ChiefsPlanet

ChiefsPlanet (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/index.php)
-   Nzoner's Game Room (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/forumdisplay.php?f=1)
-   -   Other Sports 2012 Baltimore Orioles repository thread (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=260130)

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-08-2012 08:23 PM

78-61 Big win JJ scared me in 9th.

Titty Meat 09-08-2012 08:34 PM

How bout them o's hon?

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-08-2012 08:37 PM

Steve Berthiaume ‏@SBerthiaumeESPN

#Orioles really bad news. RT / @richardjustice: Nick Markakis broken bone in thumb. Gone around six weeks pending more exam.



I wanna cry

chefsos 09-08-2012 08:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefsandO'sfan (Post 8889543)
Steve Berthiaume ‏@SBerthiaumeESPN

#Orioles really bad news. RT / @richardjustice: Nick Markakis broken bone in thumb. Gone around six weeks pending more exam.



I wanna cry

****! Damnit, Nick has been driving this team throughout the second half. This is really bad.

NJChiefsFan 09-08-2012 08:46 PM

That's rough on Markakis. After going through the rough times, feel bad for the guy, even as a Yankees fan. Sweet call to end the game. Shit happens. Maybe if Tex isn't hurt he runs through the bag. I hate when guys slide. You slow down and make the ump guess. Umps are waiting for sound and when you take away things are gonna happen.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-08-2012 08:55 PM

http://i.imgur.com/wc4lX.gif


The O's got a call that's a first.

chefsos 09-08-2012 08:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NJChiefsFan (Post 8889582)
That's rough on Markakis. After going through the rough times, feel bad for the guy, even as a Yankees fan. Sweet call to end the game. Shit happens. Maybe if Tex isn't hurt he runs through the bag. I hate when guys slide. You slow down and make the ump guess. Umps are waiting for sound and when you take away things are gonna happen.

Looks like a bad call to me, too. I'm not giving back the W. Well, actually I would if it meant getting back Markakis.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-08-2012 09:15 PM

<a href="http://tinypic.com?ref=34gvay8" target="_blank"><img src="http://i47.tinypic.com/34gvay8.jpg" border="0" alt="Image and video hosting by TinyPic"></a>

NJChiefsFan 09-08-2012 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chefsos (Post 8889627)
Looks like a bad call to me, too. I'm not giving back the W. Well, actually I would if it meant getting back Markakis.

I wouldn't give it back if the situation was reversed either. No question from the SS view you can see it wasn't close. Like I said, when you slide head-first, you make it harder on the ump. I am not gonna get on Tex though. He always goes all out. Also, along the lines of what you said, if Tex stretching for first pulled his groin again it wouldn't have been worth it.

stonedstooge 09-08-2012 09:51 PM

Teixeira's a little bitch

Dr. Johnny Fever 09-08-2012 10:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stonedstooge (Post 8889945)
Teixeira's a little bitch

He is but he was right on that play. He was safe. Oh well I hate the Yankees and I'm glad they lost.

On another note I love those O's uni's tonight.

Deberg_1990 09-08-2012 10:35 PM

Why doesn't MLB have instant replay? There's really no excuse anymore.

Dr. Johnny Fever 09-08-2012 10:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 8890107)
Why doesn't MLB have instant replay? There's really no excuse anymore.

So the Yankees can get screwed tonight. It was worth it, heh.

Deberg_1990 09-08-2012 10:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dr. Johnny Fever (Post 8890109)
So the Yankees can get screwed tonight. It was worth it, heh.

Well, the last straw for me was the guy who got screwed out of a perfect game a few years ago.

Dr. Johnny Fever 09-08-2012 10:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 8890113)
Well, the last straw for me was the guy who got screwed out of a perfect game a few years ago.

I agree there are no excuses. Being a purist is bullshit.

NJChiefsFan 09-08-2012 11:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dr. Johnny Fever (Post 8890101)
He is but he was right on that play. He was safe. Oh well I hate the Yankees and I'm glad they lost.

On another note I love those O's uni's tonight.

If I was building a team players like Teixeira are the ones I would want. Skill plus desire and an edgy attitude. Nobody wants to play teams with players like that. I hate the Red Sox, but I look at Pedroia in the same way.

