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Kyle Kendrick

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Fiendishly clever

Kris BensonFirst of all, a Major League Baseball player - a union one at that - can't get traded to Japan. Come on... suggesting something like that and then getting everyone involved the way the Phillies did in attempt to pull a prank on Kyle Kendrick in Clearwater yesterday, is just mean. Really, who doesn't know a player can't be traded to a team in Japan? So ultimately, as documented everywhere, the Phillies and the press took delight in the shortcomings of another person. It was a poor unsuspecting rube who wasn't aware enough to know that he can't get traded to a team in Japan. Nor did he know that as a member of a union, he and his agent probably had some say in a trade to another league, let alone a league in another country... if it were allowable. Which it's not. But you know what they did? They laughed at him, and wrote about it and put it on TV.

Really nice.

Whatever happened to lighting someone's shoes on fire or the ol' football to the groin? Perhaps the Kendrick prank demonstrates the reason why reality shows and things in which people are voted off or forced to be humiliated by D-list "celebrities" in front of a large audiences are so popular - it's because we're a bunch of mean people who enjoy watching others "get what they deserve."

Harumph!

Look, baseball players are on edge about getting traded or waived this time of year anyway. Then there are injuries and the like that makes a ballplayer's job hang by such a tenuous thread. It's like walking around newspaper guys talking about buyouts and layoffs even though the company is still producing double-digit profit margins. Why mess with a guy's head like that?

Anyway, the point is: don't make fun of people who aren't... well, smart. It isn't nice. It's just like awful thing Jay Leno [1]used to do where hit the streets to ask regular citizens basic knowledge questions only to yuck it up when he could prove that someone didn't know the significance of July 4. That's not funny, it's sad.

Still, traded to Japan? And they got him to believe it? Nice.

Never mind Remember when I wrote that signing Kris Benson was a bad idea, especially when the Phillies could get a player who could jump in now and help the team? Remember? I think it was a few days ago or something... hell, maybe I didn't even write it all. Maybe I just thought it and assumed I wrote it.

You know, because sports writing is so vital to the national discourse...

Anyway, because the Phillies are paying Benson a minimal base salary with incentives that could reach $5 million if he tallies up 200 innings and 30 starts, it's a pretty good deal.

It's a bargain, actually... like shopping at T.J. Maxx or knowing a guy who knows a guy who can get some stuff from time to time.

So the Phillies picked up a deal for a low price. Good. Now if he can last the year it's even better.

Oh yeah... Benson is married, too. Everyone is writing about how his wife is going to turn up in Clearwater or something. But since we have never written about ballplayer wives before, there's no reason to start up now.

If she can pitch or has another noteworthy talent, then that makes it a different story.


[1] I can't believe I'm admitting to have knowledge of Jay Leno's awful show. Truthfully, I've had dental work that got more chuckles than the best episode of Jay Leno's show. Then again, my dentist is funny... gotta give him credit there.

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Try to mix in a few strikes...

OK. Admit it. At the start of the season how many of the Phillies fans out there thought that on June 20 that Freddy Garcia and Kyle Kendrick would have the exact same amount of wins?

Actually, let’s rephrase that to something else…

At the start of the season how many Phillies fans knew who Kyle Kendrick was? I’m going to go out on a limb here and say, “Not many.”

Believe it or not, Kendrick might have some advantages over Garcia when taking the mound against big leaguers despite only pitching in 12 games above Single-A. First of all, Kendrick, just 22, is a mystery to the opposition. Like Phillies fans, the Tigers and Indians probably never even heard of the slender right-hander until he took the mound. That definitely gives the pitcher an advantage.

Secondly, Kendrick isn’t attempting to pitch with an injury unlike Garcia was. That makes a bit of difference, too.

Thirdly, and most importantly, Kendrick throws strikes. In his two outings Kendrick has had a 0-1 count on 22 on of the 50 hitters he has faced. As a result, opponents have hit just .239 against the young righty, compared to .318 off Garcia.

