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Showing posts with label Hideki Matsui. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hideki Matsui. Show all posts

Matsuiland has Officially Closed in Anaheim

It was one year ago today that the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim would officially close the door on the return of "Big Daddy" Vladimir Guerrero and start its preparations to open Southern California's newest Theme Park... Matsuiland. Hideki Matsui coming off a World Series MVP Title would sign with the Angels for $6.5 Million dollars, with promise of an influx of Japanese Media, sponsorship, added fan base, and most importantly production. Matsui's production in Anaheim was pretty close to his production in New York. Maybe Matsui had a few more strikes outs and few less home runs, but I don't think anyone would complain about the effort that Godzilla put forth in Anaheim. And although he seemed to be a very beneficial addition to the Halos Roster in 2010, you almost knew that he wouldn't be returning.

After seven years with the New York Yankees and one year with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Hideki Matsui will now be taking his talents to the Bay Area for perennial American League West Runner Ups, the Oakland Athletics. Two days ago, Matsui signed a one-year contract worth $4.25 million with the Oakland A's still wearing #55 and occasionally playing Left Field while usually playing DH. And I would expect that Matsui's numbers in Oakland will be comparable to his numbers in Anaheim. So although Matsuiland has been condemned, it will be only a matter of time when the dozen or so fans left in Oakland build their shrine to the one they call Godzilla.

Thanks for your efforts in 2010 Hideki Matsui. But you will not be missed.

Three Strikes and Your Out #1

"Strike Three Your Out" 
It isn't just an expression you want to hear the home plate ump exclaim after Weaver throws another nasty change up.  It will be a semi-regular column I write here on First2Third.net to express three points on my Halo Mind. 

Carl Crawford:  My brother, the closet Tampa Rays Fan, has always talked about Carl Crawford.  And has been saying for nearly his entire MLB Career that the Angels need Crawford. Sure Crawford right now has visions of hoisting a World Series Trophy above his head looking out into the dugout and shouting "Yo Maddon... we did it!" with a single tear dripping down his cheek.  But before long Carl Crawford has to look at closing the door on his career in Tamp Bay.  Its all but advertised in the center of ESPN Magazine that Crawford will be too pricey to remain a Ray at the conclusion of the 2010 season.  There is a possibility that CC could come back to the Rays, but with the amount of money that would have to be left on the table, it seems that a return to Tampa is very unlikely.  What doesn't seem unlikely is Crawford demanding premium money to play Left Field in greener pastures.  Jon Paul Morosi reports that Big Pappi thinks that Crawford will either be a Yankee or an Angel.  And it isn't unlike New York to drive the market prices to unreasonable areas.  The Yankees will also add players when they think it will help them win.  Next year's outfield already seems somewhat full with Nick Swisher, Curtis Grandersen, and the platoon of Austin Kerns and Brett Gardner.  So where do you fit Crawford in that outfield?  Well hopefully, you don't.  Which leads to Uncle Arte.  Arte Moreno isn't my uncle... but I wish he was.  One of the things missing from this season is someone to consistently drive in runs.  Crawford has hit over .300 since 2005, with the exception of 2008 when he was injured and then still hit .270.  Crawford also has a little pop and lots of speed.  With the exception of 2008 has stolen over 40 bags a year.  Crawford is definitely a player who can help the Angels return to form in 2011 and is one of those guys capable of going First to Third.