Dr. Johnny Fever 09-08-2012 11:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NJChiefsFan (Post 8890257)
If I was building a team players like Teixeira are the ones I would want. Skill plus desire and an edgy attitude. Nobody wants to play teams with players like that. I hate the Red Sox, but I look at Pedroia in the same way.

I agree. I just hate him because he's a Yankee. If he came to KC I'd love him.

NJChiefsFan 09-08-2012 11:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dr. Johnny Fever (Post 8890262)
I agree. I just hate him because he's a Yankee. If he came to KC I'd love him.

Thats fair. If people hate him for other reasons than his jersey, I just don't get it. Winning feels even better when either everyone doubts your team, or everyone hates your team. So 3 of my teams qualify in one way or another. Two, Devils and Yankees, have given me plenty of that joy. The Chiefs are doubted, but so far in my lifetime, the media has always been right.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 09:49 AM

Big 3 games vs the Rays this week take 2 out of 3 O's.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 01:05 PM

Dan Connolly ‏@danconnollysun

Things we are hearing: LJ Hoes is here; Kevin Gregg has left the stadium with his suitcase -- we'll be down in the clubhouse soon


OMG yes Look's like Hoes is up and gregg dfa

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 01:11 PM

Baltimore Orioles ‏@Orioles

The Orioles have selected the contracts of OF Endy Chavez and L.J. Hoes from Triple-A Norfolk.



Baltimore Orioles ‏@Orioles

RHP Kevin Gregg and INF Ryan Adams have been designated for assignment.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 01:15 PM

http://thechive.files.wordpress.com/...ifsoup-com.gif

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 08:13 PM

79-62 Nice win to start off vs the Rays

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 08:30 PM

Welcome back First place.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-11-2012 09:56 PM

Orioles win games, lose players -- and every day, remind us more of the 2008 Rays

By Danny Knobler | Baseball Insider
September 11, 2012 11:53 pm ET

0 | Comment

BALTIMORE -- They win games. They lose players.

They keep thinking they're going to win, even if no one else does.

"I'm not worried at all for this team," Jason Hammel said Tuesday night, after he became the Orioles' most recent big casualty, in the Orioles' most recent big win.

For the fourth time this week, the Orioles are tied with the Yankees atop the American League East, after Tuesday's 9-2 win over the Rays. For the second time in four days, the Orioles won a game while losing a key player.

The good news: They're looking more like the 2008 Rays every day.

Hammel, who played for that last team to shock the world and win the East, drew the comparison over the weekend, in anticipation of this week's Rays-Orioles series.

"Just a bunch of guys kind of hitting their stride together," he said. "Very confident. We're just having fun."

The Rays were like that four years ago. To a certain extent, they still are now, but it's never as much fun as it is the first time, when you're really shocking the world.

That Rays team was like that. This Orioles team is like that.

And we tend to forget it now, but that Rays team dealt with two huge injuries down the stretch. They lost Carl Crawford, who had been through all the years of losing and emerged as maybe the best player on the team that won. And they lost Evan Longoria, who was the American League Rookie of the Year that season.

Yes, kind of like the Orioles, losing Nick Markakis, who had been through all the losing and emerged as maybe the best player on this team. And now they've probably lost Hammel, who will see a doctor Wednesday but didn't sound too confident that his season will continue.

Hammel left Tuesday's start in the fourth inning, complaining of the same pain that pushed him to have surgery on his right knee in mid-July, forcing him to miss nearly two months. Tuesday's start was just his second since coming off the disabled list.

"I thought we'd cleaned it up," he said. "I know I can help this team when I'm healthy . . . I don't want to be done."

The Orioles rotation is enough of a grab-bag that they often seem to go day to day, waiting as long as possible before naming their starters for a series. As of Tuesday, they hadn't yet committed to a starter for Thursday's series finale.

Not all the uncertainty is injury-related. Most of it, in fact, isn't.
But no team in baseball has made more roster moves than the Orioles, and no team is as accustomed to seeing the faces change.

"We've been down this road many times this year," manager Buck Showalter said. "A lot of challenges. So we're kind of experienced at it, anyway."

