtzer.  Again, Obie had some trouble with control early, and this wasn't deliberate.  Plus, the whole off-speed thing was a serious giveaway.

You would have seen or heard about Clemens' beaning of Lowrie if you are reading this article.  This was the next incident.  Many factors of this butt-bean would encourage one to think that it was likely to have been deliberate - the past animosity between the two, the count, the stage of the game, etc, etc.  But I imagine that Porter would have been pissed that the beaning occurred, unless he suggested it.  He would have been upset because: 6th inning, taxed bullpen, 5th starter (for all intents and purposes) going the next day, no Matt Albers for the last 2 days, Josh Fields also unlikely to throw because he has gone three days in a row.... plus the beaning pretty much ensures one, if not two, extra pitchers are needed.  That puts the Astros in a worse position, and possibly forces Albers on to the DL to get a fresh arm for the rest of the series.

Today's beanings started with Brandon Moss in the 9th.  Hit twice in one inning - I believe that this has only happened once before in the AL - Brady Anderson hit by Mike Morgan in May 1999.  But goodness me... have a look where Moss sets up his back foot.  If he ever led off a game, and the batters box was not a scuffed up mess, I swear that his back foot would be over the line by inches.  He is clearly trying to pull the ball, and pretty much daring the pitcher to throw inside.  This may be some karma from the Craig Biggio Era coming back to bite the Astros.  But both times the catcher set up inside, and both times the pitcher missed in and a little up.  Even the A's commentary team made a point of saying neither was intentional.

But then it got silly.  Abad clearly butt-beaned Castro second hitter of the next inning.  Look, for the sake of comparison, where Castro's back foot is set up.  No one on.  0-0 count.  Castro jawed to the bench afterward.  And somehow, Abad was not thrown out.  Wow.

The A's also managed to cede any moral high ground that they had before.  Prior to this beaning, this was clearly an Astros-Lawrie thing, as evidenced by the apparent lack of support shown to Lowrie by the A's broadcast team and teammates.  Now, by butt-beaning Castro, you are picking out the best player and throwing at him clearly and deliberately.  Now it becomes an Astros-A's thing.  If this goes on, that is the reason.

Obviously, there has been a lot written on this situation, in both the media and the blogosphere.  Many of these centre around "the Unwritten Rules of Baseball", and how stupid they are.  Many cite such bulletproof arguments as "isn't it a crime for grown men to try and injure each other by throwing things??" and so on and so forth.  My take on it is this:  The Unwritten Rules of Baseball are there for the players to manage their own behaviour.  They aren't for the fans, for the TV audience or anyone else.  It is a way that the players can stop douch-ery amongst their own kind.

That, to me, is the beauty of baseball.  It is, essentially, a series of confrontations with a limited number of outcomes inside a zero-sum environment.  Luck plays a big part.  Tiny, tiny things can make the biggest difference - a matter of millimetres when the ball contacts the bat, the kick off an uneven bit of turf on the infield, the effect that a breeze has on a fly ball.  So baseball isn't always fair.  And these confrontations are repeated over and over again inside a game.  And the games are repeated over and over again.  And sometimes you win, and sometimes you lose.  But you won't win them all, and you won't lose them all, and when someone wins, someone else loses.  There is no game without an opponent, and therefore opponents are worthy of respect.  And just because you win today, doesn't mean you win tomorrow.  So you manage each victory and loss with dignity and sportsmanship.  And respect the opposition, at all times, because everyone is only a freak injury or accident off never playing again, or never playing to the same level again.  (I loved Carlos Hernandez).

And when someone steps outside that, the baseball fraternity frowns.

And when non-players, and poorly informed people comment on the Unwritten Rules, that annoys me.  The rules may be stupid and illogical, but they are there.  And they are there for a reason, have developed for a reason, and are maintained for a reason.  You see, commentators are all pretty much outside the game (with very few exceptions).  We are satellites over the game, seeing the tips of icebergs.  We see very little of what is actually going on.  We know nothing about how far below the surface the iceberg extends.  Only those in the game really know the full context.

I am a doctor, working in a small area of medicine.  I know most people who work near me - very well.  I know who is good, and who is less good.  I know who is frikking dangerous.  I have a mental list of doctors that I would allow family members to go to.  And it isn't a long list.  I know my profession.

