Showing posts with label Baltimore Orioles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltimore Orioles. Show all posts

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Accept Your Allowence And Say Thank You


I understand wanting more money for doing a job but there is a difference between getting paid what you are worth for the job you do and wanting what you feel like you deserve even though you don’t deserve it.
 
Such is the case of Orioles back-up catcher Caleb Joseph. At 30 years old he has just 231 professional games under his belt and last year set a record for most plate appearances without an RBI. With 141 plate appearances he batted sub-mendoza line .174 with 23 hits, 3 doubles, 28 strikeouts and no RBIs. In fact, in his three years as a professional he has 771 plate appearances, is batting .213 with 149 hits, 169 Strikeouts and 77 RBIs.
 
This was his first year of arbitration eligibility and last year he was paid $523,500, or nearly $23,000 per hit. Even having a crappy year and setting a dismal record the Orioles still offered him a 25% raise to $700,000 but he felt he was worth much more, he felt he was worth a cool million. The arbitrators felt different than Joseph and supported the team’s $700,000 offer.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Stan Musial And Earl Weaver RIP




Today was a difficult day for baseball with the passing of Stan Musial and Earl Weaver, both Hall of Famers.

Stan Musial was easily one of the nicest guys to ever play baseball; he spent his entire career, 22 seasons, with the St Louis Cardinals where he won 7 batting titles, 3 MVP Awards and 3 World Series Championships. He had a .331 lifetime batting average with 475 home runs and 3,630 total hits. If you look back at Major League Baseball in the 1940s and 1950s three players stand out among the rest; Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams and Stan Musial.
 Earl Weaver was on the opposite side of the spectrum, he was known for arguing any call he felt was questionable. Once his cap was turned backwards as he charged the umpire you were almost certain he was about to be ejected. Weaver actually started as a minor leaguer with the Cardinals in 1948 before moving on to managing. He eventually worked his way up to First Base Coach with the Orioles in 1967 before taking over as Manager the following season. In 17 seasons as the Orioles Manager he went 1480-1060, a .583 winning percentage, making him the 5th best winning percentage (with managers over 10 seasons or more). During his time he took Baltimore to the World Series 4 times, winning in 1970, he also won Manager of the Year Award three times. He had only one losing season, 1986, which was his final season before retiring for good.
 Both men were well respected in their organization, both have statues located at their respective stadiums and both had their jersey numbers retired. Even at their advanced age, Musial was 92 and Weaver was 82, they stayed relatively active with baseball and their teams.

Both have a decent selection of cards, though with Musial being a player he has a larger checklist, and both are included on a number of checklists in modern releases from Topps and Panini.