When Markakis went out, Showalter moved Nate McLouth to the leadoff spot. That's the same Nate McLouth who was released by the Pirates at the end of May, with a .140 batting average, the same Nate McLouth who was playing at Triple-A Norfolk a little more than a month ago, and the same Nate McLouth who had become the Orioles' third-place hitter.

McLouth's story is a good one, but is it any better than the Dan Johnson story for the Rays in September 2008, the day-long trip to Boston capped by a game-winning home run off Jonathan Papelbon in perhaps the most important game of that pennant run?

There's a reason that some of the Rays look at the Orioles and see themselves in a time machine.

"Seeing them in spring training, I knew this would be a tough year in the East," B.J. Upton said Tuesday. "They kind of reminded me a lot of us in '08, young guys having fun. Nobody expected them to win."

Just like those 2008 Rays, the Orioles have dealt with doubters all along. We thought they were supposed to fade, so every time they lost a few games or lost a key player we assumed that the fade was beginning.

Now we look up, with just 21 games left on the schedule, and we see that they're tied with the Yankees -- again.

The comparison with the 2008 Rays isn't exact, to be sure.

The Rays of '08 won 97 games. They scored 103 more runs than they allowed.

The Orioles of 2012 have allowed 22 more runs than they've scored. They made it this far because of an insanely good record in one-run games (25-7) and a very good record in two-run games (22-13).

Before Tuesday, they were just 4-12 in games decided by seven or more runs.

You can argue whether the record in the close games is the result of luck, a good bullpen or overall toughness. You can imagine what the Orioles think it's a result of.

"They're a professional, hard-driving group that has its mind set on a goal," Showalter said.

You can imagine Joe Maddon saying much the same thing in September 2008, even if you can imagine that Maddon would have used a few different words. You can imagine the Rays players saying what Hammel said Tuesday night.

"These guys are going to be just fine," he said.

They have been so far. They've been fine for 141 games, so fine that they're once again tied with the Yankees.

It's quite a story. And it's only getting better.

mdchiefsfan 09-11-2012 11:04 PM

Awesome article, but it really sucks to hear Hammel's mentality about his possibility to return.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-12-2012 08:46 PM

80-62 wow what a game

mcaj22 09-12-2012 08:53 PM

this is just silly

every time they just top themselves with more shit out of their ass

Nate ****ing McLouth is serious right now

chefsos 09-12-2012 09:01 PM

The play Machado and Hardy pulled off in the 9th was completely ****ing ridiculous.

http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=24721903

mcaj22 09-12-2012 09:06 PM

how did he know to do that, did he just think the throw to first base would have been at a crazy angle if the chance it was overthrown/missed or that longoria would have beat it out?

chefsos 09-12-2012 09:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcaj22 (Post 8905656)
how did he know to do that, did he just think the throw to first base would have been at a crazy angle if the chance it was overthrown/missed or that longoria would have beat it out?

Yes. No. I don't know. It would have been really close at 1B.

I thought maybe Hardy called for it because he'd snuck in behind the runner, but just now, as I watch Hardy being interviewed, he says that was all Manny.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-12-2012 09:27 PM

http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?co...857377620-1021


Man what a season, Davis picks Nate up so funny.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-12-2012 09:32 PM

<a href="http://tinypic.com?ref=ne70r4" target="_blank"><img src="http://i45.tinypic.com/ne70r4.jpg" border="0" alt="Image and video hosting by TinyPic"></a>

chefsos 09-12-2012 09:38 PM

Nobody puts Baby in a corner...

NJChiefsFan 09-12-2012 09:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcaj22 (Post 8905656)
how did he know to do that, did he just think the throw to first base would have been at a crazy angle if the chance it was overthrown/missed or that longoria would have beat it out?

There are things always in the back of your mind at 3b. Some of it is thrown in your head by coaches when you are young. A few of those are 1) hard balls down the line and runner on third do quick throw to first. Almost always gets the runner to lean. 2) what happened tonight if you have zero chance of the guy at 1st. I know the former was told to me about 20 times in H.S./college and I probably had coaches 1/200th the skill that this guy has had. Honestly I was more impressed by Hardy being there. Still a great play, especially in the momment.

