Article about Wakefield and Mirabelli

Discussion in 'Baseball Forum' started by Yisman, Feb 22, 2008.

  1. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    Not sure if it's worth a thread, but here goes anyway!

    http://cbs.sportsline.com/mlb/story/10658719

    FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Nobody's saying Doug Mirabelli would be pumping gas right now, or pouring your coffee at, say, Starbucks, if not for the fact that Tim Wakefield is back for a 35th consecutive season in Boston (OK, so it's only his 14th).

    Nobody's saying that Mirabelli would be sitting in the easy chair of retirement, or catching in, say, Pittsburgh without Wakefield's presence.

    Let him say it.

    At least, that last part.

    "Obviously, we're tied together here," Mirabelli says. "I know without Wakey here, I'm probably not here. I'm somewhere else.

    "But when you have a starting pitcher who's won 17 games, it makes sense to bring him back."

    And a Mendoza Line-challenging backup catcher as an accessory in the deal?

    The world champion Red Sox are preparing for what they hope is a third World Series title in five seasons. They've done a marvelous job of fertilizing their farm system and developing a pipeline to supplement their big-ticket items such as David Ortiz, Manny Ramirez and J.D. Drew.

    And while everyone is buzzing about second baseman Dustin Pedroia's smash-hit of a rookie season, Jacoby Ellsbury being on the verge of supplanting veteran Coco Crisp in center field and Clay (No-Hit) Buchholz's chances to win a rotation spot, over there in the shadows, incredibly, is Mirabelli, still hanging around.

    Boston's knuckleball insurance policy.

    About the only thing Wakefield, 41, doesn't do at contract time is negotiate a clause guaranteeing Mirabelli a spot on the Red Sox roster.

    "I wish I could do that," the pitcher says. "I'm sure the business side (of the organization) wouldn't allow that."

    Red Sox picked up Wakefield option.

    Little more than two months later, on Jan. 11, they re-signed Mirabelli as a free agent.

    Of course they did.

    Even though Mirabelli batted a lowly .202 with a .278 on-base percentage last season.

    And despite the fact that he hit .193 with a .261 on-base percentage the year before, and that he's a .231 career hitter.

    As long as Wakefield is around, it's like Mirabelli's on scholarship. He's the only active player in the game who has more invested in another player's career than he does his own.

    Mirabelli came to Boston in 2001, acquired from the Texas Rangers in the wake -- so to speak -- of an emergency. Regular catcher Jason Varitek had a broken elbow and, in what couldn't have been a more perfect moment when viewed from all these years later, Mirabelli's first start came in Toronto with Wakefield on the mound.

    "It's amazing where I've come from to be his personal guy," Mirabelli says. "That first time in Toronto, it was not fun.

    "I remember going, 'God, someone else can catch him.' I think I had four or five passed balls that day. And even when I caught him, I wasn't comfortable. It was very mentally stressful."

    Somehow -- survival is as good an explanation as any -- he learned over the next few years to relax when the games got crazy and the knuckler was floating away ... and away ... and aw ... a ... y ...

    He still misses balls from time to time. But at 37, and with seven or so years in catching Wakefield's knuckler, he knows stuff happens. Nobody is going to block every knuckleball.

    "It's not fun running to the backstop," he says.

    But it was pretty cool in 2006 when the Red Sox, after they first tried to separate themselves from Mirabelli, realized their mistake too late and re-acquired him from San Diego ... and ordered a private jet followed by a police escort from Boston Logan Airport to get him to that night's game against the Yankees on time.

    And it's pretty cool to still be employed in a place he loves, on a team full of friends.

    It isn't only on the field when he and Wakefield are paired like a left and right shoe. A couple of days ago, they went hog hunting in LaBelle, Fla. -- about 40 miles east of Fort Myers. Sometimes they go quail hunting over by Lake Okeechobee, a couple of hours east of Fort Myers. One winter, they met in Arkansas for a duck hunting vacation.

    On road trips during the season, they eat lunch together nearly every day.

    "It helps develop a tighter relationship," Mirabelli says. "So that when we need to talk about something during games, he understands where I'm coming from."

    While you hear all sorts of stories from the football world about running backs giving expensive watches and other extravagant gifts to their offensive linemen, Wakefield has done no such thing for his baseball caddy.

    "Not yet," Wakefield says.

    "I don't think I ever pay for a lunch or dinner," Mirabelli says.

    While Wakefield will earn $4 million this summer, the Red Sox chopped Mirabelli's base salary by $200,000, to $550,000. It does include $275,000 in incentive clauses, which will give him the chance to get close to last year's pay.

    There's plenty of incentive for the Red Sox to make this work, too, because as deep as the organization is, they're like everybody else at catcher. There just aren't enough to go around. After Varitek, who will turn 36 in April, and Mirabelli, the organizational options are Dusty Brown, a catch-and-throw guy who can't hit much, and George Kottaras, who isn't strong behind the plate. Kevin Cash, who filled in when Mirabelli was hurt for a time last year, is in camp as a non-roster player.

