Jon Lester now has something in common with Mike Lowell when Lester became the 21st player to win the Tony Conigliaro Award.
The award is given, each year, to the player that overcomes the most adversity. In 1999, while with the Florida Marlins, Lowell won the award after his battle with testicular cancer. Eight years later Lester won the award after his battle with non-Hodgkins lymphoma.
The Tony Conigliaro Award is one of best awards given by baseball writers because it adds a human element to the game. You are not talking about statistics or what a player brings to a team, instead you are talking about overcoming adversity and doing things people never thought was possible. And that is exactly what both Lester and Lowell did.
Lester and Lowell are not the only people who have received the award. Former Red Sox outfielder Curtis Pride, who became deaf as an infant, received the award in 1996. Former Red Sox pitcher Jason Johnson did not let his Type I diabetes stop him from his dream of playing Major League Ball. Jim Eisenreich, Jim Mecir and Freddy Sanchez overcame their birth defects - Tourette's Syndrome and clubfoot - to play Major League Baseball.
But there is one player who overcame the most difficult challenge and inspired others like him that they can achieve their goals no matter the difficulty. The player is Jim Abbott, the left-handed pitcher born without a right hand and threw a no-hitter for the Yankees in 1993. Abbott has inspired others who thought they would never play a sport due to possible physical limitations, including this man. Click this link for story. (He also ran the Baltimore Marathon in October and came in, in 3 hours; making the limit to run the Boston Marathon in April.)
Notes
"Utopia - that which is not"
Pedroia, Ellsbury Untouchable?
The word untouchable should be reserved for guys with the name Brady or Seymour not to two young 24-year olds. In the words of Beyonce Knowles "I can have another you by tomorrow So don't you ever for a second get to thinking you're irreplaceable." It's those words that separate Bill Belichick from Theo Epstein.
Dustin Pedroia's and Jacoby Ellsbury's come around more often than a Johan Santana. If you have the opportunity to trade for one of the best pitcher's in league you do it. Do you think that Belichick had any doubts trading a fourth rounder for Randy Moss? That fourth round pick could have had a lot of potential seeing that Asante Samuel and Jarvis Green were both fourth rounders in 2003 and 2002, respectively. But Belichick does not act on what can be he acts on what is.
Both Pedroia and Ellsbury have a lot of potential in the future but Johan Santana is proven veteran. There's no major league track record for Pedroia and Ellsbury. Pedroia might come back next year hitting .250 after pitchers have got a full season to know his tendencies.
The law of supply and demand tells you that it is more difficult to find a good starting pitcher, let alone a dominating one, than a second baseman. Any infielder can play second base. The hardest thing about the position is turning a double play, seeing the second baseman has their back to the runner.
Ellsbury is the player I would be hesitant to give upt but would refrain from calling him "untouchable." No one is irreplaceable. Hate to put a flaw in Buck's article. If the Sox want Santana they're going to have to give up Ellsbury. The Twins are in need of a centerfielder after losing Torii Hunter to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
I do not want to give up Ellsbury, but I would trade him, Pedroia and Buchholz for Santana if I am assured I can lock up Santana until 2010, with a club option for 2011. (Josh Beckett's contract is up after 2009 with a club option, based games started, for games stared. You would not want Santana and Beckett to potentially become free agents at the same time.)
If that was the case I would have, former Minnesota athletes, Randy Moss and Kevin Garnett welcoming Santana to Boston as he steps off the plane at Logan.
Mike Lowell's Back
Today should be referred to as Mea Culpa day for me. I said earlier that I did not think Mike Lowell would be back in a Red Sox uniform. I admit I was wrong. At the time I thought once Lowell hit the free agent market he was a goner because other teams would have been more willing to give him four years. I misjudged the market. It is what it is. No further commenting on the subject.
But Michael Averett Lowell will be started at third base for the next three seasons. He is just a stand up guy.
Don't Lie Kids....
If it were my decision Barry Bonds's cell mate in prison would be none other than Irving Lewis "Scooter" Libby. Yet, I am not a federal court justice therefore I do not have the power to make such actions but one could wish.