Same stuff happens with middle infielders. If you are going up the middle and don't have a play at 1st you just have a quick thought to throw behind the guy at 3rd.

mcaj22 09-13-2012 04:05 PM

and somehow they pulled even more magic out of their ass to top last night!

big W in 14 today!

fan4ever 09-13-2012 04:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mcaj22 (Post 8907293)
and somehow they pulled even more magic out of their ass to top last night!

big W in 14 today!

Thier record on extra inning games is amazing this year. Go Boston.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-13-2012 06:08 PM

Man was at the game today was great. 81-62 the 14 years of losing is OVER.

Dr. Johnny Fever 09-13-2012 06:36 PM

Baltimore better damn well finish this thing. If the Yankees win the division I'm going to be very disappointed in all of you O's fans.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-15-2012 10:13 PM

If the O's get to 90 wins That is playing 9 and 8 ball rest of the way vs 1@ A's 3@ M's 3@ Red Sox 4 vs Blue Jays 3 Red Sox 3@ Ray's

Angels would need 12 Win for 91 wins. Here is what the Angels got left

1 @KC
3 Texas
3 White sox
3 M's
3@ Texas
3@ M's

Ray's would need 13 Win to get to 91, Here is what they have left
1 @NY
4 Red Sox
3 Blue Jays
2 @ Red Sox
4 @ White Sox
3 O's

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-16-2012 05:45 PM

Wow a win in Oakland 82-64.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-17-2012 11:20 PM

83-64 nice win tonight.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-18-2012 02:58 PM

Orioles' rise carries over to merchandise
September, 18, 2012
Sep 18
2:17
PM ET
By Darren Rovell | ESPN.com

Recommend85
Tweet94
Comments19
Email
Print

Nate McLouthAP Photo/Patrick SemanskyThe Orioles' success -- and the return of the cartoon bird -- has been a boon to merchandise sales.
The Baltimore Orioles are not only hot on the field, they're hot off of it, too.

Sales of Orioles gear are skyrocketing, according to online retailer Fanatics.com, which says that only the New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants have sold more gear that the Orioles in September. The team jumped from the 14th spot in August to No. 3, having sold 40 percent more merchandise in the first half of September than in the entire month of August.

It's not only the Orioles' performance that has jump-started sales. It's also the fact that, before the season, the team decided to wear retro all of the time. So they mixed the Oriole Bird from the 1970 championship team with the Oriole Bird from the 1983 championship team and came up with a more contemporary version.

"There was a desire by ownership to reconnect to the past and we knew from fan feedback that they desperately missed the cartoon bird," team spokesman Greg Bader said. "Then you have the fact that the retro feel is still very popular."

So, for the first time since 1988, the Oriole Bird appeared back on the cap again.

Sales of the authentic on-field Orioles New Era cap, which retails for $34.99, are up 102 percent. That makes it the seventh-most popular team in all of Major League Baseball. Last year at this time, in their 14th straight losing season, the Orioles cap was ranked 20th in sales.

Bader said so many people are now wearing the team's apparel that "you can't go a few feet in downtown without seeing Orioles gear."

That became a problem for a person filming a documentary in Ocean City, Md., about 120 miles from Baltimore. The movie had nothing to do with the Orioles, but there was so much Orioles signage that found its way into the shooting that he felt compelled to call Major League Baseball and ask for permission to use the trademark, Bader said.

And bird fever extends well beyond Maryland, too. Fanatics.com says that 67 percent of people who purchased Orioles gear from their website came from outside the state of Maryland.

"There is a perfect storm going on right now in Baltimore," Fanatics president Jamie Davis said. "The Orioles are making a charge for the playoffs for the first time since the late 1990s, they recently redesigned their logo creating new demand, and the broad assortment of merchandise that we offer online makes it easier than ever for Orioles fans, both in Maryland and across the country, to buy their favorite items."

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-19-2012 02:02 AM

Wow what a game 18 innings 84-64. Now i need to get a little sleep

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-19-2012 07:57 AM

Per Ken Rosenthal

Ken_Rosenthal: BREAKING: #Orioles, in need of a fresh arm following their 18-inning victory, have promoted their top pitching prospect, Dylan Bundy, 19.

stonedstooge 09-19-2012 10:08 AM

GO O'S

chefsos 09-19-2012 04:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefsandO'sfan (Post 8926974)
Wow what a game 18 innings 84-64. Now i need to get a little sleep

Holy crap, you made it through the whole game? I fell asleep in the 12th...or 13th, I'm not sure. Woke up later (much later) and there was Jim Hunter talking with Dempsey about the WIN.