The players know their profession.  They know who the guys are the play hard and fair, and who oversteps the mark.  They know the classy players, and they know the self-obsessed players.  They know who rubs the opposition's nose in it, and who doesn't.  Who knows what is going on behind the scenes, or what other events may lie behind this incident.

So when Bo said "I think the game of baseball takes care of itself", then pointed out that George Springer's HBP preceded Lowrie's, this is what I think he was meaning.  He wasn't, as some have suggested, going crazy, or blowing a fuse.  At least I hope not, because that would be a tragedy.  There isn't an easily painted hero and villain here and suggesting otherwise is lazy.  This is a complex and fluid situation between two teams that play each other another 14 times.

And baseball will take care of itself.  As it has always done.

Friday, April 25, 2014

On retribution and the Astros

...If you prick us, do we not bleed? 
If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison
us, do we not die, and if you wrong us, shall we not
revenge?
-Shylock, The Merchant of Venice

Those wars are unjust which are undertaken without provocation. For only a war waged for revenge or defense can be just.
-Marcus Tullius Cicero

Revenge is not always sweet, once it is consummated we feel inferior to our victim.
-Emil Cioran 
---

I have been wrestling with the actions of the Bo Porter, Jed Lowrie, and Paul Clemens over the past seven days and I do not know what to think. A week ago today (Friday), Jarred Cosart managed to get one out before being pulled with the Astros already down 7-0. As you are already well aware, Jed Lowrie tried to lay down a drag bunt in an effort to beat the shift. It didn't work, he was thrown out. Two innings later, Paul Clemens threw a wicked googly between Lowrie's legs before Lowrie flied out. As he was on his way back to the dugout, Lowrie and Altuve started talking. Lowrie swears he was asking why Clemens threw the ball between his legs. But still tempers flared. Bo Porter came out of the dugout to yell at Lowrie who, innocent as a cherub, had no idea what in the world was the matter.

Lowrie, after the game:
I just don't understand why he came out in such a rage. ... I just don't get it. I don't know what it shows, but not a lot of confidence in his own team. Point blank.

Lowrie said, basically, if the Astros can shift down 7-0, he can bunt to beat the shift. This is a decent point.

Remember the week Porter had. Dominguez running into an out by 30 feet at 2nd base. The 17-second stare. Cosart's disaster start which led to the Goatpen getting to pitch 8.2IP, and BuntGate (as no one calls it). Then Qualls gave up the walk-off homer on Saturday, the Astros had nothing on Sunday. And those four games take place in the space of four days.

Fast forward six days. The Astros won a series in Seattle, but missed a sweep because Josh Fields allowed a walk-off homer to Kyle Seager. That afternoon/evening the team flies to Houston for a four-game series with the A's, who have owned the Astros since the beginning of last season. And then the A's do what the A's do to the Astros: beat the hell out of them.

Down 8-1 in the 7th, Paul Clemens has thrown 2.2IP, replacing Brett Oberholtzer, who was down 2-0 by the 3rd batter of the game. Jed Lowrie, who is already 3x4 with two doubles, gets plunked. The details are sketchy. Porter and Clemens have spent the day getting slammed. Lowrie has presumably spent the day at a Starbucks talking to anybody and everybody who will listen about how he has been wronged and he does not understand.

Porter won't discuss specifics. While Chris Singleton has apparently confirmed through a source that Clemens was acting on his own, Bo Porter won't confirm or deny it.

If Clemens acted on his own, Porter isn't going to be the guy that throws him under the bus. I'm not saying that Porter threw Dominguez under the bus in the 17-second stare, but he didn't shy away from his disappointment/anger/murderous rage. Was Porter trying to avoid the same thing with Clemens?

I'm not saying it's right. I'm not saying I agree with Porter's actions this week. While I agree with everyone who happens to be an Astros fan that maybe Lowrie should just shut up and wear it and realize that he's helping his team while perhaps causing his opponent to completely lose the plot and unravel, I can sympathize with Porter's position.

