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« October 2007 | Main | December 2007 »

November 30, 2007

Dukes involved in incident in Dominican game

Dukes Elijah Dukes apparently hasn't calmed down that much.

The troubled outfielder had been enjoying what Rays officials have said was a seemingly quiet and successful return to the field with the Licey team in the Dominican Republic - until Thursday night.

Dukes reacted angrily after being called out on strikes in the ninth inning and was ejected after going chest-to-chest with the umpire, and had to be restrained by several teammates at different times.

"It got a little ugly,'' said Jesus Campos, VP of baseball operations for the host Gigantes team. "If it wasn't for (teammate) Andy Tracy holding him back, things could have gotten a lot worse. ... It definitely wasn't a safe situation for the umpire because (Dukes) is a big guy.''

(Watch the video of part of the incident here. Scroll ahead to about 5:25.)

Dukes - who had been dropped from the Rays roster in June after a series of off-field and personal problems and confrontations, including accusations he threatened his estranged wife and children  - had a rough night overall.

He had words with the opposing catcher, objected to a strike call in his first at-bat, then was hit by a pitch his next time up and flung his bat to the ground, and on his way to first made a somewhat suggestive gesture to the typically rowdy crowd, which had been jeering him. It's not uncommon for fans at these games to scream and throw bottles on the field while player ejections aren't as rare as in American baseball.

Campos said he wouldn't be surprised if Dukes was suspended for his actions.

"He needs to grow up,'' Campos said. "His body and ability, it looks like it's there. He's a big man, but he has a long way to mature."

Dukes returned to the Licey lineup Thursday for the first time in 12 days. In 18 games he is hitting .236 (13-for-55) with 2 homers and 6 RBIs and 4 steals. He has struck out 21 times and walked 11 times.

Rays officials have said they hadn't decided if Dukes would return to the team next spring, but that he had been doing well. With the trade of RF Delmon Young, Dukes would have a chance for considerable playing time if he was on the team.

Rays officials were not aware of the incident.

"We are not able to properly comment until we have had a chance to speak with Elijah and officials from the Licey ball club,'' Rays spokesman Rick Vaughn said.

Earlier Friday during a media session at Tropicana Field, Rays executive VP Andrew Friedman was asked about Dukes' overall status and said he had been doing well.

"We're doing a lot of work with him and feel like he's made a lot of positive strides,'' Friedman said. "There's still a lot of things that would have to happen from our standpoint for us to count on him, and it's Nov. 30 and there's a lot of off-season to go.''

-- EDUARDO A. ENCINA and MARC TOPKIN, Times Staff Writers

(Photo -- Licey TV, YouTube. Click to enlarge.)

Percival deal official

Pecival The Rays made their two-year deal with reliever Troy Percival official on Friday, guaranteeing the 38-year-old $8-million, with a chance to earn more than another $4-million through incentives based on appearances and games finished.

Percival, who seems likely to supplant Al Reyes as the Rays closer, will be introduced to the media at 3 p.m. at Tropicana Field.

Percival, 12th on the all-time list with 324 saves, was a four-time All-Star while averaging 35 saves for the Angels from 1996-2004. He signed with Detroit and sustained an elbow injury in a July 9, 2005, game at Tropicana Field. But his torn muscle healed and he came back last summer with St. Louis, posting a 1.80 ERA in 40 innings over 34 games of mostly middle relief.

Percival, a favorite of Rays manager Joe Maddon when both were in Anaheim, is also considered a strong clubhouse leader and is expected to have a positive influence on the young pitching staff. He also joins Reyes and Dan Wheeler in giving the Rays three veteran relievers with late-innings experience.

Percival chose the Rays over several teams, reportedly including the Yankees and Brewers.

(AP photo. Click to enlarge.)

Kennedy memorial fund established

A private service will be held today in Colorado for former Rays pitcher Joe Kennedy, who died Nov. 23 during a trip to the Tampa Bay area. Kennedy was survived by his wife, Jami, and a 1-year-old son.

The Joe Kennedy Family Memorial Fund has been established, according to mlb.com, and donations can be made at any Bank of America branch, or mailed to Brad Gallimore, 1013 16th Ave. South, Nashville, Tenn., 37212.

November 29, 2007

Rays strike two-year deal with Percival

The Rays bolstered their bullpen by reaching agreement with veteran reliever Troy Percival on a two-year deal Thursday night.

"We're just finishing up a couple things but basically we're there,'' agent Paul Cohen said. "Troy's very excited.''

Percival, 38, took and passed a physical for the Rays on Thursday in St. Petersburg and will be introduced on Friday after completing a deal that is worth $8-million over two years and could exceed $10-million based on appearances and games finished.

Percival starred for the Angels when Rays manager Joe Maddon was a coach in Anaheim, spent two seasons retired following an elbow injury (sustained at Tropicana Field in a July 9, 2005 game) and made an impressive comeback last summer with St. Louis, posting a 1.80 ERA in 40 innings over 34 games.

He would join, and could possibly supplant, Al Reyes as the Rays closer. Percical chose the Rays over several teams, reportedly including the Yankees and Brewers.

Also Thursday, RHP Matt Garza and SS Jason Bartlett, the two key pieces acquired from Minnesota on Wednesday for RF Delmon Young, said they were excited to join the Rays.

"I was surprised because I didn"t think I was really leaving Minnesota, but after thinking about it, it's a great opportunity for me,'' Bartlett said. "They've got a lot of young talent over there and from what I heard it's a great group of guys and I heard the coaching staff is awesome. ... It sounds like a good fit for me and I'm excited.''

Inside the Delmon deal

The Rays deal to trade Delmon Young to the Twins hit a late snag, but both teams were focused enough on the pieces they wanted to prevent the hurdle from killing the deal as negotiations headed into the night Wednesday.

In the early afternoon Wednesday, just as the Rays were completing their new stadium unveiling, word emerged that the teams were close to a trade centered around Young and 24-year-old righthander Matt Garza. But it appeared the Rays were caught off guard by the timing of the news, as seen by Andrew Friedman's abrupt departure from the stadium festivities.

One source said the teams were close to closing the deal Tuesday. But the Rays obviously didn't plan on making a such a monumental roster move that might steal thunder from the highly anticipated stadium unveiling. As talk headed into evening, and both teams remained hushed, the feeling was that something was going to happen.

Reached on his cell phone late afternoon, Young said he hadn't heard anything. Infielder Brendan Harris, who was part of the deal, had received calls all afternoon from friends and family who heard about the rumor. In fact, when a Times reporter called his cell phone and got his voice mail, Harris immediately called back, seeing the 727 area code on the number and thinking it was the Rays with news.

Harris sounded disappointed about a looming trade: "I kinda thought I had carved a niche for myself here. This would be the third time I've been traded. It's not like I'm a bad clubhouse guy or anything."

Apparently what was holding up the deal was the Rays' health concern about Twins reliever Juan Rincon, who was reportedly the third player coming to Tampa Bay initially along with Garza and shortstop Jason Bartlett. Tampa Bay was wary of the status of Rincon's elbow -- he has arthroscopic surgery the elbow following the 2005 season and occasionally dealt with fatigue in the joint -- but Rincon's agent, Ed Setlik said Wednesday night, "If he's got elbow problems, that's news to me. He was throwing 94, 95 at the end of last season. I don't even know where to start with that claim."