*fist pump*

All I can say is wow. If you're an MLB team, and you're going into extras with the Orioles, be advised you're in a staring contest now and the O's will absolutely not blink. I never saw a mentally tougher team, ever.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-19-2012 11:27 PM

85-64 this season is just unreal.

chefsos 09-20-2012 05:15 PM

I knew this guy came out of nowhere, but the details in this column have just made me a Miguel Gonzalez fan.

Gonzalez's improbable rise mirrors Orioles'
Rookie's path to the big leagues was nearly derailed by injuries

BOSTON -- The nine pitches that changed Miguel Gonzalez's life didn't even count.

But the three batters that dug in against the right-handed pitcher for an early fall exhibition game in Mazatlan -- a city nestled in the Mexican state of Sinaloa -- combined for a trio of strikeouts that forever intertwined two men on the fringes of professional baseball for a narrative that should be etched in Mexican Winter League lore.

Legendary scout Fred Ferreira doesn't remember why he was at that exact scrimmage, or even who Matzatlan was playing. But the image of the right-handed Gonzalez, who carved up the side in his only inning of relief, was a thing of beauty. The movement on Gonzalez's pitches -- mainly fastballs, with several splitters sprinkled in -- and that smooth delivery was enough to impresses Ferreira.

With no ties to any pro organization, the 76-year-old Ferreira, who has four decades of scouting experience, committed the image of Gonzalez to memory. Several months later, as the newly appointed executive director of the Orioles' international recruiting, Ferreira was sitting in a meeting with new O's executive vice president of baseball operations Dan Duquette. It was late January and Duquette was lamenting the organization's lack of pitching depth. Baltimore, fresh off a last-place finish and 69-93 season, was in dire need of some capable arms.

Ferreira smiled and told Duquette, "I just saw a guy that can help us."

* * * * *
It is the best story within one of baseball's best stories -- a 28-year-old rookie who entered this season with one career game above Double-A bolstering an Orioles club on an improbable playoff run.

"I think you have to pinch me," Gonzalez said as his impressive stats are recited, his wins over teams like the Yankees, Red Sox and Angels treated with such reverence it's as if he's waiting for those starts to be erased. "I still don't believe that I'm up here. I was motivated. I was doing real good in Mexico. My velocity was up, my confidence was there. Everything was clicking. From one day to another, my life changed."

Moved to the O's rotation out of necessity in early July -- the club had demoted three starters in the previous week -- Gonzalez has gone six or more innings in nine of his first 12 career Major League starts, posting a 3.03 ERA with the exclusion of an eight-out nightmare on July 25, a start Gonzalez made despite being ill the entire morning. Not wanting to draw attention or make it look like he was making excuses, Gonzalez -- who had two season-ending surgeries in the Minor Leagues -- gutted it out, discreetly telling the team's trainers after the game.

"The first day [Gonzalez] showed up, you could tell there was emotional control with him," said Baltimore pitching coach Rick Adair, who calls Gonzalez the most remarkable success story he's seen in 26 years as a pitching coach.

"What he's been through physically, how he's had to miss time [and] play winter ball, you automatically know there's something inwardly about this guy that not too many people have. Perseverance, I guess, in a very intense way. You knew coming in as a pitcher, there's an automatic trust factor that this guy is not only going to do great, he's going to be prepared to do great. ... I told him when he got here, I admire him. I do."

Gonzalez pitched to a 1.91 ERA in five August starts and has been better in hostile environments, posting an ERA nearly a run-and-a-half better on the road, including a game in Anaheim on July 6th, when he threw seven innings of one-run baseball against his hometown team. The inspired win -- his first career Major League start against the organization that initially signed him -- made headlines when Gonzalez revealed he had used a glove once belonging to late Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart, a tribute to a friend and Minor League teammate.