We all know (well most people know) that President George W. Bush pardonned Scooter Libby's 30-month prison term so he only has to pay the $250,000 fine, two hours of supervised release plus 400 hours of community service. If Libby was able to get out of jail time after being convicted of 4 out of 5 counts of perjury and obstruction of justice, then it does not spell good news for the baseball fan who wants to see Bonds behind bars.
Last time, I checked lying about leaking a CIA operative's name to media outlets was a greater national security risk than lying about steroid usage. I have come to accept that justice will not be served in the case of Barry Lamar Bonds v. the United States of America just like in Libby's case. It is sad our judicial system has come to this, when the big guys get off from doing things we were told not to do as children.
Bonds and Libby were questioned by the Grand Jury lied under oath when questioned about steroid usage and leaking a CIA agent's identity, respectively. Nothing would have happened to Bonds if he was honest like Jason Giambi was when he was called to testify. The Grand Jury even went to the degree of granting immunity to Bonds to tell them everything he knew about his steroid usage from Balco.
Personally, I did not care that Bonds used steroids. It was his denial of his usage that soured me on him as a ballplayer and a person, because if you have to lie about something then you know you should not be doing it. And if you do happen to do something that is wrong it is better to come right out and admit it then hide behind lies. Former Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton learned this the hard way along with former U.S. Senator Gary Hart (no perjury charges but still lied when questioned by the press). Now Libby and Bonds can be added to the list.
It can be deduced that Bonds will probably not serve any prison time, since Libby committed a far worse action and was pardonned. There is something wrong with our justice system if a man who puts our national security at risk is allowed to walk free but goes all out to imprison a drug abuser. Lying about putting the United States in a compromising position, relating to national security, is more egregious than one man who shot himself up with steroids and lied about it.
Too Much GIRTH for Beckett to Overcome...
Cleveland's C.C. Sabathia runs away with the 2007 Cy Young Award. Josh Beckett came up 33 points short of the award with only eight first place votes, 14 second place votes and four third place votes.
Sabathia finished the 2007 regular season with a 19-7 record, a 3.21 ERA, a .259 opponents batting average and a 37-209 walk-to-strikeout ratio.
To add insult to injury, two baseball writers left Beckett off the ballot. How can you leave baseball's ONLY 20 game winner off of the ballot? It is completely inexcusable! These writers need to be stripped of their voting privileges for ANY baseball awards!
But Red Sox fans do not be disappointed with Beckett not winning the Cy Young. You cannot ask for any more from the guy. After a disappointing 2006 season, Beckett stepped up his game in 2007 and pitched himself to a 20-7 record, 3.27 ERA, .245 opponents batting average and a 40-194 walk-to-strikeout ratio. Not to mention putting the Sox on his back and bringing them back from a 3-1 deficit in ALCS, earning him ALCS MVP honors.
Beckett's performance in the playoffs is much greater than whatever he gave us in the regular season. When he pitched in the post-season, he was so dominating that the game was over before it started. It was Tom Brady-esque. It was Pedro Martinez in 1999.
All Good Things Must Come To An End...
The closer it gets to midnight tonight the clearer it becomes that Mike Lowell will not be the Sox starting third baseman on Opening Day 2008. The Red Sox have until midnight to talk exclusively about a new contract with the World Series MVP but it looks as if Lowell will be heading to free agency.
After being a throw in player in the Josh Beckett deal in 2005, Lowell re-emerged as the hitter he once was while quieting the critics who questioned steriod abuse for his decline in production in 2005. He produced during his two years in a Sox uniform both at the plate and in the field. Lowell had the mind set to play in Boston and was an asset and leader inthe clubhouse.
Lowell has always said that he loved Boston and Red Sox Nation but he has to do what is right for Mike Lowell and not the Red Sox. He only has two obligations: himself and his family. This will, probably, be Lowell's last big pay day and he wants to cash in now. His stock can't be any higher after hitting .324 with 21 homeruns and 120 RBIs as well as being MVP of the World Series; there will, certainly, be a team out there willing to give him four years at $15 million a year. It just won't be the Red Sox.