    One more time, though, it's up to baseball's odd couple to make it work -- Wakefield thrilled in the same paternal way that a college coach tries to take care of his assistants, and Mirabelli with the same fierce sense of ownership as a student charged with a special assignment.

    "Obviously, I've got a history of success with him," Wakefield says. "The experiment of working without him has been tried before, and it hasn't panned out too well in the past."

    "In my head, re-signing me made sense," Mirabelli says. "And maybe it will always make sense, even on the day when it doesn't work out any longer."
     
  2. dubagedi

    dubagedi New Member

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    Mirabelli is one of the biggest doucebags on the Sox. A couple years ago (so I can't link it) I read a story about him making fun of the way a reporter with cerebral palsy spoke, and from everything I've read in sportswriter blogs and heard from someone I know that has spoken with most Sox players, he is just an absolute asshole.
     
  3. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    I don't understand why they haven't taken a catcher with a high draft pick recently. Varitek can't play forever, and Kottaras is garbage.
     
  4. Pennythetowelboy

    Pennythetowelboy New Member

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    is there not one other catcher in baseball who can handle the knuckleball?
     
  5. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    That's another thing. Varitek CAN do it, he just hasn't in so long. When he first came to the Sox, Hatteberg was the starter and Varitek caught Wakefield. The man is a Gold Glove catcher, I find it hard to believe that he can't re-learn to catch a knuckleball. On the other hand, it makes sense to have every 5th game a built in rest day for an aging catcher. I just don't see why it has to be Mirabelli that takes his place.
     
  6. AlioTheFool

    AlioTheFool Spiveymaniac

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    While Varitek could catch Wakefield, the reason you mentioned is almost surely the only reason he doesn't. It's the same for us over here. Our backup catcher gets a game every week, because our starter needs the day off to rest his knees.

    There could be a number of reason for it being Mirabelli. If it's true that he and Wakefield have such a good rapport. Plus, I doubt there's many catchers in the league who are very willing to sign on just to be a knuckleball catcher.

    I caught a knuckler when I was younger for one season. I hated every single moment of it. Sure, it was hillarious to see hitters trying to hit it, but F that. TV does not do the knuckler justice, let me tell ya.
     
  7. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    Oh, trust me, I know. I throw one. On TV they don't look anything like what it actually does. It's one of the funnest (?) things in the world to throw a knuckler and have the hitter flail hopelessly at it.

    I just wish they could get someone to do it that didn't, you know, suck completely. Any injury to Varitek is made that much worse by having that piece of .180 hitting trash in the lineup for that time.
     
  8. Sundayjack

    Sundayjack pǝʇɔıppɐ ʎןןɐʇoʇ
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    This is a real problem. One of the few conspicuous problems going into the next few years. Not unique to the Red Sox, but the dropoff after Variteck is so stark. They actually have Mark Wagner rated higher than Kottaras, which might tell us all how thin the Red Sox catching prospects are.

    P.S. I just can't watch another year of Doug Mirabelli.
     
  9. dubagedi

    dubagedi New Member

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    He's painful as hell to watch it, but most backup catchers are. Starting catchers usually aren't good offensively, and naturally backup catchers are even worse otherwise they'd be starters. Sure, maybe Mirabelli is 15% less productive than most backup catchers but he's the only guy that can catch a knuckleball but you aren't going to find someone better for his job.

    That said, they still need to find a replacement for Varitek, but I'm not willing to give up on Kottaras who up until last year had minor league numbers very,very similar to those of 'tek when he was younger.
     
  10. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    What I would love to see is to send say Crisp, Bowden, and some prospect(s) to Texas for Saltalamacchia.
     
  11. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    Texas would be crazy to deal Saltalamacchia. The Braves were crazy to trade him in the first place.
     
  12. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    No they weren't, they have Brian McCann at catcher for the forseeable future. It's all about need. Texas needs starting pitching a lot more than they need another bat. A deal that included some quality starting pitching, be it prospects or ML ready could probably get it done.
     
  13. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    no, but Salty was playing 1B when he wasn't spelling McCann. He's just as good a hitter as Tex, much younger, and much cheaper. Also, Tex isn't known for his glove.

    It was an awful trade. They could've had Salty play catcher once a week and play 1B the rest of the time.
     
  14. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    Red Sox released Mirabelli a few days ago. What a weird sequence of events.

    Varitek was pissed off about the release, BTW.
     
  15. GreenMachine

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    Doug booed this guy: Props to Sox fans fro helping out!

    [YOUTUBE]NhcZRFcjbhw[/YOUTUBE]
     
  16. SixFeetDeep

    SixFeetDeep Red Hot Robbie Cano

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    that video makes me sick. way to keep it classy boston
     

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