Do you watch the Barclay's Premier League? I do. My grandfather played soccer professionally in England, so I have an affinity. I also have an affinity a team who has suffered one of the greatest collapses of the last 15 years - Leeds United (sound familiar?). Because of my affinity for the BPL, I see a lot of Chelsea, because they're basically the Yankees of the Premier League. Their manager, Jose Mourinho, has a wonderful knack for making such a scene of himself that it takes the attention off of how Fernando Torres has been a complete disaster and can't score a goal to save his life. Does that sound familiar?

The Astros have had one day off so far this season. Tonight's game against the A's is the 24th Astros game in 25 days. Hell, I'm mad, and I don't have anything beyond a rooting interest. My job isn't on the line. I don't have to go into the clubhouse and keep myself from physically assaulting (insert Astro here). What I'm saying is that I can understand that maybe Porter is a little on edge, maybe he feels bad for destroying Matt Dominguez in a press conference and has decided to get out in front of Clemens here.

There are so many variables here that it's hard to figure out a middle position where I don't sell out a manager whom I respect on a personal and professional level or sound like a complete homer. Because our options for Bo Porter's actions are that the losing of the past 187 games have sharpened his intensity to where he's at his breaking point, or he is a calculated genius deflecting attention to himself for just how bad the current team is performing.

Everybody in this situation is a human being. Jed Lowrie, while I've spent most of my free time today casting him as a titty-baby, has suffered through some pretty serious fluke injuries who finds himself getting plunked at an alarming rate over the last week. Paul Clemens is a fringe pitcher at best who perhaps is searching for a role as an enforcer on a team that has no identity. Bo Porter is trying to be the rare manager who doesn't lose a clubhouse that loses approximately 65% of its games and still manages to keep his job into the Good Times.

Ultimately Jed Lowrie needs to shut up. Paul Clemens needs to stop. Bo Porter needs to distance himself from whatever beef there is between the two.

Astros throw at Lowrie, again

Look, I didn't see the game. I got home when the A's were up 8-1, and I wasn't really interested in spending the remainder of my evening watching it. As we said - repeatedly - last year, "Being a fan doesn't mean you have to be a martyr."

But from what I understand, George Springer was hit by a pitch. Jed Lowrie was doing Jed Lowrie Things (getting hits). Paul Clemens hit him and was ejected. Then the narrative diverges.

Clemens: There was no carryover on my end. What happened in Oakland was squashed in Oakland. Bad pitch there. It just so happened I cut a fastball. We wanted to go inside on him. The guy's been hot, swinging a good bat. He can play the game of baseball. He's made a very good living hitting the baseball. We really wanted to get in on him and let him (know) I'm not afraid to come inside. That happens sometimes, so be it.

Porter: I think the game of baseball takes care of itself. George Springer got hit tonight, and it's part of the game.

Corporan: We were just trying to throw inside. If you see me I was set inside. (Lowrie) has been killing us. What do you want me to throw? Another fastball away? When hitters are hot, you have to do something. You have to move his feet or something. Too bad it was him. So what. In this game the umpire was to quick to eject (Clemens). There was no warning.

So the Astros aren't exactly sorry that Lowrie got hit.

Lowrie: It's flat out embarrassing. There's no other way to say it from every perspective. That kind of conduct shouldn't be condoned. 

It's also pretty clear that Lowrie holds Porter responsible for the events of the last week, and would like to see some suspensions for the Astros: At the end of the day the buck stops with him so if you look at it that way, yes, he's the one that's responsible for player's conduct.

And, as you can expect, it's not going over so well. Reactions:

Hardball Talk's Matthew Pouliot: It's one thing to play bad baseball. The Astros have had plenty of practice at that. They've just never done it with so little class before...Hopefully, Houston's front office takes a stand after this one and tells Porter to cut it out. Even if Clemens was completely on his own here, Porter certainly could have done better with his postgame comments. His tough guy act is wearing thin.

Craig Calcaterra: Just clown shoes from the Astros...You know, my original defense of Jed Lowrie bunting with a big lead in that first game was "hey, the A's should stop trying only when the Astros say they've stopped trying." But really, I don't think that's applicable anymore because the Astros are acting like they're not even playing baseball these days.

