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Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 4:57 am
by joez
PLAYOFFS DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

Code: Select all

Equipos	            G	W   L	 PCT	DIF 
Leones Del Escogido	8	7	1	.857	-
Gigantes Del Cibao	 7   3	4   .428   3½
Aguilas Cibaeñas	   8	3	5	.375	4
Tigres Del Licey	   9	3	6	.333	4½

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 4:59 am
by joez
PLAYOFFS MEXICO
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Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 5:24 am
by joez
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GUASAVE WITH A GREAT TRIUMPH GO TO THE SEMIFINALS

GUASAVE, SIN. January 6, 2012 (LMP / Alpha Communications) -

An unexpected outcome that served to dispel doubts. Guasave cotton farmers they got to the semifinals with a stunning victory 8 to 5 over the Yaquis of Ciudad Obregon that even in defeat, also secured their ticket to the next phase under tie breaker rules.

Trailing 5-3 in the eighth, Hector Navarro relieved Luis Mendoza. Jose Rodriguez singled. Brad Snyder singled. Jose Rodriguez to 2nd. Luis Ayala replaced Hector Navarro on the mound. Japhet Amador singled. Jose Rodriguez scores. Brad Snyder to 2nd. Sergio Garcia was the pinch runner for Japhet Amador. Daryle Ward walked. Brad Snyder to 3rd. Sergio Garcia to 2nd. Tony Thomas grounded into a double play. Brad Snyder scores. Sergio Garcia to 3rd. Luis Borges walked. Francisco Mendez pinch hit for Gabriel Gutierrez. Francisco Mendez doubled. Sergio Garcia scored. Luis Borges scored. Jose Felix pinch ran for Francisco Mendez. Eduardo Arredondo doubled. Jose Felix scores. Leonardo Heras grounded out to end the inning as Guasave rallied to take an 8-5 lead.

Luis Alonso Mendoza did not get a decision pitching seven innings for six hits, three runs, three walks and eight strikeouts. Luis Ayala picked up the loss while the winning pitcher was Alan Guerrero (1-0) as Sean Gleason took the save.

Japhet Amador had three hits for Guasave. Barbaro Canizares had three hits for Obregon. Canizares also homered for Obregon. Albino Contreras also homered for Obregon.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 5:48 am
by joez
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TOMATEROS ALSO IN THE SEMIFINALES WITH BUSCHMANN AND FRAZIER

Navojoa SON. January 6, 2012 (LMP / Alpha Communications) -

The Novajoa fought, fought, but the hit did not go down against a dominant performance by Matt Buschmann, who beat them and put them out of the playoffs. The great American pitched seven innings and Jeff Frazier homered in the sixth and led the Tomateros of Culiacan to the semifinals by winning 4 to 1 over the Navojoa Mayos.

The Tomateros would be starting next Wednesday the semifinal series against the team who will finally be "wildcard" that depended on the outcome of the game in Guasave between Yaquis and cotton.

Buschmann (2-0) pitched seven full innings of blanks and only four hits, walked one and struck out seven.

Arturo Barradas got one out of the eighth and the remain of out by Amauri Sanit.

Five tense innings with only zeros on the board, with Matt Buschmann and Javier Martinez (0-1) dueling it out until the homer in the sixth by Jeff Frazier broke the tie.

With two out in the sixth, Luis Cruz singled. Jeff Frazier homered his third of the playoffs. Luis Cruz scored.

Fraziers homer was the only misfortune suffered by Javier Martinez, who worked five and two thirds innings with five hits, two runs, three walks, and seven strikeouts.

Culiacan doubled the scoring in the eighth. Arturo Barradas relieved Matt Buschmann. Matt Young grounds out. Amauri Sanit relieved Arturo Barradas. Javier Colina singled. Flavio Romero popped. Wes Bankston singled. Javier Colina to 3rd. Matt Esquivel doubled. Javier Colina scored. Wes Bankston scored.

Novojoa picked up a run in the bottom of the eighth. Final score Culiacan 4 Novojoa 1.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 5:51 am
by joez
TOKYO, Jan. 6 (23:01) Kyodo

Baseball: Iwakuma signs with Seattle, says Mariners 'wanted him most'

SEATTLE -

Free agent right-hander Hisashi Iwakuma signed an
incentive-laced, one-year contract with the Seattle Mariners on
Thursday, a year after his attempted move to the majors through the
posting system ended in failure.