Rincon, who was one of the AL's top late-inning middle relievers from 2004 to 2006 before struggling last season, also served a 10-game suspension for violating MLB's substance-abuse policy in 2005.

That wasn't enough to hold up the deal. The Twins ponied up 21-year-old minor league reliever Eduardo Morlan, who spent most of last season dominating hitters in the Florida State League with Fort Myers. Morlan, who was born in Cuba and grew up in Miami, has a 2.82 ERA along with 337 strikeouts in 274 2/3 minor league innings over four seasons and would likely start next season at Double-A Montgomery. So Friedman had to be happy to add another arm to the stable of young pitching in the minors.

The Twins obviously liked Rays minor leaguer Jason Pridie, the last piece of the deal. They selected him in last year's Rule 5 Draft before returining him before spring training. It also now explains why the Rays added Pridie to the 40-man roster last week, considering talks between the teams began at the GM meetings in Orlando in the first week of this month.

But as far as the key figures of the trade, both sides knew what they wanted.

"They insisted on Garza, they wanted Bartlett," Twins GM Bill Smith said. "We were equally as insistent on getting Delmon Young."

November 28, 2007

Rays deal Delmon to Twins

The Rays completed a six-player deal late Wednesday to send AL Rookie of the Year runner-up Delmon Young to the Minnesota Twins in exchange for RHP Matt Garza, SS Jason Bartlett and a minor-leaguer.

The Rays also gave up INF Brendan Harris and minor-league OF Jason Pridie.

The Rays get Garza, who will go right into their rotation, and Bartlett, who becomes their starting shortstop. They also get minor-league RHP Eduardo Morlan, a 21-year-old who was 5-3 with 18 saves and a 3.10 ERA with Class A Fort Myers and Double-A New Britain. He struck out 99 in 69 2/3 innings.

"It's a business decision, and it helps out both teams,'' Young said. "We had too many outfielders and one of them had to go.''

Young said he was "excited" to to join the Twins and would "go over there and help out their club with 100 percent effort.''

He said he was not surprised the Rays would trade him because "you always know if there's an offer they can't resist they're going to pull the trigger.''

The Rays were in serious discussions throughout the day and earlier seemed poised to get veteran reliever Juan Rincon, but concerns surfaced about his elbow, and Morlan was substituted in the deal.

"I haven't heard anything," Young said when reached on his cell phone mid-evening Wednesday. "Just gimme a call when something gets done or not done."

The key pieces to the deal is Bartlett, who would step into the team's starting shortstop role, and Garza, a talented 24-year-old right hander who likely would become the Rays' No. 3 starter.

The Rays are also close to working out a deal to sign veteran free-agent reliever Troy Percival, who pitched under Rays manager Joe Maddon with the Angels. Percival pitched to a 1.80 ERA in 40 innings with the Cardinals last season after coming back from arm problems that led him to a brief retirement.

"Percy has huge admiration for Joe Maddon and he's instructed me to kind of really roll up my sleeves and get something done within the next couple days," Percival's agent, Paul Cohen, said Wednesday.

Reports of the potential deal surfaced around mid-afternoon and Rays executive vice president Andrew Friedman left Wednesday afternoon's stadium rendering unveiling abruptly, with his BlackBerry attached to his ear after telling the Rays PR staff he wasn't available for comment.

The Rays would lose a key piece out of their prized outfield. The 22-year-old Young hit .288 with 13 homers and 93 RBIs and made 16 outfield assists.

Garza was 5-7 with a 3.69 ERA in 16 appearances last season. Bartlett is a career .271 hitter, a base-stealing threat and owns a .967 career fielding percentage, but he is coming off a season in which he made a career-high 26 errors.

Harris, who hit .286 with 12 homers and 59 RBIs, opened his first full major season as the Rays starting shortstop, but was moved to second later in the season when questions about his range and durability arose.

"My phone's been blowing up all day," Harris said when reached on cell phone. "I haven't heard anything from Tampa directly, so I'm just waiting. I'm really surprised though."

Pridie, who was just added to the team's 40-man roster last week, was selected by the Twins in last season's Rule 5 Draft and returned to the Rays before the season. he had 14 homers and 26 stolen bases between Double-A Montgomery and Triple-A Durham.

In other Rays news, the team traded right-handed reliever Brian Stokes to the Mets for cash considerations. Stokes, who was 2-7 with a 7.07 ERA, was taken off the 40-man roster last week and designated for assignment.

Questions remain in dazzling proposal

Raysoutside

Why are the Rays doing this?

Because they want to. The Rays could stay at Tropicana Field, but say they are making this pitch because they see the opportunity to not only get a new stadium but to help transform downtown as well.

What if this stadium deal falls through?

From what the Rays say, things would be pretty much status quo. They’d keep playing at Tropicana Field – they have a lease through 2027 – and probably try again for a new stadium at a later date. But it would remain to be seen how long Stuart Sternberg would want to own the team in that situation.

What would the new stadium be called?

It depends who wants to pay for it, because the naming rights will be available for purchase. According to the Rays, Tropicana’s naming rights are specific to the current stadium, so presumably they would get a refund. There is talk of preserving the history and tradition of the site by including a reference to Al Lang – in either the stadium name or the “cove” behind the rightfield wall – to preserve the tradition.

What’s with the design?

Rather than a brick-based  retro look that has been all the rage, the Rays are looking to the future with what principal owner Stuart Sternberg termed a “more sweeping, open, inviting” design. And without a brick in it.

What’s the tall pole all about?

That’s a 320-foot mast that anchors the roof and is part of what the Rays consider an "iconic" design.

What are the specifics?

The stadium would hold 34,000 fans (most in the lower deck) and would be open air with a cable supported, sail-like covering that a team official described as "a glorified umbrella." The field would have standard dimensions. Balls hit over the rightfield wall would splash into the bay.

Isn’t it going to be hot and sweaty?

Of course, it’s Florida in the summer time. But the Rays say it will be reasonably comfortable – more so than Atlanta, on par with St. Louis or Kansas City – for several reasons: the roof, which will be deployed during the day to keep heat from building up; the breezes off Tampa Bay; and cooling devices such as fans or misters.

What about rain and lighting?

The sail-like cover can be deployed in about eight minutes, and the Rays say it would provide enough covering to prevent postponements and delays expect in the most severe storms.

What about parking?

It may be a problem, especially at first. Like Wrigley Field in Chicago and Fenway Park in Boston, there will be very little parking at the site. The Rays say there are currently are about 12,000 spots within a short walk of the stadium, and there may be more when it opens. Fans would have to get used to walking or taking shuttles.

Is there really enough room for a stadium on that site?

It’s going to be tight, but by reorienting the field – so rightfield abuts the water – and extending Bayshore Drive into the bay it can fit with standard dimensions. To make it work, there would be no seats from the rightfield foul pole across to left-centerfield.

Would players like it?

The heat would certainly have an effect on the players, as it does in Texas and Miami, though they might enjoy being outside. The Rays would likely play as many games at night as they could.

Would there be more than Rays games there?

Probably. The stadium could accommodate a football field, which could lead to a college bowl game, and could be the site of concerts and other events.

How can the Rays sell the Tropicana site even though they don’t own it?

They can’t. The team would need the city and Pinellas County to agree.

What about the debt the city and county still have outstanding on Tropicana Field?

The Rays said what to do about the debt remains a question.