AthleticsNation: Oh, also, Paul Clemens kind of sucks. Like, as a person. He insisted on throwing at Lowrie yet again for #buntgate, which rightfully got him thrown from the game...These past few series have made me really dislike the Astros...

Will Leitch ...It's probably time for the manager to get with the program. Because all this new school innovation that's making them so likable is being completely undone by a manager who is starting to look like a reactionary, delusional idiot.

I'm sure there will be more reaction to this as the National Writers wake up and put on their Capes of Morality. But, basically, my thought is this: Yeah, Lowrie has been killing the Astros. Yeah, there's now Beef between Clemens and Lowrie - just another example of Gulf Coast-versus-West Coast feud. Clemens and Porter should be smart enough to realize that it's not going to look like a coincidence (if it was a coincidence in the first place). So this is either: (a) An unwillingness to apologize for a bad pitch or (b) A mic-dropping "Sorry I'm not sorry," or (c) the Astros escalating a turf war with Jed Lowrie.

I'm sure this will come up again before the game today, and we'll update accordingly.

UPDATE:

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Thursday Morning Hot Links

Here's what you need to know around the water cooler* this morning

-Jim Callis called the Astros "the most secretive team" he's ever encountered as far as tipping their draft checks go. He also says the Astros would likely prioritize their 1-1 pick in June in this manner: California HS LHP Brady Aiken, East Carolina RHP Jeff Hoffman, NC State LHP Carlos Rodon, Texas HS RHP Tyler Kolek.

-Collin McHugh was surprised the Astros even knew who he was when they claimed him off waivers.

-Jeff Luhnow said Bo Porter was basically running a tandem pitching set-up, especially with inefficient pitchers, by having a long relief man ready to go. And why even go to the piggyback system? Pitcher health, for one.

-Bo Porter: "The most demoralizing (outcome) in baseball is a late-inning loss when you have the game won," Porter said. "And since I've been here, we've had our share of 'em."

-This Aston Villa blog wonders if Jim Crane is about to buy their football club.

* Nobody still has a water cooler.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

The One Where Ken Hoffman Spouts Nonsense

The Chronicle's Ken Hoffman has a silly notes column on a wide range of topics - from losing his driver's license to a joke about CNN - he touches briefly on the plight of the Astros and Bo Porter. Let's look...

In their first season under manager Bo Porter, the Astros lost 111 games last year, worst in the majors.

True.

This year, with a bigger payroll...

Relative. It's like going from $2.13/hour + tips to minimum wage.

...and bright young stars on the roster...

Which roster? Lancaster's? The 40-Man? Hoffman understands how this works, right?

...the Astros are 5-14 (not including Monday's late game), on pace to lose 119 games.

"On Pace To" watch! Not including the win over King Felix and Seattle (which ended around midnight Central), after 12.3% of the season, the Astros are ONPACETO lose more games. Summary judgments after 1/8 of a season. Got it. 

That's 1962 Mets territory.

B-R FTW.

Last weekend, Porter blew his lid because an Oakland batter attempted a bunt while leading 7-0 in the first inning. Porter thought it was bush league. You want bush league? Complaining about a bunt in the first inning is bush league.

Subjective. Writing about unwritten rules is the new market inefficiency.

Last year, Porter had to apologize after making an illegal pitching change. He didn't know a basic baseball rule. Porter is in over his head. Start warming up manager-in-waiting Craig Biggio.

Okay. Now this is ridiculous. So here is the whole of the argument for Craig Biggio replacing Bo Porter: (a) Porter got mad at a player for bunting when the opposing team was up 7-0; (b) one time, last year, Porter screwed up a pitching change; (c) in 2013 Porter didn't do enough with a team that had an active payroll under $20m in 2013; (d) 1/8 of the way through the season - Porter is mismanaging a team whose payroll that is slightly less than the fraudulent Marlins, $30m less than the 28th-highest payroll, and roughly one-fifth of the highest payroll in baseball, that can't hit (before last night) and routinely TOOTBLANs themselves out of innings. That's why Porter should go? You just don't go from being groomed to take over the Nationals to being a blithering idiot in 18 months...not with the rosters he's been dealt in that time. Maybe we hold off on anointing Biggio until those "bright young stars" are actually on the roster and Porter actually has a fair shot to figure out if he's in over his head.