Cliff Lee Phillies Contract
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Repeal of Baseball's Longstanding Antitrust Exemption: Did Congress Strike out Again?
Repeal of Baseball's Longstanding Antitrust Exemption: Did Congress Strike out Again? INTRODUCrION "Baseball is everybody's business."' We have just witnessed the conclusion of perhaps the greatest baseball season in the history of the game. Not one, but two men broke the "unbreakable" record of sixty-one home-runs set by New York Yankee great Roger Maris in 1961;2 four men hit over fifty home-runs, a number that had only been surpassed fifteen times in the past fifty-six years,3 while thirty-three players hit over thirty home runs;4 Barry Bonds became the only player to record 400 home-runs and 400 stolen bases in a career;5 and Alex Rodriguez, a twenty-three-year-old shortstop, joined Bonds and Jose Canseco as one of only three men to have recorded forty home-runs and forty stolen bases in a 6 single season. This was not only an offensive explosion either. A twenty- year-old struck out twenty batters in a game, the record for a nine inning 7 game; a perfect game was pitched;' and Roger Clemens of the Toronto Blue Jays won his unprecedented fifth Cy Young award.9 Also, the Yankees won 1. Flood v. Kuhn, 309 F. Supp. 793, 797 (S.D.N.Y. 1970). 2. Mark McGwire hit 70 home runs and Sammy Sosa hit 66. Frederick C. Klein, There Was More to the Baseball Season Than McGwire, WALL ST. J., Oct. 2, 1998, at W8. 3. McGwire, Sosa, Ken Griffey Jr., and Greg Vaughn did this for the St. -
* Text Features
The Boston Red Sox Wednesday, July 1, 2020 * The Boston Globe College lefties drafted by Red Sox have small sample sizes but big hopes Julian McWilliams There was natural anxiety for players entering this year’s Major League Baseball draft. Their 2020 high school or college seasons had been cut short or canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. They lost that chance at increasing their individual stock, and furthermore, the draft had been reduced to just five rounds. Lefthanders Shane Drohan and Jeremy Wu-Yelland felt some of that anxiety. The two were in their junior years of college. Drohan attended Florida State and Wu-Yelland played at the University of Hawaii. There was a chance both could have gone undrafted and thus would have been tasked with the tough decision of signing a free agent deal capped at $20,000 or returning to school for their senior year. “I didn’t know if I was going to get drafted,” Wu-Yelland said in a phone interview. “My agent was kind of telling me that it might happen, it might not. Just be ready for anything.” Said Drohan, “I knew the scouting report on me was I have the stuff to shoot up on draft boards but I haven’t really put it together yet. I felt like I was doing that this year and then once [the season] got shut down, that definitely played into the stress of it, like, ‘Did I show enough?’ ” As it turned out, both players showed enough. The Red Sox selected Wu-Yelland in the fourth round and Drohan in the fifth. -
BUYBACK AUTOGRAPHS A.J. Puk Aaron Nola Adam Ottavino Andrew
BUYBACK AUTOGRAPHS A.J. Puk Aaron Nola Adam Ottavino Andrew Benintendi Anthony Rizzo Austin Meadows Austin Riley Blake Snell Bo Bichette Bobby Bradley Brendan McKay Brendan Rodgers Bryce Harper Buster Posey Carter Kieboom Cesar Hernandez Charlie Morton Chris Sale Christian Vazquez Christian Yelich Clayton Kershaw Corey Dickerson Corey Kluber Daniel Vogelbach Dansby Swanson David Peralta David Price Dawel Lugo DJ LeMahieu Dominic Smith Dylan Cease Eloy Jimenez Eugenio Suarez Fernando Tatis Jr. Francisco Lindor Gavin Lux George Springer Gerrit Cole Gleyber Torres Hunter Dozier Hunter Pence Jack Flaherty Jake Bauers JD Martinez Jean Segura Joey Votto Jorge Alfaro Jorge Polanco Jose Altuve Josh Hader Josh Naylor Juan Soto Justin Smoak Keston Hiura Ketel Marte Kevin Newman Kohl Stewart Kris Bryant Kyle Hendicks Lance McCullers Jr. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. Lucas Giolito Luis Severino Matt Carpenter Matt Olson Max Kepler Max Muncy Max Scherzer Michael Chavis Miguel Cabrera Mike Clevinger Mike Trout Mitch Garver Mitch Haniger Mitch Keller Nick Senzel Nolan Arenado Ozzie Albies Patrick Corbin Paul DeJong Paul Goldschmidt Pete Alonso Renato Nunez Rhys Hoskins Ronald Acuña Jr. Rowdy Tellez Scott Kingery Shane Bieber Shin-Soo Choo Shohei Ohtani Tim Anderson Tommy La Stella Travis Shaw Trevor Bauer Trevor May Victor Robles Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Whit Merrifield Will Smith Willson Contreras Yasmani Grandal Zack Wheeler DUAL BUYBACK AUTOGRAPHS George Springer/Jose Altuve Houston Astros® Ronald Acuña Jr./Ozzie Albies Atlanta Braves™ Gleyber Torres/Miguel Andujar New York Yankees® Mike Trout/Shohei Ohtani Angels® Anthony Rizzo/Kris Bryant Chicago Cubs® Scott Kingery/Rhys Hoskins Philadelphia Phillies®. -
2014 All-American Release Spring 5-29-14.Indd
The Voice Of Amateur Baseball Collegiate Post Office: P.O. Box 50566, Tucson, AZ 85703 Overnight Shipping: 2515 N. Stone Ave., Tucson, AZ 85705 Main Telephone: (520) 623-4530 FAX Line: (520) 624-5501 Baseball E-Mail: [email protected] Web Site: www.baseballnews.com Contact: Lou Pavlovich, Jr. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Office: (520) 623-4530 For Immediate Release: Thursday, May 29, 2014 NCAA Division I All-Americans TUCSON, Ariz. — The Louisville Slugger NCAA Division I All-American baseball teams and National Player of The Year were announced today by Collegiate Baseball newspaper. The 17-man first team, chosen by performances up to regional playoffs and picked by the staff of Collegiate Baseball newspaper, features 11 conference players or pitchers of the year, including: • RHP Aaron Nola, Louisiana St. (Pitcher of Year Southeastern Conference). • LHP Jace Fry, Oregon St. (Pitcher of Year Pac-12 Conference). • RHP Andrew Morales, U.C. Irvine (Pitcher of Year Big West). • LHP Nathan Kirby, Virginia (Co-Pitcher of Year Atlantic Coast Conference). • LHP Chris Diaz, Miami, Fla. (Co-Pitcher of Year Atlantic Coast Conference). • C Max Pentecost, Kennesaw St. (Player of Year Atlantic Sun Conference). • 1B Casey Gillaspie, Wichita St. (Player of Year Missouri Valley Conference). • 2B Jace Conrad, Louisiana-Lafayette (Player of Year Sun Belt Conference). • OF Michael Conforto, Oregon St. (Player of Year Pac-12 Conference). • OF Michael Katz, William & Mary (Player of Year Colonial Athletic Association). • UT A.J. Reed, Kentucky (Player of Year Southeastern Conference). Kentucky’s A.J. Reed is Collegiate Baseball’s National Player Of The Year after one of the best seasons in college baseball history. -
San Francisco Giants Weekly Notes: April 13-19
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS WEEKLY NOTES: APRIL 13-19 Oracle Park 24 Willie Mays Plaza San Francisco, CA 94107 Phone: 415-972-2000 sfgiants.com sfgigantes.com giantspressbox.com @SFGiants @SFGigantes @SFGiantsMedia NEWS & NOTES RADIO & TV THIS WEEK The Giants have created sfgiants.com/ Last Friday, Sony and the MLBPA launched fans/resource-center as a destination for MLB The Show Players League, a 30-player updates regarding the 2020 baseball sea- eSports league that will run for approxi- son as well as a place to find resources that mately three weeks. OF Hunter Pence will Monday - April 13 are being offered throughout our commu- represent the Giants. For more info, see nities during this difficult time. page two . 7:35 a.m. - Mike Krukow Fans interested in the weekly re-broadcast After crowning a fan-favorite Giant from joins Murph & Mac of classic Giants games can find a schedule the 1990-2009 era, IF Brandon Crawford 5 p.m. - Gabe Kapler for upcoming broadcasts at sfgiants.com/ has turned his sights to finding out which joins Tolbert, Krueger & Brooks fans/broadcasts cereal is the best. See which cereal won Tuesday - April 14 his CerealWars bracket 7:35 a.m. - Duane Kuiper joins Murph & Mac THIS WEEK IN GIANTS HISTORY 4:30 p.m. - Dave Flemming joins Tolbert, Krueger & Brooks APR OF Barry Bonds hit APR On Opening Day at APR Two of the NL’s top his 661st home run, the Polo Grounds, pitchers battled it Wednesday - April 15 13 passing Willie Mays 16 Mel Ott hit his 511th 18 out in San Francis- 7:35 a.m. -