Do the Rays have a developer in mind for the Tropicana site?

Yes. The Rays are working with Hines Interests of Houston. But because the land is publicly owned, the city would have to issue a request for proposals from developers. A developer other than Hines could be awarded the site.

What retail options are coming to the Tropicana site?

The Rays won’t say. But they do at least have one specific major outdoors retailer in mind.

Where’s the money coming from for the new stadium?

The biggest chunk, the Rays say, would come from the sale of Tropicana Field and adjacent parking lots to a private developer. The Rays say that transaction could raise between $250-$300-million toward the new stadium. But that includes property tax revenues generated by the redeveloped Trop site.

What are the Rays contributing?

The team said it is prepared to increase its rent payments from about $1-million a year to $10-million a year. The money, which will be paid to the city, would then help pay for construction of the new ballpark.

Is the team seeking money from the state?

Yes. The Rays say the money, $60-million paid out over 30 years, is important but not a deal breaker.

Who’s on the hook if the stadium goes over its $450-million budget?

The Rays say they will cover cost overruns.

– Marc Topkin and Aaron Sharockman, Times Staff Writers

Rays unveil dramatic ballpark vision

ST. PETERSBURG — The Tampa Bay Rays this afternoon revealed a bold plan for a new waterfront baseball stadium at one end of a dramatically transformed St. Petersburg downtown.

The Rays’ plans call for a $450-million, open-air, 34,000-seat stadium to open in 2012 at the current site of Al Lang Field. On the other end of downtown at Tropicana Field, the team proposes a massive retail and residential development.

"We’re talking about a major-league downtown," Rays principal owner Stuart Sternberg said during a meeting with the St. Petersburg Times editorial board, where he previewed the concept.

"My goodness, it's beautiful," said Gov. Charlie Crist, after a rendering of the stadium was unveiled.

The break in the team’s silence comes after nearly three weeks of speculation. Rays officials said they spent 1 1/2 years working on the plan, which was first reported Nov. 9 by the St. Petersburg Times’ Web site, www.tampabay.com.

The team formally unveiled its plans at a 2:15 p.m. announcement that included Crist, St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker and Major League Baseball president Bob DuPuy.

Several significant questions remain about financing, parking and the Florida heat.
Rays officials insist the project will not require new tax money. But the plan does call for $60-million in state tax money and property tax revenue from the redeveloped Tropicana Field site, as well as proceeds from the sale of that land.
The team says it believes it can stay within its $450-million stadium budget and, if not, would be responsible for any cost overruns.

"No new taxes," Sternberg said.

The stadium would require approval of St. Petersburg voters, because it involves a long-term lease of waterfront property. The team is asking for a November 2008 city referendum.

The stadium would include a sail-like cover, anchored to a 320-foot-tall mast, that could be used when it rains. It would be constructed in a way to maximize views of the waterfront and the city skyline in what Sternberg termed a "sweeping, open, inviting" design.

"We want to create something iconic … that will become the postcard shot of St. Pete," Rays vice president Michael Kalt said.

The Rays plan for the stadium to open for the 2012 season, which would allow the team to play host to the Major League Baseball All-Star Game within a few years. The team believes the stadium would become a destination, with fans spending hours before and after games in the area.

"We have the ability to make such an impact on the community, and we embrace our responsibility," said Rays president Matt Silverman.

Among the key points to the project:

Tropicana redevelopment

The Rays are working with one of the world’s largest private real estate developers to turn Tropicana Field and its adjacent parking lots into a mixed-use development worth up to $700-million.

Hines Interests in Houston has developed a plan to turn the 85-acre Trop site into a sprawling retail and residential community, anchored by a major outdoor merchandise chain. Rays officials declined to name the retailer.

The development would include 900 residential units and 1-million square feet of retail space, team officials said. Fourteen new acres of public parks would be created and centered around an enhanced Booker Creek.

If the Rays keep to their timetable, work on the site would begin in 2009, and a first phase would be complete by 2011.

"It’s a blank canvas for a developer," said Rays president Matt Silverman.

Combined with a new stadium on the waterfront, team officials said the development could finally push the growth of downtown beyond the waterfront while fulfilling the promise of economic development that never materialized at the Tropicana site.

In order for any of it to happen, though, the city first would have to request proposals for the site from developers — a requirement because the land is publicly owned.

The city would get to set the ground rules — how many residential units, how much retail — but the developers would set the asking price.

Rays officials said Hines is interested in developing the site, but recognize that other developers would be, too. Kalt said the team would ask the city to begin the development process within months.

Financing

Sternberg pledged that the stadium would be built with no new city taxes. The money, $450-million, largely would come from the Rays and the redevelopment of the Tropicana Field site.

The cost includes a contingency, Kalt said, as well as money for improvements to a park to the north of the stadium. Any cost overruns would be the team’s responsibility, Kalt said.

Here’s how the financing would work:

The Rays, who now pay about $1-million a year in rent to the city, would increase their yearly payments to close to $10-million. The city would then issue bonds, with the rent as the pledged revenue, to pay approximately $150-million of the construction costs.

The Rays also would benefit from the sale and redevelopment of the Tropicana Field site. The team said the site could be worth between $250-million and $300-million to the Rays. Part of that money would come from the future property taxes created by the Tropicana redevelopment. Called tax increment financing, the program funnels city and county property taxes toward downtown capital projects.

The tax program has been in place in downtown St. Petersburg since 1982 and runs through 2035.

The two revenue streams, Kalt said, are "sufficient to form a financing plan."

Sternberg said the team also would pursue $60-million in state funding in the form of a sales tax subsidy.

"It is a significant amount of money that would cause us to make changes in our design" if the legislature rejects the funding, Sternberg said. But, "it wouldn’t be a show stopper."

Weather issues

Though the stadium would be open air, a sail-like roof that could be deployed in about eight minutes would provide cover in the event of rain, resulting in postponements or delays only in extreme conditions.

The Rays would play mostly night games in the stadium and would plan to keep the cover on during the afternoons to keep the temperature in the seating area down. Fans or misters would provide cooling, and some stadium areas — possibly the concourses — would be air-conditioned.

Team officials said with that technology and the breeze coming off Tampa Bay, the stadium would be relatively comfortable even without full air conditioning. The team has hired a climatologist who estimates it would be about 4 degrees cooler than the average temperature for a game in Atlanta, and on par with summer conditions in Kansas City and St. Louis.

Stadium design

Rather than the retro look that has been popularized in Baltimore, Cleveland, Arlington, Texas, and San Diego, the proposed stadium would have an open, modernistic “21st century design” without a brick in the building.

Though the 34,000-seat stadium would be a snug fit when oriented on the Al Lang site, the field dimensions will not be compromised, with somewhat standard measurements, including 320 feet down the rightfield line, with balls that go over the wall and splash into the water.

The roof would be attached to the top of the stadium and anchored to a 320-foot mast in left-centerfield. The cables for the roof would be strung permanently over the playing field but high enough that they would only come into play in the most extreme circumstances. (Architects said the same thing about the catwalks at Tropicana Field, but they are hit regularly.)

"Essentially it’s a glorified umbrella," Kalt said.

"I like to think of it as a convertible top," Silverman said.

The seating areas would be constructed to maximize views of the water and St. Petersburg’s skyline, with what would be the smallest upper deck seating area (about 10,000 seats) in Major League Baseball. There would be no seats from the rightfield foul pole across to left-centerfield.