According to a source with knowledge of the negotiations, the
30-year-old Iwakuma will receive a base salary of $1.5 million plus
performance bonuses that will make the deal worth well over $3.9
million, or 300 million yen -- the amount he made with the Rakuten
Eagles last season.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 5:58 am
by joez
Seattle signs prized Japanese hurler Iwakuma

With one-year deal, right-hander will compete for rotation spot

By Greg Johns / MLB.com | 01/05/12 10:35 PM EST

SEATTLE --

Hisashi Iwakuma, one of the premier pitchers in Japan over the past decade, signed a one-year deal with the Mariners on Thursday and will compete for a spot in the club's starting rotation when Spring Training opens next month.

Iwakuma, 30, first tried coming to the Major Leagues last year, but couldn't reach agreement with the A's on a contract after Oakland won the right to negotiate with him with the top posting bid of $19.1 million.

The 6-foot-3, 170-pounder instead remained in his home country last season and then became a free agent, which occurs after nine years of professional ball in Japan's system. Iwakuma's deal is for a $1.5 million base, with a potential of another $3.4 million in performance bonuses based on innings and games pitched.
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Speaking through an interpreter from Japan, Iwakuma said the key to signing with Seattle was the team's interest in him and he wasn't bothered by accepting far less than the A's were offering a year earlier.

"I didn't make a contract with the Athletics, but I didn't need it, money-wise," he said. "I just wanted to get a good relationship with a team."

The Mariners and A's will open the regular season against each other in a two-game series in Tokyo on March 28-29.

Iwakuma had never been to Seattle before visiting two weeks ago, when he took a physical and went to dinner with general manager Jack Zduriencik. He said his family loved the city, which was another key reason for his decision.

While the one-year agreement was surprising, given Iwakuma was talking about a four-year contract last year with the A's, Zduriencik said it makes sense for both sides.

"It serves both parties' best interests," Zduriencik said. "He wants to pitch here in the United States. He's enjoyed his short time in Seattle and is very familiar with the Mariners. He'd like to establish himself in the U.S. and see what happens.

"We were agreeable to one-year deal. If he comes over and has the success we expect, it would be an opportunity to talk more years. But the fact he's here now serves both parties well."

Iwakuma was the Pacific League MVP in 2008 when he went 21-4 with a 1.87 ERA. He has a career mark of 107-69 in 226 games with Kintetsu and Rakuten.

The right-hander has a fastball in the low 90s and uses an excellent slider and sinker to induce groundouts. He's a control pitcher, with 90 strikeouts and 19 walks in 119 innings last season.

Health may be the biggest concern with Iwakuma, who was sidelined from May 18-July 26 last year with a sore shoulder. He went 3-2 with a 1.72 ERA in his first six starts, then came back after the injury to make 11 starts, going 3-5 with a 2.87 ERA in that span.

Iwakuma pitched only six games in 2006 due to a shoulder problem and missed half of '07 with oblique and elbow issues, but he's been relatively durable since and threw more than 200 innings in both 2008 and '10.

Iwakuma said he recently threw 30 pitches in a light bullpen session and felt no pain. He expects a tough transition to the Major Leagues, but that his family would help with the move to the United States and in providing motivation.

"I will show them the best way I can be in this year with Major League baseball," he said.

Zduriencik has been looking for another starter to add to a rotation that returns Felix Hernandez, Michael Pineda and Jason Vargas, along with young Blake Beavan and Charlie Furbush.

The club has a strong nucleus of pitching prospects who are close to being Major League ready, led by Danny Hultzen, last year's No. 2 overall Draft choice out of Virginia, as well as James Paxton, Erasmo Ramirez and Taijuan Walker.

Zduriencik, who dealt Doug Fister and Erik Bedard at last year's July 31 Trade Deadline, didn't rule out pursuing other pitching options.

"We'll certainly keep our ears open," he said. "We have discussions with some other parties, but today we're here to talk about Hisashi and what he brings. We'll tackle other roads as they happen."

