Friday, January 30, 2009

Fitzgerald not deserving of praise?

Here's something interesting we haven't seen reported anywhere else for some reason. Thanks to SportsbyBrooks for reminding us of the domestic violence allegations against Larry Fitzgerald made by the mother of his child. So far as I can tell, there are no criminal charges, but she has sought and received a restraining order against Fitzgerald in the last month or so. Some of the allegations from the Petition:

"Nazario [the former gf] claims that Fitzgerald “grabbed me by my hair with both hands on the back of my head very very hard and tossed me across the room,” and that when she tried to leave he “grabbed the back of my neck and slammed me down on the marble floor.”

Wow. Sounds like pretty serious stuff to me. It is pretty interesting that it hasn't gotten more attention in the mainstream media. Of course, since it's not a criminal matter, nothing has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. However, for a restraining order, it generally does have to be shown beyond a preponderance of the evidence. My guess is that Fitz likely consented to the entry of this order so as to avoid her testifying and there being a record for the media to peruse.

Makes me wonder, again, why the case involving Michael Vick and dogfighting inflamed the public so much, when a story like this gets little to no attention. True, this is just one person's version, but even before Vick plead guilty he faced enormous criticism and outrage. Does the public really think dogfighting allegations are worse than slamming a woman's face on the floor?

Also, see this PFT story from when it was first reported.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Roger Clemens' interesting pregame ritual

Here's a story that was too good not to share. If you're looking for another reason to dislike Roger Clemens, here it is. Apparently, in the new book by Joe Torre, there is a story from one of the Yankee trainers revealing that before important playoff starts, Clemens would have the trainer rub liniment on his balls before the game. Ummm, I know the locker room is supposedly a pretty weird place that's different from the real world, but that's got to be the weirdest thing I've ever heard about. The simple question is, why couldn't he just do it himself, rather than getting the trainer to do it?

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Andruw Jones slides even further toward irrelevancy

Latest news on Andruw Jones I found is this nugget that he quit the winter ball team he was playing for. Believe it or not, he was apparently hitting only a woeful .148 during his time there. Of course, this comes after the recent announcement from the Dodgers that they had agreed to release him in exchange for Andruw agreeing to defer a portion of his salary. Now, I don't have the time nor energy to do a lot of digging into this, but it seems to me that was basically the Dodgers cutting a player for poor performance. Where is the benefit to Andruw? He still had (I think) around $12 million left on his contract. He's not going to that anywhere else next year for sure. The only reason I could see is that he really didn't want to be playing in Los Angeles. I don't believe that either though, because there is no way he'd give up $10 million dollars just to try to sign with another team.

Of course, one option for Andruw may be re-signing with the Braves. Not really sure what to think of this one. On one hand, Andruw has just shown nothing over the past two years to even resemble a major league player. Two years ago for the Braves he was automatic out in the middle of the lineup, which of course was impossible to get around. On the other hand, the drop in his production has been so precipitous it makes you wonder if there's any fix out there. I mean, we all know he was productive at one point. What's to say he can't be productive again? He's only 31 yrs old at this point and hit 51 HR's in 2005. Was it just the pressure of the free agent year in 2007 that led to the dropoff? Was it just poor conditioning? Those are things that can be fixed if he puts his mind to it. My guess, which I haven't read anywhere else, is that maybe Andruw has some serious mental issues going on, like depression or related illness. There doesn't appear to be any physical reason, and I can't believe that he's not a competitive enough person to put 100% effort into his career at this point.

I tend to agree with Dave O'Brien writing for the AJC who believes re-signing Andruw to a small deal with incentives would be a good idea. Give him another chance and let's see how it works out. If he truly wants to keep playing of course. It wouldn't surprise me at this point if he considered early retirement.