Blog Archives

April 28, 2010

Take the Brandon Phillips Tour

Someone sent me a link last August to a site called LikeMe.net, who have recommendations on Cincinnati-area restaurants and attractions supposed to be personally recommended by Brandon Phillips.

You can check out his recommendations here:
http://www.likeme.net/users/BrandonPhillips/recommendations

No way for me to really tell whether these are Phillips’ actual haunts, other than to actually stake out the Super Bowl in Erlanger, KY, but I don’t have any reason *not* to believe it either. I mean, would you really be that surprised to find yourself sitting next to BP at the bar at BW3?

April 22, 2010

Videos of Aroldis Chapman in Action

Here are a few short videos of Aroldis Chapman dominating the Indianapolis Indians despite his lack of experience on Thursday at Victory Field.

In the first inning, Chapman picked off a runner who’d strayed too far off first base.

Chapman pitched, too, with his fastball always in the upper 90s. His talent is raw, but very impressive.

And finally, what everyone is interested in seeing: Chapman batting. As in most things, he needs practice, but he did manage a hit in the game.

April 22, 2010

Bats 7, Indians 1: Chapmania Comes to Indy

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W: Chapman (1-1) L: Karstens (1-2)

Boxscore

Aroldis Chapman and the Louisville Bats came to Indianapolis tonight to face the Indians. There were definitely more Cincinnati Reds fans in attendance than when I last visited on Monday.

Chapman was effectively wild. His raw talent was amazing, routinely hitting the high 90s on the scoreboard pitch speed. His change-up was in the low 80s. That’s a nice speed differential. However, he allowed 3 hits and walked 5 over 5 1/3 innings. That only amounted to 1 run, and the win, thanks to a strong Louisville Bats offense, but I hope he has the time to improve in the minors. I’d hate for him to be called up early and destroyed by the maelstrom that is the Reds.

Wilkin Castillo and Juan Francisco led the Bats offensive charge, both clubbing home runs and driving in 2. Thanks to the Bats’ bullpen, that lead held up, and Chapman received his first professional win.

Aroldis Chapman was the primary reason we made the trip. Below are a few pictures of him in action.

April 21, 2010

The Daily Brief: Is Volquez’s Wife Pregnant?

Last Game
The Reds actually won! They broke their 5-game losing streak with a win over the Dodgers, although they continued their streak of being the only team in the majors without a starting pitcher with a win.

Next Game
Aaron Harang tries to prove to himself and the world that he still has something left when he starts for the Reds against Hiroki Kuroda at 7:10m EDT. The game will be on FSN-OH and 700 WLW.

The Question on Everyone’s Minds
You may have heard that Edinson Volquez received a li’l ol’ 50 day suspension yesterday for violating MLB’s drug policy. Volquez released a statement explaining himself.

Prior to the conclusion of last season, my wife and I sought medical advice in Cincinnati with the hope of starting a family. As part of my consultation with the physician, I received certain prescribed medications to treat my condition. As a follow up to our original consultation, my wife and I visited another physician in our home city in the Dominican Republic this past off-season. This physician also gave me certain prescribed medications as part of my treatment. Unfortunately, I now know that the medication the physician in the Dominican gave me is one that is often used to treat my condition, but is also a banned substance under Major League Baseball’s drug policy. As a result, I tested positive when I reported to spring training.

Although I understand that I must accept responsibility for this mistake and have chosen not to challenge my suspension, I want to assure everyone that this was an isolated incident involving my genuine effort to treat a common medical issue and start a family. I was not trying in any way to gain an advantage in my baseball career. I am embarrassed by this whole situation and apologize to my family, friends, fans, teammates, and the entire Reds Organization for being a distraction and for causing them any difficulty. I simply want to accept the consequences, learn from the mistake, and continue to strive to be the best person and baseball player I can be.

Upon reading this, I couldn’t help but think, “Did it work?” If this is the truth, can we expect a little Volquez within the next few months?

Regardless, MLB allows players to serve suspensions while on the disabled list, which doesn’t sound like much of a suspension to me. It’s like pulling a prank at the end of a school year and getting kicked out for 3 weeks, but getting to serve that during the summer. Kind of weakens the deterrent. Still, it does work in the Reds favor.

What to Say to Sound Smart at the Water Cooler
Since he was acquired from Oakland in 2003, Aaron Harang has led the Reds in most pitching statistics, including starts (196), wins (69), innings pitched (1247 1/3), and strikeouts (1,056).

April 20, 2010

Volquez Banned Just As Things Were Looking So Good For The Reds

Cheater! Cheater! Pumpkin-eater!News broke this afternoon that injured Reds pitcher Edinson Volquez–you may remember him from one of the two awesome things about the 2008 Cincinnati Reds (Joey Votto was the other)–tested positive for performance enhancing drugs.

Edinson Volquez has failed a test for performance-enhancing drugs and will be suspended for 50 games, SI.com has learned.

Sigh. Just what the Reds need. There is one good bit of news to come from this. Well, good, if true. With breaking news on the internet, it’s hard to tell. According to C. Trent, Volquez can serve the suspension while on the disabled list. If that’s true, then Volquez’s suspension would be up sometime in June. July was the month that had been touted as a possible return, but that always felt overly optimistic to me.

There’s nothing but wild assumptions flying over Twitter and teh internets right now, but one thing I think we can look forward to: Volquez’s apology. Which of the options will he employ?

  • Denial: “I didn’t do it.”
  • Feigned Ignorance: “I didn’t know it was banned.”
  • Competitive Excuse: “I wanted to return from my injury quickly.”
  • Silence: No statements at all.

My money’s on Feigned Ignorance.