Though the Mariners principal owner is Hiroshi Yamauchi, the former chairman of Japanese-based Nintendo, the club has signed only three previous players directly from Japan over the past 16 years.

Closer Kazuhiro Sasaki signed with the Mariners as a free agent in 2000 and pitched for Seattle through the 2003 season before returning to Japan.

Ichiro Suzuki arrived in 2001 and is now heading into the final season of a contract paying $18 million for 2012. He's made 10 All-Star appearances and won 10 Gold Gloves in his 11-year career.

Catcher Kenji Johjima came from Japan to play catcher for Seattle from 2006-09 before opting to return to his homeland.

Japanese-born Mac Suzuki pitched for the Mariners from 1996-99, but that was the start of his professional baseball career after he'd moved to the United States as a 16-year-old. Shigetoshi Hasegawa pitched for the Mariners from 2002-05, but he had already been in the Major Leagues for five years with the Angels before signing with Seattle.

The Mariners are also close to signing Japanese shortstop Munenori Kawasaki to a Minor League contract with an invitation to Major League camp. That deal has not yet been finalized, though Kawasaki told reporters in Japan that he'll be competing for a job on the Mariners this spring.

Iwakuma and Kawasaki both played with Ichiro on the Japanese team that won the 2009 World Baseball Classic. Iwakuma was 1-1 with a 1.35 ERA in the Classic, allowing three runs in 20 innings over four appearances. He also starred for Japan's bronze medal team in the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics.

Iwakuma said he had not spoken to Ichiro about playing for the Mariners, but looked forward to the opportunity of being on the same team in Seattle.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 6:02 am
by joez
Roenicke, coaches to attend Aoki workout

Club won negotiating rights for Japanese player in December


By Adam McCalvy / MLB.com | 01/06/12 12:10 PM EST

MILWAUKEE --

Brewers manager Ron Roenicke and two of his Major League coaches will be among a club contingent watching outfielder Norichika Aoki's workout this weekend at Maryvale Baseball Park, the first step in determining whether both sides want to spend the ensuing week pursuing a deal.

Roenicke, bench coach Jerry Narron and hitting coach Johnny Narron will attend the one-day affair with Brewers general manager Doug Melvin, director of pro scouting Zack Minasian and his predecessor, Dick Groch, now a special assistant to Melvin. So will two Brewers officials who spend most of their time at Maryvale: special assistant and player development director Reid Nichols and his top assistant, Tony Diggs.

They will watch Aoki take batting practice off the coaches, they will hit him fly balls and gauge his throwing arm and they will time his running speed.
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"It's the same with any player you work out," Melvin said.

But both sides made clear that this is not a "tryout." Aoki, 30, is already an accomplished player in Japan, a three-time batting champion whose club, the Tokyo Yakult Swallows, posted him last month for Major League teams to bid.

The Brewers won the bidding by reportedly paying $2.5 million for Aoki's rights, and have until 4 p.m. CT on Jan. 17 to sign him. If they do not, Aoki would return to the Tokyo Yakult Swallows and the Brewers would not pay the posting fee.

Since the team does not scout in Japan and made its bid based in part on second-hand accounts and video of Aoki's games, club officials wanted to see him in person before beginning formal negotiations.

Both the Brewers and Aoki's camp, led by agent Nez Balelo of CAA Sports, have declined to reveal the precise schedule to avoid turning Aoki's workout into a media event.

Subsequent negotiations, should they ensue, will probably take place with similarly tight lips. Aoki would no doubt prefer a multi-year deal for making the move to the U.S., a common request for players shifting their careers from Japan. The Brewers, given that Aoki would essentially play a reserve role, would much prefer a one-year contract.

As of the start of this offseason, all eight of the players who were posted and signed with Major League teams since the current system was implemented in 1998 received multi-year contracts (three others inked Minor League deals). The most recent position player is shortstop Tsuyoshi Nishioka, who drew a bid from the Twins that topped $5 million, then agreed to a three-year, $9 million contract.