Jack Zduriencik, it was nearly a year ago that much of the media was anointing Zduriencik GM of the year and how shrewd he was to "Steal" Cliff Lee from the Philies and how adding, Chone Figgins, and Mitlon Bradley to the Ichiro Mariners would certainly guarantee them the West.  What good ole Jack Z didn't know is that Milton Bradley is a bum, Figgins' success in Anaheim was more of a testament of Mike Scioscia, and that Cliff Lee didn't thrive in the Pacific Northwest.  You can't blame Jack Z for all of his mistakes.  I mean, I would have jumped at the opportunity to give prospects away for Cliff Lee too.  He wasn't the only one.  Jon Daniels did it too.  Once the Mariners decided the season was a wash, good ole Zduri decided to trade to American League West rivals, Rangers.  And although Cliff Lee was awesome in last years Playoffs, in Texas he just hasn't been the same guy.  I was one of the few guys who was saying Figgins should have been traded last year, of course that was with the impression that Brandon Wood was the second coming of Bobby Grich and would have a first full season much like his first baseman counter part Kendry Morales.  I was wrong.  But Jack was wrong to sign Figgins to that kind of deal.  And then, the Mariners decided to move Jose Lopez, last years every day second baseman to third and Figgins who was an everyday third baseman back to second?  Why?  Because Figgins didn't have traditional power corner numbers?  Really?  The Mariners made a huge mistake right there.  Figgins was comfortable at third.  Moving him to second made him adjust to another position, in a new ball park, with a new team, with a new coach.  Bad move.  And Milton Bradley... don't get me started on that guy.  There is a reason he has had trouble spending any significant time with a team.  When I asked Mariner fans who would be driving in all the runs when Ichiro and Figgins got on base, I kept hearing Bradley would drive them in.  And Griffey would.  Well Griffey would wind up falling asleep in the locker room and Bradley ended up in relationship therapy.  Jack over paid for a third baseman that they converted back to second base.  What Jack should have done was sign a World Series MVP to bat DH and occasionally play Left Field.  Which takes me to my next point.

Hideki Matsui, was signed to be the Designated Hitter for the Angels last season.  He was signed for significantly more than what Jon Daniels payed Vladimir Guerrero to put on that terrible blue jersey.  Now I know Vlad's contract was affected by the Matsui signing and the Angels would have probably have had to paid significantly more to keep him a Halo.  But Matsui and the Angels just didn't seem like a good fit.  And now with less than 20 games left in the season, it still looks bad.  After hearing some delicious speculation that Matsui was more of an ambassador to Japan than a real solution at DH, the signing made sense.  But where it would have made better sense would have been Japan.  I once heard Matsui and Ichiro called the Derek Jetter and A-Rod of Japan.  Wouldn't Seattle have benefited from the addition of another Japanese Superstar.  Wouldn't have the Mariners benefited from a Left Handed hitter, with power who could have plugged the wholes in the line up left by the departing Adrian Beltre?  And wouldn't the Japanese fans want to see their two biggest stars playing together?  Just seems like another blown call by Jack Z.  But back to Matsuiland.  The Halo faithful attempted to rally behind the affectionately called Godzilla.  But again, he wasn't the player he was advertised as.  Slumps through most of the season, haven't helped the 3rd Place Angels or the career of Matsui.  And although his one year in Anaheim will go down as one of the worst seasons for the Angels this decade, it isn't entirely Matsui's fault.  Matsuiland will be closing in early October and the Angels will look for a new Designated Hitter in the off-season. 

This is Three Strikes... and I'm out!

Go Halos.

Weaver plays the stop, I get free stuff, and the Angels Win!

This shot of the Big A behind the Budweiser Patio is typically the back drop of my seats.  I spend most games in Section 241 in Right Field.  The past few years I had multi-game packages in that area.  I love siting in Right Field, especially that section, because you don't have to shift your head or tweak your neck and back to watch the game.  But this isn't where I sat last night.  I took my daughter, Lily to the game last night.  At 5 years of age, I've raised her right, she's a true Angels fan.  She was excited to receive her Rally Monkey Lunch Box.  We approach the ticket booth, our attendance to this game was planned at the last minute.  There was a guy standing in line in front of us.  He asks me, "You buying tickets to the game?"  It was at this point I noticed two tickets in his hands.  I've bought tickets once before like this, great deal on great seats, but today I had no cash.  I explain to the guy, "I don't have any cash."  To my shock and probably awe, the kind gentleman says "No, I'm not selling them.  I'm giving them away.  Their yours.  You'll love them, 9 rows back on the third base side."  Any minute I half expected Ashton Kutcher to jump out, so after another thanks, we worked our way to the entrance. No Ashton, no Punk, the tickets were good.  And the seats were even better.  And it seems the positive Karma this gentleman gave would pay it forward to the Angels. 
Weaver plays the role of stopper, Matsui wins the game and I get free stuff, how much better time can you have at an Angel Game.  We took our seats right shortly after the National Anthem.  I got a few shots of the field, nothing pro status, but fun all the same.  I'll be posting these on the Diamond Aces fan page on facebook.  I have to be honest.  I missed most of the game, because my daughter wanted to get a photo with the Rally Monkey.  It was a nice effort, but failed in the execution.  Did watch Weaver go a couple of innings looking perfect.  Then thanks to the free tickets, got a free SOBET Life Water, or what my daughter calls, Lizard Juice.  We spent the next three innings waiting to see the Rally Monkey.  Finally we sat down at the top of the eight.  Shields doesn't look like the old Shields, maybe its a timing issue, maybe he needs more time, but he wasn't the Shields of 2008.  Rodney made a case for himself to get some starts closing.  He looked un-hit-able.  Then we got to see Matsui make the As pay for walking Torii Hunter, after the awesome double by Abreu.  Lily liked the Rally Monkey dancing and then Godzilla Dancing.  I liked the Angels not going 1-5 to start the season.  We both came home happy!

