Category: Phillies Baseball


Above: Jayson Werth is back to being "this cool".

Kyle and I tag-teamed this. The post, that is.

Jayson Werth spoke with the media today at Nationals camp. David Murphy of the Philadelphia Daily News blog High Cheese has the transcript. You can see it all by clicking on the link, but here are a couple of noteworthy snippets you may find interesting.

Get your full dose of Werth-douchyness at Crossing Broad.

Polanco

After a 2010 season where a nagging elbow injury kept him out of 30 games, Placido Polanco arrived at Spring Training Wednesday pain-free.

Polanco’s 132 games played last year were his fewest since 2006. The Phillies’ number two hitter only accounted for 52 RBI last year, and hasn’t hit for fewer since his 2002 season, where he played for both the Cardinals and the Phils.

Polanco still was able to keep his batting average at about .300 (.298 to be exact), but he had a pretty good idea why his production fell off when his injury woes worsened with the wear-and-tear of the season. Read the rest at Crossing Broad.

Ruben-amaro-charlie-manuel“Dude, what do you want from me? We gave all the money to Cliff!”

He’s not expecting something by tomorrow at noon, but Phillies’ skipper Charlie Manuel is hoping for a contract extension before Opening Day. If one isn’t signed by April 1, don’t expect to hear anything about it until after the 2011 campaign.

“I think that once the season starts, I don’t want to talk about my contract,” Manuel said.

According to agent Pat Rooney, who represents Charlie Manuel, the two sides are apart on money more than anything.  He breifly shared his stance on the matter with CSN Philly’s Jim Salisbury.

“Charlie deserves to be paid as one of the top five managers in baseball,” Rooney told CSNPhilly.com on Monday night. “I don’t want to negotiate through the media, but they know our position. Hopefully we’ll have something by opening day.”

It’s one of the few times that we’ve really heard either side mention the matter in the media. Both sides have been saying this offseason that a contract extension is likely, but plenty of time has come and gone. And Manuel still has no guarantee that he’ll be with the team after 2011.

Ruben Amaro breifly mentioned the negotiations yesterday, saying that “we want to get something done, which we have since December. I don’t view it as a distraction for our players because we don’t make our negotiations public.”

We can’t argue with that. We didn’t know that Cliff Lee was a possibility until the very day he agreed to terms in December. The Phillies do business rather quietly, so it can be tough to draw inferences from the situation, but there are a couple of things to consider. Read the full article at Crossing Broad.

Michael Young looks into the distance, where he sees $48 million, no matter where his future lies... must be nice.

Now this is just silly.

The Philadelphia Phillies inquired about Texas Rangers second basemen, shortstop, third basemen, designated hitter, head chef, Tarot card reader… player Michael Young today. Young has requested a trade from the Texas Rangers after being moved to numerous positions on the field, the latest move to designated hitter after the Rangers signed free agent thid baseman Adrian Beltre.

With Chase Utley playing second, Jimmy Rollins at Shortstop, Placido Polanco at third, and my source telling me that there is no designated hitter in the National League, it would be hard to imagine how Young would fit. However, with the injuries suffered by the Phillies last year, Young would be one hell of an insurance policy. And ya know, he’s a right-handed bat. That’d be nice.

The other problem here would be the money. Young is owed $48 million over the next three years and the thought of him joining the Phils is nothing short of absurd. I’m actually convinced that Ruben Amaro was sad because he hasn’t seen his team’s name on MLBTradeRumors.com in more than a week, and it led him to call some folks in Arlington.

If you can find a positive from this, it would be that it’s nice to know the Phils’ front office seemingly explores every possibly option out there, even when it’s not really an option. You have to appreciate that as a fan. It’s that approach that has likely gotten the makeup of this team to where it is right now.

Spring Training in four days folks.

As a devout and dedicated Phillies fan, I would like to wish former Phillies first baseman and current ESPN Baseball Tonight analyst John Kruk a happy 50th birthday!

Kruk was a pretty popular fella back in the day during the Phillies 1993 run to the World Series. So much so, that Saturday Night Live used the late Chris Farley to play him in a couple of short skits, which you can see here.

Enjoy!

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