But other Japanese players have signed one-year free-agent deals. On Thursday, the Mariners announced they had signed right-hander Hisashi Iwakuma to a 2012 contract that guarantees $1.5 million, with another $3.4 million in performance bonuses based on innings and games pitched. Iwakuma, 30 and one of Japan's premier pitchers over the past decade, first tried coming to the Major Leagues last year, but couldn't reach agreement with the A's on a contract after Oakland bid $19.1 million for negotiating rights. He returned to Japan for another season and was a free agent this winter because he had the necessary nine years of service.

Aoki has played five seasons for the Swallows and is a .329 hitter with 68 home runs, 295 RBIs, a .408 on-base percentage and 93 stolen bases. A left-handed batter, he had a career-high 209 hits in 2010, but dropped to 170 hits and a .292 average in 2011. Melvin said the Brewers' understanding is that he earned about $2.7 million last season.

Aoki would be the first Japanese position player to sign via the posting system this winter. The Yankees walked away from shortstop Hiroyuki Nakajima on Thursday because they were unable to agree on a deal.

Aoki's potential role on the Brewers is in flux. Aoki was mostly a center fielder in Japan but Milwaukee is set there with Nyjer Morgan and Carlos Gomez, both of whom are arbitration-eligible. Corey Hart is entrenched in right field, and National League MVP Ryan Braun is in left, unless he is suspended the first 50 games. Braun is reportedly appealing a test under MLB's Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment program.

Pending the Braun situation, only one backup outfield spot is unspoken for. The top candidate already on the 40-man roster is 25-year-old Logan Schafer.

"We want to be open-minded about it," Melvin said. "You don't want to tip your hand in negotiations like this."

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:06 pm
by joez
AUSTRALIAN WINTER LEAGUE

Code: Select all

Player          POS  G  AB  R  H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS  OBP  SLG  AVG  OPS E
Joshua Roberts   OF 34 140 19 42 13  1  4  24 69  7 27  2  0 .327 .493 .300 .820 2
Andrew Campbell  2B 16  53  9 15  4  1  0   5 21  9  7  3  1 .387 .396 .283 .783 0
Ryan Battaglia    C  5  12  2  2  2  0  0   3  4  2  3  0  0 .286 .333 .167 .619 1
Mitch Nilsson     C 12  39  3  8  2  0  1   5 13  7  8  0  0 .326 .333 .205 .659 2

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:10 pm
by joez
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Remember Josh Roberts? Probably Not

Josh Roberts, still giving it a burl. By Chuck Murr

Indians Ink

Josh Roberts hardly made a blip on American professional baseball. That's a shame because the game needs more dedicated yet happy-go-lucky players like him. Roberts was one of the Indians' first attempts to discover gold in the outback, signing at age 16 as a very raw athlete out of his native Australia. He never panned out, but not for lack of desire. He still plays the game he's learned to love.

In 117 games in the Tribe system from 2004-06, Roberts hit only .210 (77-for-367) with four homers and 43 RBI. He totaled 34 runs, 13 doubles, three triples, went 10-for-13 in steal attempts, but drew only 39 walks compared to 96 strikeouts.

Roberts was tried at catcher, first base and outfield. He had little experience at any of the positions, but worked his tail off to try and learn them.

Roberts was tough as nails, but always had a sunny disposition. If he thought it would help the team win, he'd get behind the bus and push it to the next town. Indians officials finally decided that it would take Roberts, despite his athleticism and work ethic, longer to master the game than to push a bus from Lake County to downtown Cleveland. He was released at age 20 after the 2006 season.

Now 24, Roberts is back in his native Ipswich, Australia, playing both pro baseball and rugby.

"I'm having a good time, still," Roberts recently told a reporter for The Queensland Times. "At the start of the year you get a bit sore but after you’ve been doing it a couple of weeks, it’s not too bad. You get a bit of fitness from footy.”

Roberts is still doing whatever he can for his team. On days when he doesn't catch, play first base or the outfield, he's on the mound.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:40 pm
by joez
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Villa Clara suffered a surprise defeat against Metropolitan, but remains a threat in the Cuban baseball championship series of 2012. Metropolitans took a couple of walks for a decisive 9-8 lead in the tenth inning and added added another run on a single by Roberto Ramirez for the win 10-8. Despite the defeat, Villa Clara improved to 16-7 and is spearheading the east. Ciego de Avila followed with 16-9, Santiago de Cuba (14-8) and Tunas (14-9). Matanzas (15-8) leads the west, escorted by Cienfuegos (13-11), Industrial (14 -12) and Pinar del Rio (15-13).