The STREAK begins 1/162

On April 6th there would only be 13 Teams with a perfect record, Baltimore and Tampa Bay have yet to play.  I was only pretty sure the Angels would be one of them.  The Angels sit atop the Western Division mountain in an all too familiar fashion.  However the Angels are not a lone, The Texas Rangers and Seattle Mariners are still right there with them.  I hope the Oakland As get comfortable in their spot in the cellar, now to get the Rangers and Mariners used to looking up at the Angels in 1st.


The Halo offense came pretty much from the Hansen Brothers... you now MMM-POP, Mathis, Morales, and Matsui all hit homeruns.  Morales scored a couple of RBI and I was really impressed with Aybar leading off.  If Mathis keeps up his offense numbers like that, we might be saying good-bye to Mr. Napoli.  Not to mention Weaver was dealing.  It was far from a perfect pitching, but it was good enough for the win.  And not to mention all the Ks. And Brian Fuentes got save number 1.  Will he surpass last years numbers? 

I wasn't happy with the performance of one Brandon Wood.  Surely he has a 161 games to prove that he's the real deal, but last night he looked a little loss.

You have got to be excited about what the Angels are doing and if you aren't... you aren't an Angel fan.

My Off Season Grade for the Angels, B.

Take a look at what the Angels did right this off season. They didn't over pay for any free agents including their own. They offered arbitration to the two guys who got picked up quickly, which netted them four draft picks. Replaced Vlad with a cheaper, more patient hitter, in Matsui. Replaced lefty Darren Oliver (7th Inning Reliever), who is/was still valuable for a former closer who saved 37 of 38 games last year. That move bolstered the bullpen, which was a huge problem for the Angels last year and with the return of Scott Shields the 7th, 8th, and 9th will look better than it did last year. The Angels also re-signed Abreu who had over 100 RBI. Then you have guys like Torii Hunter who is a Silver Slugger and Golden Glover winner, Morales who hit 34 Homeruns and 103 RBI., a platoon at 2B who hit over 18 home runs, a catching platoon who hit over 25 home runs, and I haven't even got into AVG. OBP. or OPS. And the Halos Rotation consist of three players who have been All-Stars, and another guy who had an All-Star year last year.

Just because the Halos front office didn't over spend on declining free agents or trade away their entire farm system for a one year rental doesn't make them worse.  Spending money in the right places, like adding Fernando Rodney who can save the Angels money in the long run by not allowing Fuentes contract to vest.  Spending money on bringing in a World Series MVP, Hideki Matsui, who is a proven commodity in a World Series race and who's patience at the bat could rub off on younger players like Brandon Wood or Howie Kendrick.  The re-signing of Bobby Abreu was a necessity after he was able to influence batters like Erick Aybar and Maicer Izturis.  Hopefully the veteran leadership of Abreu, Hunter, and Matsui can rub off on the much younger infield. 