Although the stadium will be designed for baseball, it will be able to accommodate other events, including football, which could lead to a college football bowl game.
To accommodate the stadium, the Rays say they would need to fill in a small area of the waterfront to shift a section of Bayshore Drive east. The road would be closed to vehicles on game days.

At today's announcement, Rays' first-baseman Carlos Pena hit balls from what would be the spot of home plate in the new ballpark. After several attempts, he hit a ball into the Tampa Bay.

Parking

There would be minimal parking on the site, provided by a small garage. The Rays say there are enough existing spots in lots and garages in the area. They say there are 12,000 spots within a 15-minute walk of the stadium and that many could be used for game parking, that more could be available, and there will also be parking at the Tropicana Field site, with some type of shuttle service.

-- By Aaron Sharockman and Marc Topkin, Times staff writers

Romano: Your own stadium taste test

Raysinfield

ST. PETERSBURG — As first impressions go, this one is certainly intriguing.
The Rays have come up with a stadium proposal that is attractive,  innovative and ambitious.

It is also a long, long way from reality.

Based on the details revealed today by the Rays, there are no obvious flaws to the plan. St. Petersburg taxpayers will not have any money flow out of their bank accounts or from current city funds, and the entire area could benefit greatly from the retail/housing/entertainment development being proposed near midtown.

The problem is perception. As a team, the Rays have not won enough games to claim the hearts of the Tampa Bay area. And as an owner, Stuart Sternberg has not spent enough money to earn the public’s trust.

So you begin with skepticism, and go from there.

Sort of like every Opening Day around here.

The Rays understand this will be a problem. They know your first question will be about financing. They know your second question will be about the weather. They know your third question will be about parking.

Team officials believe they have the proper answers to those questions, and hundreds of others. But having an answer is not the same thing as changing someone’s mind. And I think a lot of minds are already made up.

Here then, is your own stadium taste test. Consider each issue, ponder the logic offered by the Rays, and decide for yourself whether this stadium deal is worth pursuing.

The Deal

Basically, the Rays are saying the 15 acres at Al Lang are more valuable as a site for a baseball stadium and the 80 acres at Tropicana Field are more valuable as a development site. So they are proposing to swap land with the proceeds from the Tropicana site financing the construction of both sites.

The team will be responsible for cost overruns and is not going to charge fans for personal seat licenses. If that plan holds up to scrutiny, it’s difficult to find fault with it.

Agree or disagree?

The Weather

The Rays say watching a game at this ballpark will be cooler than summer games in Atlanta or Texas. They say the breeze from the water and the design of the stadium will have a natural cooling effect.

I’m not sure I buy the idea that it will be cooler than Atlanta, but I do think people are overreacting to the heat question. Probably 75 percent of the Rays home games are played at night. You may not have a fresh breeze blowing through your hair, but it’s not like you’re going to roast while sitting waterside at 7:30 p.m.

Agree or disagree?

The Parking

It is not going to be as simple as Tropicana Field or Raymond James or the St. Pete Times Forum. The stadium itself will have a very limited number of parking spaces, so fans will have to find alternative parking in downtown St. Pete.

The Rays say their studies show an ample number of parking spaces within a 15-minute walk of the stadium site. Frankly, this idea should thrill the city. It will bring added dollars and customers to downtown retailers and restaurants.

The Rays are the ones who stand to lose on this issue. Most teams get considerable revenue from parking charges. The Rays will get none.

Agree or disagree?

The Stadium

It’s hard to judge based on sketches and virtual reality tours, but the initial impression was not spectacular. The waterfront view is certainly attractive, but the stadium itself did not look particularly charming or homey.

Sternberg said the Rays did not want to follow the trend of retro ballparks and instead wanted to take stadium design into the 21st century, so the stadium will not have a single brick. But the reason retro ballparks work is not because they’re the latest fad but because they have a classic elegance. Bricks are like blue jeans. They never go out of style.

Agree or disagree?

The Perception

Again, this may be the most difficult hurdle for the Rays.

No matter what they say about financing, there will be suspicions that current tax money is being diverted to a team owned by millionaires. And there will be accusations that Sternberg is squeezing money out of the Bay Area while refusing to dramatically increase the team’s payroll.

This issue will come down to a matter of trust. If all the business proposals work — and that is no guarantee — Sternberg will still have to convince voters to approve the referendum in 12 months.

The man is sharp, and he is sincere. He may want to consider townhall-style meetings to answer the questions of concerned citizens. The future of his team, and the direction of the city, may depend on this.

Agree or disagree?

John Romano can be reached at romano@sptimes.com.

Shortstop talks heating up?

The Rays' search for a shortstop has expanded to include Minnesota's Jason Bartlett and the teams have had discussions.
Bartlett, 28, has been the Twins' primary starter the last two seasons, though he was limited by neck and back injuries last season.
Bartlett hit .309 in 99 games in 2006, but dropped off last season to .265, with five homers, 43 RBIs and 23 stolen bases. His defense also suffered last season as he made 26 errors and had a .960 fielding percentage; in 2006 he made 13 errors and had a .971 fielding percentage.
The talks could be part of a larger deal as the Twins are reported to have interest in several of the Rays prized young outfielders such as Delmon Young, B.J. Upton and Rocco Baldelli, whose status is in question due to last season's hamstring injury.
If the Rays don't get Bartlett or another shortstop through trade, they could try to sign free agent Cesar Izturis.

Rays' new stadium plans

The Rays will unveil their plans for a new downtown waterfront ballpark at 2:15 today. Check back here for details, including artist renderings.

November 27, 2007

Friedman: The time is now

    The plans to build a new waterfront stadium won’t directly affect the plans to build the Rays team.

     But executive vice president Andrew Friedman said Wednesday that the focus this off-season had shifted to making the team better sooner rather than the usual later.

   “I think we’re at a point, a lot of our focus in ‘06 and ‘07 was on the future, and I think right now our M.O. is changing in that we have a lot fewer questions this off season than we did last offseason and next offseason we expect to have even fewer,’’ Friedman said at a pre-winter meetings luncheon.

    “So this is a good opportunity for us to start being more aggressive to focus on the now than we were able to in the previous years. It gets back to the personnel we have in upper minors and at the major-league level that we feel like it’s the right time to really start moving this thing forward.’’

    Friedman reiterated that the Rays were seeking to acquire a shortstop as part of an effort to improve their defense, and were aggressively looking for bullpen help. They remain unlikely to splurge on the free agent market, but are discussing a number of trade possibilities.

  One that made its way into Internet rumors that they are not discussing involves Minnesota pitcher Boof Bonser, a Gibbs High product.

Rays sign three ... minor-league free agents

The Rays announced the signings of three minor-league free agents on Tuesday - OFs Chris Richard and Jon Weber, who played for Triple-A Durham last season, and C Hector Gimenez, who has been in the Astros organization.

Richard, 33, hit .284 with 14 homers and 57 RBIs for the Bulls and at one time appeared in line for a callup to the Rays but sustained a minor injury. Weber, 29, was acquired from the Texas organization in July and hit .265 with three homers and 21 RBIs in 39 games for the Bulls.

Gimenez, 25, spent all of last season on Houston's disabled list after undergoing surgery to repair his right labrum in March. He is a switch-hitter with a .263 career average in seven minor-league seasons, and has played in two major-league games.