I don't have an issue with Lowell opting to test the market. If he did not go out and test the market he would be letting the Red Sox determine his value instead of letting the market determine his value. Hence the term "market value." But if any of you Sox fans are hoping that Lowell is going to follow in Schilling's footsteps in sign at the last minute, it's not going to happen. There is a lot depending on Lowell. He's going to set the market for free agents this year. So Lowell will not be returning to the Sox in 2008 but he will be greatly missed.
Little Big League
He's little. He's cocky. But now he can add a Rookie of the Year award to his World Series.
Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia(left) was named the American League Rookie of the Year. First Red Sox rookie to be named Rookie of the Year since Nomar Garciaparra won the award in 1997. (Milwaukee Brewers Ryan Braun (below right) was named the National League's Rookie of the Year.)
Even though Pedroia got off to a rough start, hitting only .182 in April causing most fans to call for more of Alex Cora. Pedroia came back strong in May, earning the AL Player of the Month award for May and continued his hot hitting well into the summer months as well as September and October. Pedroia played in 137 of 162 games hitting .317 with 48 extra-base hits, including 39 doubles, 1 triple and 8 homeruns. His strikeout to walk ratio was almost exact at 42 to 47, respectively, as well as having a .380 On-Base Percentage, .442 Slugging Percentage and a .823 OPS. He also put up some good numbers in the field and made some exceptional plays. Pedroia finished the regular season with only 6 errors, 360 assists and 259 put-outs.
You have to tip your cap to Pedroia for a remarkable season and ALCS and World Series as a Rookie.
Personally, I don't know about you but I don't put a lot of stalk in the Rookie of the Year award. Take a look at some of the past Rookie of the Year winners.
- In 2003 Kansas City's Angel Berroa won it while in K.C. After losing his starting shortstop position to Tony Pena, Jr., Berroa has played in just 9 games this year hitting .091 in 11 At-Bats.
- Eric Hinske won the award in 2002. Now he is a fourth outfielder and defensive replacement at first base for the Red Sox.
- Oakland's Ben Grieve won the award in 1998. After spending three years with the A's, he was traded to the Devil Rays (or known today as the "Rays") and quickly got lost.
- Remember in 2003 how we hated Scott Williamson? Well he was a Rookie of the Year award winner in 1999 for Cincinnati.
- Japanese pitcher Kazuhiro Sasaki, from Seattle, won the award in 2000. Not only was he NOT a rookie but he had one exceptional year as a closer for the Mariners and then faded into oblivion. He is currently back in Japanese ball.
- Who can forget the Chicago Cubs pitcher, Kerry Wood. He had so much potentional but a plethora of injuries ended his chances of becoming one of the best starting pitchers in baseball. Wood is still on the Cubs a relief pitcher, appearing in only 22 games with a 1-1 record and 2.22 ERA with a .207 opponents batting average. But he is no longer the pitcher he once was or had the possiblity of being.
- Chuck Knoblauch, the guy who couldn't throw the ball from second base to first without it going into the dugout or stands, was the Rookie of Year during his stint with the Minnesota Twins. He became so ineffective as a second baseman for the Yankees in the late '90s that the Yanks moved him to leftfield.
Although I do believe that Colorado's Troy Tulowitzki (left) will be a better MLB player in future years than Braun. Tulowitzki just appears to have more potential. He might become the next A-Rod and we'll look at the 2007 NL Rookie of the Year award the same way we look at the 1996 Rookie of the Year award. But you never know everyone said that about Wood.
Freshman Year at ASU
Dustin Pedroia's freshman year photo for the Arizona State Sun Devils in 2001-2002. (Photo from ASU archives)
Jed Lowrie
FULL NAME: Jed Carlson Lowrie
DOB: April 17, 1984
BIRTHPLACE:
HEIGHT: 6’0”
WEIGHT: 185 lbs
BATS: Switch
THROWS: Right
COLLEGE: Stanford
ACQUIRED: Drafted in the 1st Round of the 2005 Major League Baseball Draft
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: April 15, 2008
PERSONAL INFORMATION:
Growing up in
Links:
McRae, Kyle. "Not Easily Intimidated." Stanford University Athletic Site 17 May 2005.