The real interesting move the Angels committed to is Matt Palmer.  Last year's off season was picked up relatively cheap when he couldn't keep a job in San Francisco.  Palmer to collect 11 wins, with a handful of those wins coming in relief.  There is something about Palmer that kept the Angels in a lot of situations that they probably should have lost.  Tony Reagins has even said that the "5th starters spot is Palmer's to lose."  Personally, I would have rather had the Angels pursue a project like project like Chien-Ming Wang or even a Ben Sheets.  But you cannot deny the successful decisions of the Front Office, and you have to accept that they know a lot more than most of us bloggers.  But what do you think?  Are the Angels making smart decisions with their money?  Did they blow it, by not pursuing Sheets or Wang?  Can Palmer pan out as a regular 5th man starter?  Leave me a comment and tell me what you think.

Wang maybe Right.

According to Peter Abraham of the Boston Globe, by way of MLBTradeRumors, Chien-Ming Wang is telling friends he's prepare to move on from the Yankees.  Abraham goes on to say that Wang should be ready to join a MLB rotation in May.
Wouldn't it make sense for the Angels to take a shot at Chien-Ming?


He had some mechanic issues coming off an injury, similarly to Kazmir.  He speaks enough English to conduct interviews, which probably means he understands enough to talk things out with Butcher.  Coming off an injury and an inflated ERA, Wang's market has got to be low.   Plus, "Wang has been idolized in Taiwan where all of his games are televised nationwide, many on public big screens to large audiences."
Part of what sold me on Godzilla was the opening of new revenue streams.  Couldn't Chien-Ming Wang also open similar revenue streams in Taiwan?
The Ninja could surely offer a 1 year, low base-heavy incentive contract to Wang.  This signing would keep Palmer in the bullpen, O'Sullivan a little more time to develop in AAA, and a potential ace to fill out our line up.  And if Wang doesn't return to his previous self, he surely could fill out the 5th spot of the rotation.  And if he's terrible, you could make the decision between Sully and Palmer.

What do you think?

You have your fear, which might become reality; and you have [Matsui], which IS reality.

It was announced on December 14th that the Angels were in serious negotiations with Hideki Matsui.  Matsui coming off a World Series MVP award was looking for a new home, when it was announced that the Yankees wouldn't be bringing him back.  All of the speculation was Matsui would only be interested in playing for a city with a large Asian population and an American League team, which could allow him to DH.  This led many to think that the MVP would be playing in Seattle, Oakland, or L.A.  Fortunately for the Angels, Matsui filled a lot of holes on and off the field.

It was apparent that Vladimir Guerrero wouldn't be coming back.  And the sport of baseball has been growing internationally for years.  Their are many Japanese players in the Majors.  But very few are of the status of Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki and the newly acquired Hideki Matsui.  Rev Halofan of HalosHeaven brought up a good point in his article entitled Hideki Matsui Signing a Goal of Angels President John Carpino.  Rev goes on to mention Billboard advertising was another bonus to signing Matsui. 

The minute that Arte Moreno purchased the then Anaheim Angels from the Disney Corporation and wanted to take the Angels to the next level.  Shortly after the purchase, there was free-agent spending, a name change, lower beer prices, and 5 American League West Championships Titles.  A Matsui signing opens up a window to fans of baseball in Japan who still idolize Matsui, perhaps new revenue streams.  Or what I'm sure would make Uncle Arte happiest, a legion of fans in Japan wearing Angel Red Hats, television broadcasting rights, and maybe an opening day game in Japan.  

On the field Matsui is a true professional, or in other words, he won't swing at pitches in the dirt.  He's patient and will draw a lot of walks.  He also has a lot of power and can help drive in a lot of runs.  Matsui will add international star power to the Halos.  Off the field, the Angels will take advantage of the larger fan base.  More revenue streams.  This move will make the team better, immediately.  If Bobby Abreu's approach helped the players last year, Matsui's approach will help the team this year.  Sure I'll miss Vladimir Guerrero.  But I'm already picturing the the sound guy at the stadium ripping the soundtrack to Kaiju daisenso and animations on the scoreboard with Matsui's face photo-shopped on Godzilla and Matsui will be shooting lazer beams out of his eyes and breathing nuclear fire through the cities of opposing teams.  And when the spectacle is over on the score board, Matsui was crush a ball to the Angels Bullpen with Matsui doing his job and being professional