November 26, 2007

Young honored

Rays RF Delmon Young finished a distant second in the AL Rookie of the Year voting to Boston 2B Dustin Pedroia, but he was a unanimous selection to the Topps Rookie All-Star Team.
Young was one of five players chosen unanimously in a poll of major-league managers; the others were Dodgers 1B James Loney, Brewers 3B Ryan Braun, D'backs OF Chris Young and Astros OF Hunter Pence.

The full squad:

1B James Loney, Los Angeles (N.L) (98 games, 15 HR, 67 RBI, .331)
2B Dustin Pedroia, Boston (139, 8, 50, .317)
3B Ryan Braun, Milwaukee (113, 34, 97, .324)
SS Troy Tulowitzki, Colorado (155, 24, 99, .291)
OF Delmon Young, Tampa Bay (162, 13, 93, .288)
OF Chris Young, Arizona (148, 32, 68, .237)
OF Hunter Pence, Houston (108, 17, 69, .322)
C Carlos Ruiz, Philadelphia (115, 6, 54, .259)
RHP Brian Bannister, Kansas City (165 IP, 12-9, 3.87, 77 K, 44 BB)
LHP Hideki Okajima, Boston (69 IP, 3-2, 2.22, 63 K, 17 BB)

November 23, 2007

Ex-Ray Joe Kennedy dies

Kennedy

Kennedy's high point with the Rays may have been a 1-0 complete-game win at Seattle in 2002.  [AP photo]

Former Rays pitcher Joe Kennedy died on Friday of undetermined causes during a visit to the Tampa Bay area for a wedding.

Agent Damon Lapa told Foxsports.com the cause of death was likely a heart attack or brain aneurysm.

Kennedy was staying with his wife's family in Lithia and collapsed early Friday morning.

According to Hillsborough County Sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Carter, Kennedy was not feeling well Thursday night and went to bed early, then awoke at about 1:15 a.m. and collapsed as he tried to leave the bedroom. Fire rescue personnel responded and found him unresponsive, and he was transported to Brandon Regional Hospital where he was pronounced dead of what Carter said were natural causes.

Word spread quickly among Rays officials and alumni.

"I can't believe we're talking about this,'' said former Rays star Aubrey Huff, who had dinner with Kennedy on Tuesday.  "It's very troubling. It's got to be heart-wrenching for his wife and new baby.
"There was never a day when he was in a bad mood. He was always happy, always full of life, always busting your chops.''

Rays minor-league operations director Mitch Lukevics said in a statement:
"We are shocked and deeply saddened by the news of Joe's sudden passing and extend our deepest sympathies to his family.  Joe made all of us very proud as we watched him transform from a young pitching prospect in 1998 into our Opening Day starter in a very short time."

"There are no words to describe this,'' former Rays scouting director Dan Jennings told espn.com. "It's very, very tragic.''

Kennedy lived in Colorado during the offseason but returned to the bay area for a wedding, and was staying with his wife's family. Huff was with Kennedy Tuesday night for dinner and a bachelor party and said he seemed fine then. "Same old Joe,'' Huff said, fighting back tears.

Kennedy, 28, was 18-31 with a 4.98 ERA in three full seasons with the Rays from 2001-03. An eighth-round pick in the 1998 draft, Kennedy came up through the Rays system, making his big-league debut in 2001 and was their opening day starter in 2003. He struggled to a 3-12 record that season and the Rays traded him after the season to Colorado as part of a three-team deal that brought Mark Hendrickson to Tampa Bay.

Since leaving the Rays, Kennedy had two stints with Colorado and Oakland, and last season also pitched for Arizona and Toronto and was a free agent at the time of his death. He had a career record of 43-61, with a 4.79 earned run average. His last major-league appearance came in relief for Toronto on Sept. 29 - against the Rays.

Lapa told Foxsports.com: "The cause of death is unknown at this time. The best guess at this point is either a heart attack or a brain aneurysm. The way he died was sudden. There is no reasonable explanation for what happened.'' He said an autopsy would be performed.

Kennedy is survived by his wife and a 1-year-old son.

November 22, 2007

Thanksgiving stove talk

Just because it's Thanksgiving, it doesn't mean that the hot stove isn't cooking.

Rays executive vice president Andrew Friedman didn't expect any activity today, but interestingly enough the Nationals team website ran a somewhat cryptic story on Washington's interest in Elijah Dukes.

We've touched on it before. Dukes is playing well with Licey of the Dominican Winter League and has made an impression on his manager there, Nationals third-base coach Tim Tolman.

"He's an intense competitor and he has done a fine job for us," Tolman said in the story. "When he leaves the ballpark, I'm not worried about him."

The story also said that if the Nats acquired Dukes, they would work hard to have manager Manny Acta and first baseman Dmitri Young mentor Dukes. Young said he's been told by his younger brother, Rays outfielder Delmon Young, that Dukes is "a great kid."

November 21, 2007

Voters: Don't ask us to pay for new stadium

ST. PETERSBURG – City voters are open to the idea of a new downtown waterfront baseball stadium – depending on who’s paying for it, according to a new St. Petersburg Times poll.

Fifty-seven percent of city voters surveyed said they would favor plans to build a new ballpark if no city tax dollars were used.

If city tax dollars were part of the equation, 69 percent said they would oppose the plan. In voters' minds, the financing of the $450-million Tampa Bay Rays stadium is the biggest road block. Not parking. Not the heat.

The telephone survey of 616 city voters was conducted Monday and Tuesday and includes a four percent margin of error.

Respondents were split on whether money from the sale of Tropicana Field should be used to build a new stadium.

They were, however, more likely to favor the Rays' plan if Tropicana was converted into a large mixed-use development that paid local property and state sales taxes.

The results are a good first step for team executives, who have not discussed their plans to build a new stadium at Al Lang Field since the Times’ website www.tampabay.com broke the story Nov. 9.

The Rays would pay up to a third of the cost to build a new 35,0000-seat open air stadium.

The team also could use money from the sale of Tropicana Field and property taxes generated by the redevelopment of the site to offset construction costs.
The Rays said today that Gov. Charlie Crist, St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker and Major League Baseball President Bob DuPuy will be on hand Nov. 28 for an official announcement.

The Rays say they intend to “announce details and renderings of a new waterfront ballpark and redevelopment of Tropicana Field.’’

People who attended more than six Rays games largely supported a new stadium, even if city tax dollars were part of the equation.

Complete coverage of the waterfront park plan

-- by Aaron Sharockman, Times staff writer

Crist and Baker to attend stadium announcement

The Rays will have Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker on hand for the Nov. 28 official announcement of their plans for a new stadium at the current site of Al Lang Field.
MLB President Bob DuPuy, who usually handles such matters for commissioner Bud Selig, will also attend.
The Rays will be represented by principal owner Stuart Sternberg, team president Matt Silverman and senior VP Michael Kalt, the point man in negotiations for the stadium.
The Rays plan to "announce details and renderings of a new waterfront ballpark and redevelopment of Tropicana Field.''

November 20, 2007

40-man set

The Rays added four players to the 40-man roster -- catcher John Jaso, outfielder Fernando Perez, outfielder Jason Pridie and left-hander pitcher James Houser -- and designated relievers Brian Stokes and Jon Switzer for assignment.

The Rays also traded Chris Snelling, who they claimed off waivers last month, to the Phillies for cash, opening another spot on the 40-man, which is now at full capacity.