McRae, Kyle. "Foundation for the Future." Stanford University Athletic Site 30 January 2004.
McRae, Kyle. "Defining Moment." Stanford University Athletic Site 28 February 2003.
Jon Lester
DOB: January 7, 1984
BIRTHPLACE:
HEIGHT: 6’2”
WEIGHT: 225lbs
BATS: Left
THROWS: Left
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: June 10, 2006
ACQUIRED: Drafted in the 1st Round of the 2002 MLB Draft.
Jon Lester with a younger cousin in his home state of Washington. (outincenterfield.com)
PERSONAL INFORMATION:
The only child of John and Kathy Lester, Jon Lester was born on January 7, 1984 in
Jon Lester withstood a four hour rain delay to make his major league debut against the Texas Rangers on June 10, 2006. He went 4 2/3 innings and recorded a no-decision in the Red Sox's 7-4 loss to the Rangers. In those 4 2/3 innings, Lester allowed three runs (two earned) on five hits while striking out four and walking three. (AP Photo)
Lester meets with the media in August of 2006 after being diagnosed with non-Hodgkins large-cell lymphoma. (Boston Globe)
World Series Game Four starter and winner, Jon Lester poses with the World Series trophy. (AP Photo)
Jon Lester cleans off his spikes in front of a bunch of rookies after coming off one of the five practice fields at the Red Sox's Fort Myers Spring Training facility. (AP Photo)
Jon Lester throws a pitch in Spring Training 2007. (AP Photo)
Links:
Edes, Gordon. "A journey from cancer to champion for Sox' Lester" The Boston Globe 17 February 2008.
Multimedia:
VIDEO: Jon Lester chats with John Dennis and Gerry Callahan, on WEEI's "Dennis & Callahan," at the picnic table in Ft. Myers, Florida Thursday February 21, 2008.
Seattle Radio Station Interview
Dustin Pedroia
DOB: August 17, 1983
BIRTHPLACE:
HEIGHT: 5’9”
WEIGHT: 180lbs
COLLEGE:
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: August 22, 2006
ACQUIRED: Drafted in the 2nd Round of the 2004 Major League Baseball Draft
Dustin as youngster playing Little League. (outincenterfield.com)
PERSONAL INFORMATION
Born and raised in Woodland, California with his older brother - Brett, their father owned a tire business and Dustin's little league team fell one game short of reaching the Little League World Series. Recruited by Texas, Cal State - Long Beach, Tulane, Florida and Miami out of high school, Pedroia attended Arizona State University where he was an interdisciplinary studies major. Throughout his collegiate career, his parents (Guy and Debbie) rarely missed a Sun Devils home or away game. Pedroia married his wife, Kelli, on November 11, 2006. (Information from ASU SID)
Dustin fielding a ground ball as youngster. I guess his growth spurt stopped at six. (outincenterfield.com)
Pictures from Pedroia's Days at Arizona State University:
Links:
Inside Track. "Dustin and Gary's dustup" Boston Herald 22 February 2008.
Goldberg, Jeff. "Cocky or Confident? Pedroia Doesn't Care" Harford Courant 18 February 2008.
Bradford, Rob. "Gotta hand it to him" Boston Herald 10 November 2007.
Reiter, Ben. "The Little Big Man: Dustin Pedroia" 22 March 2007.
Multimedia:
Dustin Pedroia joins Dale Arnold and Michael on WEEI's "Dale & Holley" mid-day show on Monday February 25, 2008.
Junior Year at ASU
Dustin Pedroia during his junior year, 2003-2004, at Arizona State University.
Pedroia fielding.
Pedroia's swings through a pitch during his junior year.
2003-2004: Dustin Pedroia makes a play for the Sun Devils.
Sophomore Year at ASU
Mike Lowell
DOB: February 24, 1974
AGE (on Opening Day:) 34
BIRTHPLACE: San Juan, Puerto Rico
HEIGHT: 6'3"
WEIGHT: 210 lbs
BATS: Right
THROWS: Right
COLLEGE: Florida International
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: September 13, 1998
ACQUIRED: Traded to the Red Sox from the Florida Marlins along with Josh Beckett and Guillermo Mota for Hanley Ramirez, Anibal Sanchez and Jesus Delgado on November 25, 2005.