But as rapid as his ascent with the Orioles seems, Gonzalez's journey from obscurity has been anything but an overnight sensation.

* * * * *
There is an age difference of nearly nine years between Gonzalez and fellow rookie pitcher Dylan Bundy, and for six weeks, Gonzalez was simultaneously the least-experienced and oldest member of the Orioles' rotation. It's a fact fitting of a career that has been littered with setbacks and late arrivals.

Born Miguel Angel Gonzalez in Pegueros, Jalisco, Mexico, Gonzalez's parents, Miguel and Noeimi, moved to San Fernando Valley, Calif., when Gonzalez was 4 years old to give their three children a better life. A groundskeeper who works at Loyola Marymount University, the elder Miguel would bring his two sons, Miguel Angel and German, to nearby fields to play baseball along with their uncle, Fernando Martin.

By the time his family found out about organized baseball in their area, Gonzalez was 12 years old and the oldest rookie on his Little League team. A year later, he tore a meniscus in his right knee, an injury Gonzalez pitched with for more than a decade until finally undergoing surgery in 2008. By that time, Gonzalez had just finished a winter season with Mazatlan, and while he never once appeared on any Angels' top prospects lists, the 23-year-old had made strides in his third season since being signed as an undrafted free agent, going 8-4 with a 3.38 ERA in 30 games (19 starts) for Double-A Arkansas.

Things sputtered from there. Gonzalez spent seven months rehabbing his knee and made his first appearance back for Mazatlan on Oct. 25, 2008, in hopes of catching up on a missed Minor League season. It was no surprise the Angels left him unprotected in that December's Rule 5 Draft, where Gonzalez was scooped up by the Boston Red Sox.

However, any hope of continuing a solid stint in winter ball went out the window in the spring, when Gonzalez was told he needed Tommy John surgery. The procedure cost Gonzalez all of 2009, and he never really rebounded in the Boston farm system. Gonzalez struggled (mostly at the Double-A level) and the Red Sox released him in the winter of 2011.

"One side of my brain was like, 'OK, this is it. You have to move on,'" Gonzalez said. "But I really thought about it, and I talked about it with my wife [Lucy] and she got me into it again, back to baseball. This is the only thing I know how to do. I love playing it. So I stayed within myself -- kept working, kept fighting."

The release was difficult to absorb even in Mexico, where Gonzalez was again pitching for Mazatlan. It hurt, but it also intensified his quest to prove others wrong. Finally fully healthy, Gonzalez's fastball was creeping up in the mid-90s for the first time in his career, and he was getting swings and misses he never had before. Gonzalez was still playing and being paid to do so, and he wasn't done just yet.

* * * * *
Even with Ferreira's recommendation, the Orioles -- the only team willing to give him a shot -- didn't get around to signing Gonzalez to a Minor League deal until March 4. He was late to camp, never appearing in big league Spring Training, and was virtually off the grid. Even when the Minor League season started, Gonzalez was kept in limbo, told to be patient as the organization sorted out where it was sending the top prospects and those who just missed making the big league roster. He was finally assigned to Triple-A Norfolk, joining first-year manager Ron Johnson for the club's ninth game of the season.

It wasn't how Johnson wanted to ease the new guy in, but the skipper didn't have much choice with an overworked bullpen. So he conferred with Norfolk pitching coach Mike Griffin and summoned Gonzalez in the bottom of the sixth inning with the bases loaded and Norfolk up, 1-0. Gonzalez retired the next seven batters. In his second outing, Gonzalez entered the game with runners on first and third and again delivered, this time with 3 2/3 scoreless innings that included six strikeouts.

Johnson was intrigued.

"This guy didn't have a job," Johnson said. "I kept waiting for his ERA to revert back to what it had been [in seasons past]. Then I started putting him in more regular relief spots. It was just nothing. He just got everybody out. That might be the greatest signing of the year."

With Baltimore's rotation struggling and Gonzalez flourishing -- posting a 1.04 ERA as a reliever -- the organization decided to stretch him out with more innings in mid-May so that he'd be an option as a starter.

It was harder than it seemed, given how Gonzalez is a pitcher who lives off fastball command and low pitch counts, and Griffin, who tries to foster camaraderie by having his pitchers all sit in a circle before every game and talk about something, started to wonder: who was this guy anyway?