The team has 10 days to trade, release or outright Stokes and Switzer.

Stokes, who was a candidate to be the team's closer in spring training, struggled as a late-inning reliever early in the season and never recovered, going 2-7 with a 7.07 ERA in 59 appearances during his first full major league season.

Switzer, the Rays' second-round draft pick in 2001, one of the team's only left-handed relievers, was 0-2 with a 8.05 ERA in 21 outings.

Snelling to Phils

The Rays have yet to announce their moves to their 40-man roster, but they've made a minor trade, sending OF Chris Snelling to the Phillies for cash. 

The move gives the Rays another spot on the 40-man roster. When the Rays claimed Snelling off waivers last month, they released reliever Jay Witasick to make room.

Uribe not necessarily on Rays' wish list

The Rays are believed to have very limited interest in White Sox SS Juan Uribe, who suddenly became available Monday when Chicago acquired All-Star SS Orlando Cabrera from the Angels for RHP Jon Garland.

Tampa Bay is looking to upgrade at shortstop, especially in a defensive capacity, and Uribe, who fielded to a .976 fielding percentage in 150 games at shortstop last season and owns a career .975 fielding percentage in his career, would seem to be a good fit. And Uribe's bat, which has produced 20 homers on three of the past four seasons, has some pop.

But Uribe's recent battle with his weight is reason for concern for the Rays, who are believed to think his defense is in decline and at a $4.5 million 2008 pricetag might not be in the team's best interest. As the crop on shortstops thinned out, and Chicago couldn't land SS Edgar Renteria, the White Sox resigned Uribe for one season earlier this month, but they pulled a surprise trade for Cabrera, who is coming off the best year of his career, which included a Gold Glove.

White Sox GM Kenny Williams said Monday he wants to do what's best for Uribe and trade him to a place where he would start -- something he's undoubtedly do in Tampa Bay. But if Chicago didn't get the right deal, they could keep Uribe in a utility role. The White Sox have expressed interest in Rays LF Carl Crawford, but Chicago would likely have to put together a package deal that included solid young pitching to get a whiff of Crawford.

November 19, 2007

My MVP ...

This year, the easiest slot to fill-in on the MVP ballot was the top one. It was the other nine spots that were troubling.
As one of 28 voters for the AL MVP award, I spent hours over the final weekend of the season pondering what to do, completing the 10-player ballot, as required, before the start of the playoffs. My usual guidelines are to identify the players who had the best seasons and helped their team have success, so I usually have at least one player from each of the playoff-bound teams at the top of my list, and the non-playoff bound players toward the bottom.
Yankees 3B Alex Rodriguez was the obvious No. 1 choice, so much so I expected him to be a unanimous selection. (And he would have been except for the two writers from Detroit who both just happened to have him second and the Tigers' Magglio Ordonez first.)
My biggest issues were deciding:
which Boston player was indeed more valuable (I picked Mike Lowell over David Ortiz),
whether a second Yankee deserved to be in the top 10 (Jorge Posada was, I decided)
and where to place Tampa Bay's Carlos Pena, weighing his individual performance with the team's lack of success, raising the question of how "valuable" he could be while not wanting to be too biased from having seen him play every day (I settled on sixth; two writers had him as high as third, Bob Dutton of the Kansas City Star and Dave Sessions of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram).
All that said, here is the ballot I cast:
1. Alex Rodriguez, Yankees
2. Magglio Ordonez, Tigers
3. Vladimir Guerrero, Angels
4. Mike Lowell, Red Sox
5. Victor Martinez, Indians
6. Carlos Pena, Rays
7. David Ortiz, Red Sox
8. Jorge Posada, Yankees
9. Ichiro Suzuki, Mariners
10. Curtis Granderson, Tigers

Another MVP for A-Rod, Pena ninth

Yankees 3B Alex Rodriguez won his third AL MVP award Monday, dominating the voting by the Baseball Writers Association of America, and Rays 1B Carlos Pena finished ninth.


Rodriguez received 26 of 28 first-place votes and beat runner up and Tigers OF Magglio Ordonez, who received the other two first place votes, by a 382-258 margin. Angels OF Vladimir Guerrero, Red Sox DH David Ortiz and Red Sox 3B Mike Lowell rounded out the top five.


Pena -- who was second to Rodriguez in the AL with 46 homers – received 64 points, which included two third-place votes, two sixth place, two seventh place, three eighth place, eight ninth place and five 10th place votes. Two members of the BBWA in each AL city ranked their top 10 players.


Pena finished behind Yankees C Jorge Posada (sixth), Indians C Victor Martinez (seventh) and Mariners OF Ichiro Suzuki (eighth), but was ahead of Tigers OF Curtis Granderson, Yankees SS Derek Jeter and Indians OF Grady Sizemore, who finished 10th through 12th respectively.


Pena still received the most MVP points by a Tampa Bay player. Only three times has a Rays player received points: Aubrey Huff (four in 2003), Jorge Cantu (one in 2005) and Carl Crawford (two in 2006).

Rays interested in Japanese reliever

Even though free-agent Japanese reliever Yasuhiko Yabuta was reportedly close to signing a two-year deal with the Royals, Yabuta told reporters in Japan that four other teams, including the Rays, have expressed interest in the 34-year-old righthander, the Kyodo News reported today.

Yabuta_yasuhiko Yabuta (left), speaking yesterday at a fanfest in Chiba, said the Indians, White Sox and Pirates have also expressed interest.

Working primarily as a setup man, he was 4-6 with a 2.73 ERA, 38 holds and four saves last season for the Chiba Lotte Marines. A 12-year veteran, he spent his entire career with the Marines of the Japanese Pacific League, beginning his career as a starter, but became a reliever permenantly four years ago. Over the past four years, he owns a 2.80 ERA in 222 appearances.

A change of pace pitcher who relies on his change up, Kabuta is best known for striking out Alex Rodriguez, Derrek Lee and Johnny Damon in a 1 1/3-inning relief outing in the World Baseball Classic in 2006.

Will votes come in for Pena?

It's pretty likely that Yankees 3B Alex Rodriguez will win his third AL MVP award in the last five years Monday afternoon, but it will be interesting to see where Rays 1B Carlos Pena will figure in the voting.

Pena's season, in which he set Rays club records in homers, RBIs, total bases and slugging percentage, will be hard for the voters to ignore. And Pena's comeback season was one of the feel-good stories of the season.

Last week, Rays RF Delmon Young finished second in AL Rookies of the Year voting, but was entirely left off eight of the 28 ballots, a fact that Rays manager Joe Maddon chalked up to "personal prejudice," as we reported in today's Times.

But the AL MVP is different in a couple ways. Voters rank 10 players (as opposed to the top three in ROY balloting). And while Pena will likely be hurt by playing for a last-place team, writers know him well as one of the nicest guys in baseball, which right or wrong, could make a difference.

What do the readership think? Where will Pena fall in the MVP race?

We'll find out Monday at 2.

November 18, 2007

Rays prospects play prominent role in World Cup win

Top Rays prospects Evan Longoria and Justin Ruggiano were two of the four Team USA players to have multiple hits in the U.S.'s 6-3 win over Cuba in the World Cup final today in Taiwan.

It marked the United States' first win in the World Cup sincs 1974 and ended Cuba's run of nine consecutive World Cup titles.