PERSONAL INFORMATION:
Lowell is married to wife, Bertica and have one daughter Alexis Ileana (4) and graduated from Florida International with a degree in finance.
Links:
Browne, Ian. "Note: Lowell knew he was staying put" MLB.com 20 February 2008.
Bradford, Rob. "Castro's exit good news, Lowell still skeptical" Boston Herald 20 February 2006.
Horrigan, Jeff. "Sox standout Lowell: Castro killed my kin" Boston Herald 2 August 2006.
Edes, Gordon. "Just another comeback year" The Boston Globe 12 January 2006.
Minichino, Adam. "Lowell fighting cancer battle one day at a time." 9 July 1999
Multimedia:
Mike Lowell chats with WEEI's "Dennis & Callahan" on Monday February, 25, 2008.
Most Stars of the Game for the Red Sox
13 Stars
Manny Ramirez
10 Stars
J.D. Drew
8 Stars
David Ortiz
Jason Varitek
7 Stars
Kevin Youkilis
6 Stars
Coco Crisp
Mike Lowell
5 Stars
Josh Beckett
Daisuke Matsuzaka
4 Stars
Jon Lester
3 Stars
Sean Casey
Tim Wakefield
Dustin Pedroia
Opposing Players who have the most Stars of the Game
4 Stars
Frank Thomas
2 Stars
Roy Halladay
Rich Hardin
Alex Rios
Manny Ramirez
AGE (on Opening Day): 35
DOB: May 30, 1972
BIRTHPLACE:
HEIGHT: 6’0”
WEIGHT: 200lbs
BATS: Right
THROWS: Right
HIGH SCHOOL: George Washington (
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: September 2, 1993
ACQUIRED: Signed as a free agent on December 13, 2000 from the Cleveland Indians
MAJOR LEAGUE EXPERIENCE: 14 years, 33 days
PERSONAL INFORMATION
The son of a seamstress and a cab drive, Manny Ramirez was born and grew up in one of the poorest countries in Latin America where he was a fan of the Toronto Blue Jays due to their Dominican ties. At the age of 11, his parents Aristides and Onelcida made the decision to move the parents to the
FUN MANNY FACTS:
Favorite Movies:
“The Matrix,” “Rocky II,” “The Village,” “Ice Age,” “Finding Nemo”
Favorite Baseball Movies:
“The Rookie,” “Field of Dreams,” “Major League”
Jason Varitek
33
JASON VARITEK
FULL NAME: Jason Andrew Varitek
AGE (on Opening Day): 35
DOB: April 11, 1972
BIRTHPLACE:
HEIGHT: 6’2”
WEIGHT: 230lbs
BATS: Switch
THROWS: Right
COLLEGE: Georgia Tech
MAJOR LEAGUE DEBUT: September 24, 1997
ACQUIRED: Traded with Derek Lowe from the
PERSONAL INFORMATION
and Caroline Morgan (6/13/2005).