Always quiet by nature, Gonzalez didn't want to attract any attention or ruffle any feathers on his first Triple-A team. He didn't even want to ask what time pregame stretching was, as if at any moment the O's would realize this was a mistake and Gonzalez would be gone.

"If you sit down and really have a conversation with Miguel about anything, he doesn't get excited a whole lot," Griffin said of Gonzalez, who had a 1.98 ERA in six Triple-A starts, and who was always the last guy in the circle to share. "It's just a flat-line demeanor, it's the best way I can describe it. Everything comes to him so slowly. We talk about the game speeding up on some pitchers where they can't get it back down. And that's the reason he's been so successful."

* * * * *
When you have waited as long as Gonzalez has for this, what's another few minutes?

A panic attack for Johnson, who got the call from the Orioles after his club's 6-4 win in Pawtucket, R.I., to send Gonzalez their way, led him to punch a few buttons on his phone and dial the wrong number. "No," the recipient said. "This wasn't Miguel and he wasn't going to the big leagues."

Perhaps Johnson should prank call someone else. They finally tracked down Gonzalez by calling the pitcher's hotel room in the middle of the night.

"I was jumping up and down," Gonzalez said, laughing. "Yes, the quiet guy that you know was jumping up and down. I had the chills. I will never forget that day. I just wish for other players that have had ups and downs, been struggling in the Minor Leagues, just to have patience. The dream can come true."

That dream came full circle on Sept. 11, when Gonzalez came jogging off the field after the O's pregame batting practice at Camden Yards. There was someone he had to meet, a man he needed to look in the eye and shake his hand and thank: Ferreira.

"What a great story," said Ferreira, after the pair had shared an emotional introduction. He has kept tabs on Gonzalez, getting messages from Duquette and manager Buck Showalter almost every time after the rookie pitches.

"[Ferreira] will be the first to tell you it was all Miguel," Showalter said. "Miguel never gave in, never quit trying."

Gonzalez, who will make his first Fenway Park start on Friday, and the Orioles are fighting for the American League East title, and every game is critical. He wouldn't have it any other way.

"I've always been the same guy everywhere I've been to," Gonzalez said. "Playing in Mexico, playing in the Minor Leagues, I've always been that confident guy -- never lost my confidence. I'm not afraid to pitch. I've done it my whole life. Why be afraid now?"


http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?...#disqus_thread

bigbucks24 09-21-2012 07:05 PM

Need a link to the game?
http://www.vipboxsports.eu/watch/774...am-online.html

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-21-2012 08:12 PM

86-64 another win.

bigbucks24 09-21-2012 08:29 PM

Think someone will get hit tomorrow? First Kakes and now Dino?

chefsos 09-21-2012 08:33 PM

Dino will be fine. It hit him in the head.:)

Unfortunately, I think the fun of a bench-clearing beanball war with the ****ing Sox will be negated by the fact of a pennant race. Too much to lose. Spring training might get interesting, though...

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-21-2012 08:40 PM

Nice to beat Lester...

chefsos 09-21-2012 08:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefsandO'sfan (Post 8934171)
Nice to beat Lester...

Oh hell yeah. I forgot about that. He was, what, 1000-0 against us?

bigbucks24 09-21-2012 08:47 PM

14-0, but not anymore, bitch!!

RJ 09-21-2012 08:53 PM

My sone tells me the Orioles started selling playoff tickets today. Been a while since they've done that.

chefsos 09-21-2012 09:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RJ (Post 8934191)
My sone tells me the Orioles started selling playoff tickets today. Been a while since they've done that.

Betcha didn't think you'd be typing that a few months ago.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-22-2012 03:24 PM

87-64 this season is just Great 16 straight extra inning wins.

RMFN 09-22-2012 03:34 PM

Been a fan of the O's since 1958. Good to see we have something to get excited about this year. Hoping they can get pass the Yankees and just win the division. Hell with the wild card.

chefsos 09-22-2012 04:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RMFN (Post 8935449)
Been a fan of the O's since 1958. Good to see we have something to get excited about this year. Hoping they can get pass the Yankees and just win the division. Hell with the wild card.

And I thought I was old...