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:47 pm
by joez
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Felix Fermin in a dispute indicated that the Aguilas-Licey game is under protest, claiming that Licey had enrolled two-players roster on a irregular basis, the Tigers blanked the Eagles 1-0 run after pitching work of Emil Rogers, who combined with five relievers blank the Eagles ontwo hits. The protest by the Eagles is based on an irregularity by Licey reinforcements rostering Hiram Bocachica and Christian Marrero, which violates the regulations of the Caribbean Baseball Confederation.

You have to expect a decision from the League of Baseball Professional Dominican in this regard. Meanwhile, the win was the third for the Licey with 6 losses, while the Eagles suffered their fourth straight loss, 3-5 to the present record, even are in the third position. This is the fourth consecutive defeat of the Eagles, who were approaching the Licey Tigers, just a half game out of the third position.

This Saturday isa free day for the Aguilas, who will return to action Sunday at Cibao stadium, in front Giants of San Francisco de Macoris, which at the time of writing the story lost its meeting with the Lions of Escogido.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 2:58 pm
by joez
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Wants to continue, Manny Ramirez will be submitted to teams in January

Manny Ramirez

ESPNdeportes.com Services

Manny Ramirez is scheduled to present himself to several teams later this month in an effort to return to the majors, according to a source told Buster Olney of ESPN The Magazine.

No information about which teams are interested in seeing Ramirez said Olney.

The slugger had retired in April after exposure to a 100-game suspension after testing positive a second time to a drug test. He was reinstated last month after agreeing to meet a 50-game suspension instead of the 100 that was imposed for the offense.

His suspension will start as soon as a team signs him.

Last month, Ramirez told Enrique Rojas of ESPNDeportesLosAngeles.com he had made ​​a mistake by using performance enhancing drugs and withdrew without further explanation. He said that he is in the best shape of the last three years.

"Every day I regret the decisions I made for following bad advice," Ramirez told ESPN. "We are human, make mistakes, we are not perfect. We all deserve a chance to prove we've changed."

Ramirez is batting .312 lifetime with 555 home runs and RBIs 1.831 in 19 seasons with Cleveland, Boston, the Dodgers, White Sox and Tampa Bay.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 3:06 pm
by joez
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Sandy Garces agrees with KC Royals

A few months removed from the outfield, Sandy Garces has agreed to terms with the KC Royals as a LHP. Garces took part in the Dominican Prospect League last season but struggled to impress scouts offensively during the year. During the DPL Elite Travel Team tour during Spring Training Garces made contact and showcased his raw abilities. As an Outfielder he posses average to plus speed, solid defense and plus arm strength. Although Sandy is a contact hitter, his swing gets long through the zone and doesn’t project to be more than a slash and dash hitter. He worked hard to improve his hitting skills but was never able to get over the hump.

His trainer Leo Perez decided to place him on the mound due to his plus arm strength and feel for Curveball. Leo a former pitcher and CUBS farm hand cleaned his mechanics and taught him the fundamental approach of pitching. Sandy is now 17 years old, 6’1, 175lb, he sits 87-91mph with a feel for Curveball and Change-up. In a few DPL appearances Garces looked like he had been on the mound since little league baseball. The KC Royals evaluated him numerous times during the DPL season and recently had him workout at their academy, eventually deciding to offer him a contract. Garces will most likely start his professional career in the Dominican Summer League in 2012.

Congratulations to Sandy Garces, Leo Perez and the KC Royals.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 3:09 pm
by seagull
A washed up (clean) Manny for a mil or two might sell some tickets in June.

Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian Ball

Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2012 3:23 pm
by seagull
I remember watching Johnny Goryl hit ground balls to a 16 year old Australian kid, Jason Smit, on the small infield on the back fields of Winterhaven about 5 years ago. The skinny kid didn't field the balls very smoothly and I wondered what the Tribe saw in him. I guess the 16 year old signing age for international kids had something to do with it.

I never saw him hit but he didn't look like he could hit the ball out of the infield.

Guess he's still hanging on with the Tribe somewhere.