November 16, 2007

Stadium details coming ...

The details of the Rays' plans for a new waterfront stadium will be released shortly after Thanksgiving. Rays president Matt Silverman said at a Tampa Bay Partnership luncheon on Friday the team was targeting a Nov. 28 announcement.
While the outline of the plan was reported by the Times last Friday, the team has made minimal comments since and not provided specifics of the plan or renderings of the proposed stadium.

November 15, 2007

Rays brief Selig, DuPuy on stadium proposal

As the quarterly owners meetings wrapped up three hours to the south in Naples, Rays officials took the opportunity to brief MLB commissioner Bud Selig and chief operating officer Bob DuPuy on the team's plans for a new stadium in downtown St. Pete.

The organization gave Selig and DuPuy details of their proposed $450 million stadium to be built off the bay on the site of Al Lang Field. Major League Baseball spokesman Rich Levin termed the meeting as an "information session" and said nothing was done formally, but that the meeting went well. Both sides agreed to keep each other informed on the issues as the plan proceeds.

November 14, 2007

Reyes back, Norton not

The Rays announced Wednesday they had exercised their 2008 option on reliever Al Reyes, who will make $2.3-million after a successful 2007 season, and declined a $1-million option on INF/OF Greg Norton, who becomes a free agent.

The Rays also officially reinstated OF Rocco Baldelli, SS Ben Zobrist and C Shawn Riggans to the 40-man roster from the 60-day DL.

Reyes saved 26 games in 30 opportunities last season. Norton hit .243 with four homers and 23 RBIs in 75 games.

November 13, 2007

No matter where, Huff a sponge for controversy

Toward the end of his tenure with the Devil Rays, Aubrey Huff took to the local radio airwaves to vent about his frustrations about playing in a Rays uniform.

But those soundbites can’t nearly match what Huff said last week on the nationally broadcast Bubba the Love Sponge Show on Sirius Satellite Radio. Most of what Huff said can’t be put in this space because of its extremely graphic nature (A partial transcript can be found online. You’ve been forewarned).

Huff disparaged the city of Baltimore, calling it a “horse----“   town compared to Tampa , where he still lives. Last offseason, the Orioles signed Huff to a three-year, $20 million contract. 

Huff talked about his escapades on the road, which he said includes waking up at 1 in the afternoon hungover. As for studying video before games, Huff said, “All this studying? Honestly, you're gonna look at a piece of, a TV, and say this guy, this guy is going to throw me this way? No, he might throw you a different way! Who cares? Just see it and hit it.” Huff later took back his comments in a (Baltimore) Sun story, saying he was acting. One thing's for sure, Huff has probably already worn out his welcome in Charm City with two years remaining on his deal.

 

Think the Rays are glad something like this didn’t happen on their watch?

Biscuits aplenty

In another testament to the Rays' vaunted farm system, four Montgomery Biscuits were named to the Topps Double-A All-Star Team released Tuesday.

Third baseman Evan Longoria, the Southern League MVP, highlighted the group. Catcher John Jaso, right-handed pitcher Chris Mason and reliever Dale Thayer rounded out the quartet. Four players made up one-third of the 12-player team.

Longoria, who led the Southern League in six offensive categories despite spending the end of the season at Triple-A Durham.

Jaso's .316 average was tops among all Double-A catchers and ranked second in the Southern League. Mason, who was 15-4 with a classification-low 2.54 ERA, was MiLB.com's Double-A pitcher of the year.

Thayer's 21 saves led the Southern League and he held opposing batters to a .187 average.

The team included Arizona OF Justin Upton, younger brother of Rays CF B.J. Upton, and Cleveland 2B Asdrubal Cabrera, both of whom finished the season in the majors playing for title contenders 

November 12, 2007

Young finishes second

Young_2 Rays RF Delmon Young finished second in the AL Rookie of the Year voting announced Monday.

Boston 2B Dustin Pedoria was the winner with 132 points, including 24 of the 28 first-place votes. Young was second with 56 points and three first-place votes. Kansas City's Brian Bannister was third with 36 points and the remaining first-place vote. Boston's Daisuke Matsuzaka was fourth, the Angels Reggie Willits fifth and Boston's Hideki Okajima sixth.

Voting was done by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America based on regular season performance, with ballots from two writers in each AL city cast before the start of the playoffs.

(Times photo - Edmund D. Fountain. Click to enlarge.)

Rookie of the year?

Rays RF Delmon Young would be something of a surprise if he wins the the AL Rookie of the Year award that will be announced shortly after 2 today.
Young had a strong season for the Rays, but the popular opinion among most observers is that Boston 2B  Dustin Pedroia will be the winner. Baltimore pitcher Jeremy Guthrie, Kansas City pitcher Brian Bannister and Boston pitchers Daisuke Matsuzaka and Hideki OKajima are also candidates.
Pedroia certainly raised his profile during the Red Sox's championship run, but there are two things to remember in this award process:
First , the voting done by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America is based on regular season performance. The ballots for all the BBWAA awards, in fact, are required to be cast before the start of the playoffs. And up until his not-running-out-a-ground-ball incident the final weekend in Toronto, Young had a very solid and controversy-free season that was sure to catch the attention of some voters.
Secondly, the winner is chosen based on ballots fron two voters in each of the 14 AL cities. So even if there is "Northeast" or big-market bias for Pedroia, there are only two Boston writers who vote, two New York writers, two Tampa Bay writers, etc.
As for the "experts," most seem to think Pedroia will win. Among ESPN's 20 baseball contributors, 16 pick Pedroia. Keith Law doesn't have Young in his top three, picking Guthrie, Pedroia, Bannister. Buster Olney picks Pedroia.

November 09, 2007

Where should the Rays play?

What do you think about the Rays' plans? Vote in our poll:

 

Stadium shopping
Where should the Rays play baseball?
Indoors at the Trop
On the St. Petersburg waterfront
Closer to Tampa, likeToytown or Derby Lane
Orlando

Pena wins Silver Slugger award

Rays 1B Carlos Pena capped his comeback player of the year season Friday when he won the Louisville Slugger Silver Slugger award for being the top-hitting AL first baseman.

Pena, who batted .282 and established franchise bests with 46 homers and 121 RBIs, becomes the first Rays player in club history to earn the honor, which has recognized the top offensive player at each position in each league since 1980. Pena was one of seven first-time winners of the award.

A prestigious award within the game because the winners are determined by a vote of MLB coaches and managers, voting is based on a combination of offensive stats including batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage as well as the voters’ general impression of the player’s overall offensive value. Managers and coaches were not allowed to vote for players on their own teams.

Pena becomes the fifth different AL first baseman this decade to win the award. Twins 1B Justin Morneau won last season while Mark Teixeira (’04, ’05), Carlos Delgado (2000, ’03) and Jason Giambi (’01, ’02) each won twice this decade.

Pena will receive a three-foot silver bat trophy with his name engraves on it as well as his AL Silver Slugger teammates during a ceremony sometime next season.

November 08, 2007

Rays unveil new logos, uniforms

Rays The Rays have a fresh look as of this afternoon, as the team unveiled its new uniforms and logos, blue-themed colors, and shortened name.

The Rays showed the new uniforms off at St. Petersburg's Straub Park on Thursday afternoon, and will be in downtown Tampa Friday for a free event at Gaslight Park starting at 11:45 a.m.