San Francisco Giants
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS 2016 END OF SEASON NOTES 24 Willie Mays Plaza • San Francisco, CA 94107 • Phone: 415-972-2000 sfgiants.com • sfgigantes.com • sfgiantspressbox.com • @SFGiants • @SFGigantes • @SFG_Stats THE GIANTS: Finished the 2016 campaign (59th in San Francisco and 134th GIANTS BY THE NUMBERS overall) with a record of 87-75 (.537), good for second place in the National NOTE 2016 League West, 4.0 games behind the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers...the 2016 Series Record .............. 23-20-9 season marked the 10th time that the Dodgers and Giants finished in first and Series Record, home ..........13-7-6 second place (in either order) in the NL West...they also did so in 1971, 1994 Series Record, road ..........10-13-3 (strike-shortened season), 1997, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2012, 2014 and 2015. Series Openers ...............24-28 Series Finales ................29-23 OCTOBER BASEBALL: San Francisco advanced to the postseason for the Monday ...................... 7-10 fourth time in the last sevens seasons and for the 26th time in franchise history Tuesday ....................13-12 (since 1900), tied with the A's for the fourth-most appearances all-time behind Wednesday ..................10-15 the Yankees (52), Dodgers (30) and Cardinals (28)...it was the 12th postseason Thursday ....................12-5 appearance in SF-era history (since 1958). Friday ......................14-12 Saturday .....................17-9 Sunday .....................14-12 WILD CARD NOTES: The Giants and Mets faced one another in the one-game April .......................12-13 wild-card playoff, which was added to the MLB postseason in 2012...it was the May .........................21-8 second time the Giants played in this one-game playoff and the second time that June ...................... -
Sabermetrics: the Past, the Present, and the Future
Sabermetrics: The Past, the Present, and the Future Jim Albert February 12, 2010 Abstract This article provides an overview of sabermetrics, the science of learn- ing about baseball through objective evidence. Statistics and baseball have always had a strong kinship, as many famous players are known by their famous statistical accomplishments such as Joe Dimaggio’s 56-game hitting streak and Ted Williams’ .406 batting average in the 1941 baseball season. We give an overview of how one measures performance in batting, pitching, and fielding. In baseball, the traditional measures are batting av- erage, slugging percentage, and on-base percentage, but modern measures such as OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging percentage) are better in predicting the number of runs a team will score in a game. Pitching is a harder aspect of performance to measure, since traditional measures such as winning percentage and earned run average are confounded by the abilities of the pitcher teammates. Modern measures of pitching such as DIPS (defense independent pitching statistics) are helpful in isolating the contributions of a pitcher that do not involve his teammates. It is also challenging to measure the quality of a player’s fielding ability, since the standard measure of fielding, the fielding percentage, is not helpful in understanding the range of a player in moving towards a batted ball. New measures of fielding have been developed that are useful in measuring a player’s fielding range. Major League Baseball is measuring the game in new ways, and sabermetrics is using this new data to find better mea- sures of player performance. -
Phillies Legend Remembered As