I'll say, welcome to this thread of misfit toys, but I can't say welcome to the O's because I wasn't even born in '58.

Anyway, today's win only went 12 innings? Pfftt.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-22-2012 07:49 PM

<iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/n02McFCfEOw?feature=player_detailpage" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

bigbucks24 09-23-2012 12:04 AM

Will the Yanks ever lose again?

mdchiefsfan 09-23-2012 09:29 AM

Just bought my tickets for Monday's double header. Can't wait.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-23-2012 04:45 PM

Bad L today 87-65. How sad is it that the AL central winner will have a worse record then both wildcard teams and 2 teams that will miss the playoffs.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-23-2012 10:38 PM

http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?co...y_25029411&v=3


Bundy Looked good today.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-24-2012 12:08 PM

Brittany Ghiroli ‏@Britt_Ghiroli

#orioles lineup McLouth 7, Hardy 6, Davis 9, Jones 8, Wieters 2, Thome dh, Reynolds 3, Flaherty 4, Machado 5, Johnson SP


Love Game 1 lineup.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-24-2012 04:53 PM

88-65 nice win in Game 1 now let's get game 2.

chefsos 09-24-2012 05:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefsandO'sfan (Post 8946656)
88-65 nice win in Game 1 now let's get game 2.

...and root for the Twins. It's possible now to get past the MFY...tonight.

Man, only eight games left at the end of this night. I'm really going to miss this insane season after it's over, whenever that may be.

mdchiefsfan 09-24-2012 11:43 PM

First game was great, second was brutal.

http://i1164.photobucket.com/albums/...psd79cb2ea.jpg

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-25-2012 01:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mdchiefsfan (Post 8948718)
First game was great, second was brutal.

http://i1164.photobucket.com/albums/...psd79cb2ea.jpg

Nice I'll be there wed night, Big night for Joe Saunders tonight must win.

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-26-2012 08:55 PM

What a great game to be at 7HR, 89-67

RJ 09-26-2012 09:21 PM

Really needed that win tonight. I wouldn't complain about a wild card but I'd sure prefer they just win the division and remove all doubt.

On a side note.....baseball fields sure are pretty.

mdchiefsfan 09-27-2012 05:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiefsandO'sfan (Post 8953408)
What a great game to be at 7HR, 89-67

Man that must have been awesome to see. I'm going Saturday night to watch the O's wreck the Sux. Not a bad deal I got for it either. $50.00 gets you an upper reserve seat. But you get all your can eat wings and pulled pork and all you can drink Miller Light and Natty Boh's at Hooter's from 4-7. Can't wait.

mdchiefsfan 09-27-2012 05:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RJ (Post 8953438)
Really needed that win tonight. I wouldn't complain about a wild card but I'd sure prefer they just win the division and remove all doubt.

On a side note.....baseball fields sure are pretty.

Not to mention the AL West has been brutal on us this season. I would much rather have to face Chicago while Texas and NYY beat each other up than have to go through Oakland/LAA, Texas, and probably NYY to get to the WS.

YayMike 09-27-2012 07:42 AM

As previously pointed out....the Angels really really scare me....

ShowtimeSBMVP 09-27-2012 08:57 PM

<iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/ZAiadUMDDZ8?feature=player_detailpage" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

chefsos 09-27-2012 09:12 PM

I've got a feeling this Rays/White Sox series is going to be epic. These are two teams whose backs are nearly against the wall now.

And as I'm typing that, I see Longoria went deep in the 9th, 3-2 TB. I hate the ****ing Chisox, but they need to win a few for me this weekend.

NJChiefsFan 09-27-2012 09:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chefsos (Post 8955769)
I've got a feeling this Rays/White Sox series is going to be epic. These are two teams whose backs are nearly against the wall now.

And as I'm typing that, I see Longoria went deep in the 9th, 3-2 TB. I hate the ****ing Chisox, but they need to win a few for me this weekend.

Rays seems pretty intent on making that last series mean something.

RJ 09-28-2012 07:14 PM

Chris Tillman is pitching another great game tonight. Along with Adam Jones, he could end up being another All Star for the O's from the Erik Bedard trade.

C'mon Blue Jays!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:35 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.