Players will be at area Champs Sports stores this evening from 6-7:30, with the new merchandise available for purchase.

While the idea of dropping Devil from the team name is new, this is the second time the Rays have changed uniforms, but new ownership touts this as the start of a new era as the struggling team begins its second decade.

The Rays changed the name of their website to raysbaseball.com.

"We are now the "Rays" -- a beacon that radiates throughout Tampa Bay and across the entire state of Florida," principal owner Stuart Sternberg said. "Tampa Bay and the Sunshine State are beautiful places. We want the Rays to reflect the best our region has to offer."

(Pictured: Pitchers James Shields, left, and Scott Kazmir, right, show off the Rays' new home white and road gray uniforms. Photos courtesy of Tampa Bay Rays. Click to enlarge.)

-- Marc Topkin, Times staff writer

 

November 06, 2007

Friedman: Rays have no "untouchables"

Friedman When you average 97 losses over 10 years and finish last nine times out of 10, there isn't much you can say definitively. And one thing the Rays can't do is say that any one player -- not Carl Crawford, not B.J. Upton, not Scott Kazmir, not Delmon Young, not Evan Longoria -- can be considered off-limts in a potential trade.

And that's exactly what executive VP Andrew Friedman said on Tuesday at the GM meetings at the Grand Cypress Resort.

"We're not good enough as of (today) to say that anyone is untouchable,'' Friedman said. "Obviously, there are players that we're much less likely to talk about, and it would be much harder for us to deal. That being said, we have to listen to anything and everything. And if there is a team that wants Player X and is offering, in our opinion, a good deal more than Player X, we can't be afraid to pull the trigger.''

Friedman said there was some "dialogue" about potential trades, though nothing appears imminent. He also said there have been some conversations with agents of current Rays about potential contract extensions, but no "serious negotiations.''

The Rays only free agent is backup catcher Josh Paul, and it appears unlikely they will sign him before the free market opens on Nov. 13.

Otherwise, there was no major news as of 5:30 p.m. from the GM meetings, though there was a vote, 25-5, to explore using instant replay to clarify home run calls. However, even if approved, and commissioner Bud Selig will be a tough sell, it likely won't be implemented in time for next season.

(Pictured: Andrew Friedman. Times photo - James Borchuck. Click to enlarge.)

November 05, 2007

Great Scott?

As baseball's general managers gather in Orlando for their annual meetings and other activities, baseball writers have to have something to do, too. And one of the more creative rumors spinning around the Internet on Monday involves the Rays and Scott Kazmir.
The idea - suggested by New York Post writer Joel Sherman, and headlined SCOTT-STOVE LEAGUE - is that if trade offers for Twins pitcher Johan Santana turn out to be excessive, the Rays would consider dealing Kazmir for a similar package.
The basic premise isn't as outlandish as it might seem - the Rays' style is to listen to all offers and explore all possibilities, and if a team wanted to get crazy, they would have to listen. For example, if the Mets (now, wouldn't that be ironic ... ) missed out on Santana and wanted to offer one of their young star players, Jose Reyes or David Wright, and more for Kazmir, the Rays would have to listen.
But there is also the typical assumption that because Kazmir is eligible for arbitration, he will soon be too expensive for the Rays. Based on everything new owner Stuart Sternberg has said, that should not be an issue, especially the way he and his top execs have stressed the importance of keeping their young core together.
Sherman throws out another interesting idea, that the Rays could pursue Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum, a potential future star, and are willing to talk about all position players except B.J Upton. Again, the premise isn't incorrect, that in THE RIGHT DEAL they would be willing to move Carl Crawford or Delmon Young.
There is also some Rays chatter in Minnesota, suggesting the Rays would deal Crawford or (on a lesser level) Rocco Baldelli for young pitching. Given that they are about to lose Torii Hunter and both Baldelli and Crawford have fixed salaries for the next few seasons, that seems a reasonable conversation to have.

November 02, 2007

Now appearing ...

Tb_cost420
[Kevin Costner and Modern West iperform Thursday night at Straub Park. Getty Images]

There will be Rays all around the Tampa Bay area Thursday-Saturday as the team celebrates the official unveiling of its new uniform, logo, colors and shortened name.

Here is the latest schedule of events and appearances as provided by the Rays. All events are free.

THURSDAY

4 p.m. Interactive activities, including Rays Street Team and mascot Raymond, begin at Straub Park (next to Vinoy Renaissance hotel in downtown St. Pete)

5:30     Fashion Show featuring Rays players, Manager Joe Maddon, Rays coaches and former Rays Wade Boggs and Fred McGriff modeling new uniforms. New merchandise will be available for purchase starting at 5:30.

6:30     Kevin Costner and Modern West in concert performing original rock and roll.

8        Fireworks show

FRIDAY
7 a.m.   Players visit local TV and radio stations

10         Players visit MacDill Air Force Base

10:30    Manager Joe Maddon and team president Matt Silverman present jersey to St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker at City Hall

11:45    Picnic in the Park at Gaslight Park, downtown Tampa. Free hot dogs, peanuts Cracker Jack, sodas, water and autographs from more than 15 players and manager Joe Maddon. Radio announcers Andy Freed and Dave Wills will emcee. T-shirt giveaway. New merchandise available at team store at 400 North Tampa St.

12:30 p.m.    RHPs Gary Glover and Jason Hammel visit participants in Pediatric Cancer Foundation's Kids Fishing Derby at Vinoy Marina adjacent to hotel.

1:45     Carl Crawford, Maddon and Silverman present jersey to Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio at her office.

5:30-7:30 player appearances at Champs Sports stores (subject to change, according to the team.)

Tyrone Square Mall, St. Petersburg
Rocco Baldelli, Brendan Harris, Josh Wilson

International Plaza, Tampa
Scott Kazmir, Dioner Navarro, B.J. Upton

University Square Mall, Tampa
Grant Balfour, Jon Switzer, Delmon Young, Ben Zobrist

Brandon Town Center
Carl Crawford, Gary Glover, Edwin Jackson

DeSoto Square Mall, Bradenton
Jason Hammel, James Shields, Andy Sonnanstine

Southgate Plaza, Sarasota
Al Reyes, Dan Wheeler, manager Joe Maddon

SATURDAY
1-3 p.m. Additional appearances at central Florida Champs Sports
Florida Mall, Orlando
Dioner Navarro, James Shields

Lakeland Square, Lakeland
Dan Wheeler, manager Joe Maddon

 

 

November 01, 2007

Hickey to return

The Rays announced Thursday that pitching coach Jim Hickey will return to the team on a one-year contract. Hickey's future was in question following his arrest on DUI and other charges after returning from the Sept. 30 season finale.

"Im extremely grateful for the opportunity to continue coaching the Rays,'' Hickey said in a statement released by the team. "Last month, I let down my family, the organization, and the Tampa Bay community. I am truly sorry for my actions.''

On Monday, Hickey pleaded no contest to charges of DUI and leaving the scene of an accident. He had his license revoked for six months and was placed on probation for one year, though the term may be reduced. A seperate charge of resisting arrest was folded into the DUI charge. He has performed 50 hours of court-ordered community service, and will perform more under team direction.

"Ever since the incident, Jim has shown contrition and taken full responsibility for his actions,'' Rays executive VP Andrew Friedman said in a statement. "We are confident he has learned from his mistakes, and we are ready for hi