C4 | Tuesday, December 8, 2020 |beaumontenterprise.com |BeaumontEnterprise SPORTS DICK ALLEN: 1942-2020 Phillies legendrememberedas‘courageouswarrior’ By RobMaaddi parkevery dayand just play were 56-106 and only AP SPORTS WRITER baseball.” 495,000 people came out Allen wasMiddleton’sfa- to Comiskey Parktosee DickAllen hitthe ballso vorite player as akid. He them. hard, fans in Philadelphia called the abuseAllenre- “It wasone of those startedshowing up in bat- ceived“horrific” and point- things wherethe fans were ting practice during his ed outhis accomplish- kind of down in the rookieseasonjusttowatch ments areevengreatercon- dumps,”Bill Melton, hisAll- him hammer shots overthe sidering the racism he en- Star teammate in Chicago, Coca-Cola sign atopthe left- dured. recalled Monday. “Things center field roof at Connie Allen batted .292 with 351 were bad. The economy Mack Stadium. home runs, 1,119RBIs and wasbad,everything.” The rousing attention, he .912 OPSin15seasons.He “I think Dick just brought gotthatearly.The rightful playedfirst base, thirdbase aflavortothe WhiteSox. acclaim,sadly,hehad to and left field. And the flavorwas this: na- wait much longer. Afterseven years in Phil- tional attention. We’d go in- Allen, aseven-timeAll- adelphia, Allen playeda to NewYork, we’d finally Star sluggerwhose fight season each with the Cardi- getwriters,press, pictures against racism duringatu- nals and Dodgers. back to Chicago. …Wewere multuoustime with the In 1972, he joined the starting to draw attention, Philliesinthe 1960scost WhiteSox andwas an im- magazine covers,”hesaid. him on and off the field, mediate hitinwinningthe Melton said Allen would died Monday.Hewas 78. AL MVP.Allen led the AL in always shrug off theHall of The 1964 NL Rookie of Matt Slocum /AssociatedPress homers(37), RBIs (113), on- Fame vote,sayingitwasn’t Year and1972 AL MVP hada Former Philadelphia Phillies greatDickAllen, pictured in 2017,aseven-time base averageand slugging meant to be. -
UCLA Baseball Program, Head Coach John Savage Has the 3/30 at Arizona* 12:00 P.M
UCUCLALA Sports Information Baseball u J.D. Morgan Center u 325 Westwood Plaza u Los Angeles, CA 90024 Baseball SID: Alex Timiraos u [email protected] u (310) 206-4008 u (310) 825-8664 FAX 2007 STATS LEADERS (returners) NO. 1 UCLA OPENS 2008 CAMPAIGN AGAINST OKLAHOMA Name GP-GS AVG H HR RBI Bruins, Sooners previously met in Oklahoma City at 2000, 2004 NCAA Regionals Alden Carrithers 61-61 .352 82 2 32 Gabe Cohen 56-51 .345 71 10 36 UCLA opens the season with a three-game home OKLAHOMA (0-0) AT NO. 1 UCLA (0-0) Brandon Crawford 61-61 .335 83 7 55 series on Friday, Feb. 22, against Oklahoma, a at UCLA’s Jackie Robinson Stadium Jermaine Curtis 37-37 .329 50 4 33 perennial contender in the Big 12 Conference. UCLA Cody Decker 54-49 .307 59 14 57 Friday, Feb. 22, 6 p.m. (2007 stats) holds a 4-3 all-time record against Oklahoma, as OU - Jeremy Erben, RHP, So. (JC transfer) Name GP-GS ERA W-L IP SO the two teams met at Cal State Fullerton in the Kia UCLA - Gavin Brooks, LHP, So. (6-7, 4.47 ERA) Garett Claypool 23-7 3.54 3-1 53.1 35 Baseball Bash – Oklahoma defeated UCLA, 7-2, on Gavin Brooks 18-18 4.47 6-7 110.2 98 Saturday, Feb. 23, 3 p.m. Jason Novak 24-0 4.83 3-0 41.0 38 March 4, 2005. The Bruins and Sooners also met in the Oklahoma City Regional in 2000 and 2004. -
Baseball Classics All-Time All-Star Greats Game Team Roster
BASEBALL CLASSICS® ALL-TIME ALL-STAR GREATS GAME TEAM ROSTER Baseball Classics has carefully analyzed and selected the top 400 Major League Baseball players voted to the All-Star team since it's inception in 1933. Incredibly, a total of 20 Cy Young or MVP winners were not voted to the All-Star team, but Baseball Classics included them in this amazing set for you to play. This rare collection of hand-selected superstars player cards are from the finest All-Star season to battle head-to-head across eras featuring 249 position players and 151 pitchers spanning 1933 to 2018! Enjoy endless hours of next generation MLB board game play managing these legendary ballplayers with color-coded player ratings based on years of time-tested algorithms to ensure they perform as they did in their careers. Enjoy Fast, Easy, & Statistically Accurate Baseball Classics next generation game play! Top 400 MLB All-Time All-Star Greats 1933 to present! Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player 1933 Cincinnati Reds Chick Hafey 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Mort Cooper 1957 Milwaukee Braves Warren Spahn 1969 New York Mets Cleon Jones 1933 New York Giants Carl Hubbell 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Enos Slaughter 1957 Washington Senators Roy Sievers 1969 Oakland Athletics Reggie Jackson 1933 New York Yankees Babe Ruth 1943 New York Yankees Spud Chandler 1958 Boston Red Sox Jackie Jensen 1969 Pittsburgh Pirates Matty Alou 1933 New York Yankees Tony Lazzeri 1944 Boston Red Sox Bobby Doerr 1958 Chicago Cubs Ernie Banks 1969 San Francisco Giants Willie McCovey 1933 Philadelphia Athletics Jimmie Foxx 1944 St. -
Em Reading: Hit a Home Run with Reading
Hit a Home Run with Reading! • Keep ’em Reading • Grades by | Carol Thompson K–2, 3–5 Library Incentive Program and Party Join the World Series anticipation with this read- ing incentive and encourage your students to hit a home run. This month-long unit will prove to a fun learning experience. Objective: To get kids to read Incentive Summary This is a great incentive for October (World Series) or springtime incentive. Using the theme of base- ball, students are encouraged to hit a home run Activities and celebrate their favorite teams and players while • Read various baseball books. (Suggested learning about the history of America’s best-loved Resources on page 4.) sport. Readers keep up with their stats on a base- • Locate fan Web sites and have students write ball field record sheet and earn tickets to the com- a letter to a favorite player, manager, or coach. munity minor league baseball team on the school Teach and/or review proper form for friendly night. The school also hosts an old-fashioned hot letter. Letters can be e-mailed too. dog and apple pie cookout. • Act out the book Casey at the Bat or use it as a reader’s theater. • Have a favorite team dress-up day where stu- Bulletin Board dents wear their baseball/softball uniforms Here’s a sample of our “Hit a Home Run with (including hats which are normally against Reading!” bulletin board. Get creative. Baseball dress code so the kids love it!). bats and baseballs can create great letters. It also • Have the High School baseball or softball team looks good to use old book covers on this bulletin players or coaches come and read to classes board for a 3-D effect. -
2016 PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES (71-91) Fourth Place, National League East Division, -24.0 Games Manager: Pete Mackanin, 2Nd Season
2016 PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES (71-91) Fourth Place, National League East Division, -24.0 Games Manager: Pete Mackanin, 2nd season 2016 SEASON RECAP: Philadelphia went 71-91 (.438) in 2016, an eight-win improvement from the previous year (63 W, .388 win %) … It marked the Phillies fourth consecutive season under .500 (73- PHILLIES PHACTS 89 in both 2013 & 2014, 63-99 in 2015), which is their longest streak since they posted seven consecutive Record: 71-91 (.438) losing seasons from 1994 to 2000 ... The Phillies finished in 4th place in the NL East, 24.0 games behind Home: 37-44 the Washington Nationals, and posted 90 or more losses in a season for the 39th time in club history … Road: 34-47 Philadelphia had 99 losses in 2015, marking the first time they have had 90+ losses in back-to-back Current Streak: Won 1 Last 5 Games: 1-4 seasons since 1996-97 (95, 94) … Overall, the club batted .240 this year with a .301 OBP, .384 SLG, Last 10 Games: 2-8 .685 OPS, 427 extra-base hits (231 2B, 35 3B, 161 HR) and a ML-low 610 runs scored (3.77 RPG) … Series Record: 18-28-6 Phillies pitchers combined for a 4.63 ERA (739 ER, 1437.0 IP), which included a 4.41 ERA for the starters Sweeps/Swept: 6/9 and a 5.01 mark for the pen. PHILLIES AT HOME HOT START, COOL FINISH: Philadelphia began the season with a 24-17 record over their first 41 th Games Played: 81 games … Their .585 winning percentage over that period (4/4-5/18) was the 6 -best in MLB, trailing Record: 37-44 (.457) only the Chicago Cubs (.718, 28-11), Baltimore Orioles (.615, 24-15), Boston Red Sox (.610, 25-16), CBP (est.