How about this one:

Garcia pitched at least six innings in four of his 11 starts. Kendrick is two-for-two.

See what happens when a healthy pitcher no one has heard of throws strikes?

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Perhaps even more important than all of it – the health, the strikes and unfamiliarity – is that Kendrick has some fielders making the plays behind him. According to CSN resident honcho, Rob Kuestner, the Phillies were flashing the leather behind the kid. Nope, that’s not a cliché, either, because Rob introduced that bit of vernacular to our popular lexicon.

To that I say half of good pitching is good defense. Don’t believe me? How about a story proving this to be the case from the paper of record? According to a story in The New York Times by Dan Rosenheck, the statistical posse has showed that good pitchers are just as likely to be lucky as good.

How about this line from last night:

9 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 SO, 92 pitches – 57 strikes.

That’s what Johan Santana did to the Mets in a 9-0 victory last night. Is that lucky or good?

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According to reports, 1994 called and wanted its facial hair trend back from Geoff Geary.

Come on… I kid. I kid.

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Here’s the nicest thing anyone could say about an athlete/celebrity: “He gets it.”

Jim Furyk is one of those guys who gets it.

As one of the top golfers in the world, Furyk could very easily wall himself away from everyone and everything. He could hire an army of publicists and managers whose main job was to tell other people “no” and then be sycophants.

Certainly there are less talented and less accomplished folks than Furyk who have done just that. But the thing about Furyk is that he remembers where he came from. He knows that if it all ends tomorrow and he can’t play golf ever again, the folks who helped him on his way up will be the ones there for him on the road back down.

The guys who get it know that.

So despite the Ryder Cups and the top 10 finishes at all of the major tournaments, Furyk takes time out for the local press. He returns to the area for clinics and exhibitions and sometimes he even brings some of his famous friends. At the same time he hasn’t forgotten his friends from school, either, even though he doesn’t have to do any of it.

He does because he gets it.

It seems as if Floyd Landis, the star-crossed winner of the 2006 Tour de France gets that, too. Like Furyk, Landis appears to have a little army of friends from the old days ready to protect him. Certainly Floyd and Furyk have different issues right now, but taking care of your roots doesn’t seem to be a problem for either of them.

No, the last few paragraphs have nothing to do with anything, but sometimes I just feel like giving credit where it’s due.

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Speaking of Floyd, the good folks at Simon & Schuster sent me a copy of his book and I should be diving in by the weekend. As promised, I will give the tome a full review.

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If you’re like me, a good vacation would be one where you load the car up with some nice, expensive gasoline, load everyone in, tune up the iPod to the stereo and hit the road. Because of that, the Frugal Travel series in The Times has been quite riveting.

Check it out.

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Big league debuts

We love big-league debuts. Better yet, we really love comparing the debuts of Phillies pitchers over the recent past. So with Kyle Kendrick out there at the Bank on Wednesday afternoon, what better excuse to trot out the digits from some of the more notable opening nights for some Phillies.

Congratulations to Kendrick... now he has a baseball-reference.com page! More importantly, it appears as if he has earned himself another start next week in Cleveland... how about that for the kid? A road trip.

Kyle Kendrick vs. White Sox on June 13, 2007: 6 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 2 BB, 4 K for a ND

Scott Mathieson vs. Devil Rays on June 17, 2006: 6 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 5 K for Loss

Cole Hamels vs. Reds on May 12, 2006: 5 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 5 BB, 7 K for ND

Gavin Floyd vs. Mets on Sept. 3, 2004: 7 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 5 K for Win

Brett Myers at Cubs on July 24, 2002: 8 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 5 K for Win

Brandon Duckworth vs. Padres on Aug., 7, 2001: 6 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 4 K for Win

David Coggin at Expos on June 23, 2000: 6 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 1 BB, 4 K for Win

Randy Wolf vs. Blue Jays on June 11, 1999: 5.2 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 3 BB, 6 K for Win

Carlton Loewer vs. Cubs on June 14, 1998: 9 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 8 K for Win

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