Varitek and two of his three daughters at the 2005 All Star Game in Detroit. (Gettysimages)
Justin Masterson
Right-Handed Pitcher
DOB:
BIRTHPLACE:
BATS: Right
THROWS: Right
HEIGHT: 6’6”
WEIGHT: 250lbs
COLLEGE:
ACQUIRED: Drafted by the Red Sox with the fifth pick in the second round of the 2006
(San Diego State Student-Newspaper)
PERSONAL INFORMATION:
Born in
American League East
AL East | Wins | Losses | GB | Pct. | Streak | L10 |
Baltimore Orioles | 14 | 11 | 0.0 | 0.560 | Lost 2 | 6-4 |
Tampa Bay Rays | 14 | 11 | 0.0 | 0.560 | Won 6 | 8-2 |
Boston Red Sox | 15 | 12 | 0.0 | 0.556 | Lost 5 | 5-5 |
New York Yankees | 13 | 13 | 1.5 | 0.500 | Won 1 | 4-6 |
Toronto Blue Jays | 11 | 15 | 3.5 | 0.423 | Won 1 | 3-7 |
2008 Hitting Statistics
Hitting Statistic Leaders: (Updated April 26, 2008)
Batting Average
(Minimum of 3.1 PA)
1 | Manny Ramirez | .347 |
2 | Dustin Pedroia | .324 |
3 | Kevin Youkilis | .309 |
Hits
1 | Dustin Pedroia | 36 |
2 | Manny Ramirez | 34 |
3 | Kevin Youkilis | 29 |
4 | Julio Lugo | 27 |
5 | J.D. Drew | 21 |
Doubles
1 | Dustin Pedroia | 11 |
2 | Manny Ramirez | 9 |
3 | Kevin Youkilis | 7 |
4 | Sean Casey | 6 |
Triples
1 | Kevin Youkilis | 2 |
2 | Manny Ramirez | 1 |
| Jacoby Ellsbury | 1 |
Homeruns
1 | Manny Ramirez | 6 |
2 | David Ortiz | 4 |
3 | J.D. Drew | 3 |
| Jason Varitek | 3 |
| Jacoby Ellsbury | 3 |
Total Bases
1 | Manny Ramirez | 63 |
2 | Dustin Pedroia | 50 |
3 | Kevin Youkilis | 46 |
4 | Jacoby Ellsbury | 33 |
5 | J.D. Drew | 32 |
Runs Batted In
1 | Manny Ramirez | 20 |
| David Ortiz | 20 |
3 | Kevin Youkilis | 14 |
4 | J.D. Drew | 13 |
Walks
1 | J.D. Drew | 14 |
| David Ortiz | 14 |
| Kevin Youkilis | 14 |
4 | Jacoby Ellsbury | 13 |
Runs
1 | Jacoby Ellsbury | 20 |
2 | J.D. Drew | 18 |
3 | Manny Ramirez | 17 |
4 | Kevin Youkilis | 16 |
5 | David Ortiz | 15 |
Strike Outs
1 | Manny Ramirez | 26 |
2 | J.D. Drew | 20 |
3 | David Ortiz | 18 |
4 | Jason Varitek | 16 |
Stolen Bases
1 | Jackass Ellsbury | 8 |
2 | | 4 |
3 | Julio Lugo | 3 |
| Dustin Pedroia | 3 |
On Base Percentage
(Minimum of 3.1 PA)
1 | Manny Ramirez | .413 |
2 | Kevin Youkilis | .396 |
| Jacoby Ellsbury | .396 |
Slugging Percentage
(Minimum of 3.1 PA)
1 | Manny Ramirez | .643 |
2 | Kevin Youkilis | .489 |
3 | Dustin Pedroia | .450 |
On-Base plus Slugging Percentage
(Minimum of 3.1 PA)
1 | Manny Ramirez | 1.056 |
2 | Kevin Youkilis | .886 |
3 | Jacoby Ellsbury | .836 |
Blog Archive
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2007
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November
(33)
- "Utopia - that which is not"
- Pedroia, Ellsbury Untouchable?
- Mike Lowell's Back
- Don't Lie Kids....
- Too Much GIRTH for Beckett to Overcome...
- All Good Things Must Come To An End...
- Little Big League
- Welcome to Red Sox Nation....
- Freshman Year at ASU
- Jed Lowrie
- Jon Lester
- Dustin Pedroia
- Junior Year at ASU
- Sophomore Year at ASU
- Mike Lowell
- 2008 Red Sox Depth Chart
- Most Stars of the Game for the Red Sox
- Opposing Players who have the most Stars of the Game
- Manny Ramirez
- Jason Varitek
- Justin Masterson
- American League East
- 2008 Hitting Statistics
- Clay Buchholz
- 2008 Fielding Statistics
- 2008 Pitching Statistics
- 2008 MLB Regular Season Standings
- Lou Merloni
- Jacoby Ellsbury
- Terry Francona
- J.D. Drew
- Coco Crisp
- Grapefruit League
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