Red Sox and John Smoltz about to part ways
Michigan
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After eight starts and few glimpses of the repertoire that made him one of the dominant pitchers of his generation, John Smoltz's Red Sox career has come to a crossroads, and possibly an end.
The Red Sox have designated the 42-year-old righthander for assignment this afternoon, meaning that if he is not claimed on waivers, the club has 10 days to release him or send him to the minors. Smoltz, who went 2-5 with an 8.32 earned-run average this season, could also retire.
Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein flew to New York this morning to deliver the news to Smoltz in person.
"I think [that] was an important thing to do," said manager Terry Francona. "He met with Smoltzie face to face, told him what we were going to do, told him to go home and take a deep breath."
Smoltz, who allowed nine hits and eight earned runs in 3.1 innings of the Sox' gruesome 13-6 loss to the Yankees last night, has left the club and returned to his home in Atlanta to consider his options. During his pregame press briefing, Francona did not seem to rule out any option with regard to Smoltz should he clear waivers. Rosters expand Sept. 1.
The surefire future Hall of Famer is replaced on the roster by rookie Junichi Tazawa, who was pitching in the Japanese Industrial League last season and has skyrocketed through the Red Sox system.
Tazawa will be in the bullpen tonight. The club has not yet named a starter to replace Smoltz on Tuesday, but the 23-year-old righthander appears to be the leading candidate.
Two of the three pitchers the Red Sox used in their loss to the Yankees last night were designated for assignment today -- lefthander Billy Traber, who relieved Smoltz and was no more effective, was let go to make room for veteran infielder Chris Woodward, who was claimed on waivers from Seattle.
If this is the end of Smoltz's decorated career, during which he won 212 games -- the first 210 during his 20 seasons with the Atlanta Braves -- and saved 154, it was certainly an inauspicious final few weeks.
The Red Sox signed Smoltz, who was coming off major shoulder surgery that cost him most of the 2008 season with the Braves, to one-year contract for $5 million plus incentives in early January, hoping one of the great postseason pitchers of all-time -- he is 15-4 with a 2.65 ERA in 40 postseason games and 27 starts -- would offer a boost to the staff in October.
But he couldn't make it through the summer. After several rehab starts in the minors, Smoltz made his Red Sox debut June 25, allowing five runs in five innings while suffering the loss in a 9-3 decision to the Washington Nationals. It didn't get much better after that, as Smoltz struggled terribly during his eight starts with the Sox, allowing 59 hits and 37 earned runs in 40 innings, including eight home runs.
His two victories came against the Royals July 11 -- allowing just one run in five innings while striking out seven -- and the Orioles July 31, two of the weakest teams in the league. His losses came against the Orioles, Nationals, Rangers, A's and Yankees.
Smoltz, who threw in the upper-90s with perhaps the best slider in baseball during his heyday, struggled with his command during his time with the Sox, and his pitches lacked their familiar bite. He especially struggled against lefthanded hitters, who batted .440 against him with six home runs and a 1.248 OPS in 91 at-bats.
The Red Sox have designated the 42-year-old righthander for assignment this afternoon, meaning that if he is not claimed on waivers, the club has 10 days to release him or send him to the minors. Smoltz, who went 2-5 with an 8.32 earned-run average this season, could also retire.
Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein flew to New York this morning to deliver the news to Smoltz in person.
"I think [that] was an important thing to do," said manager Terry Francona. "He met with Smoltzie face to face, told him what we were going to do, told him to go home and take a deep breath."
Smoltz, who allowed nine hits and eight earned runs in 3.1 innings of the Sox' gruesome 13-6 loss to the Yankees last night, has left the club and returned to his home in Atlanta to consider his options. During his pregame press briefing, Francona did not seem to rule out any option with regard to Smoltz should he clear waivers. Rosters expand Sept. 1.
The surefire future Hall of Famer is replaced on the roster by rookie Junichi Tazawa, who was pitching in the Japanese Industrial League last season and has skyrocketed through the Red Sox system.
Tazawa will be in the bullpen tonight. The club has not yet named a starter to replace Smoltz on Tuesday, but the 23-year-old righthander appears to be the leading candidate.
Two of the three pitchers the Red Sox used in their loss to the Yankees last night were designated for assignment today -- lefthander Billy Traber, who relieved Smoltz and was no more effective, was let go to make room for veteran infielder Chris Woodward, who was claimed on waivers from Seattle.
If this is the end of Smoltz's decorated career, during which he won 212 games -- the first 210 during his 20 seasons with the Atlanta Braves -- and saved 154, it was certainly an inauspicious final few weeks.
The Red Sox signed Smoltz, who was coming off major shoulder surgery that cost him most of the 2008 season with the Braves, to one-year contract for $5 million plus incentives in early January, hoping one of the great postseason pitchers of all-time -- he is 15-4 with a 2.65 ERA in 40 postseason games and 27 starts -- would offer a boost to the staff in October.
But he couldn't make it through the summer. After several rehab starts in the minors, Smoltz made his Red Sox debut June 25, allowing five runs in five innings while suffering the loss in a 9-3 decision to the Washington Nationals. It didn't get much better after that, as Smoltz struggled terribly during his eight starts with the Sox, allowing 59 hits and 37 earned runs in 40 innings, including eight home runs.
His two victories came against the Royals July 11 -- allowing just one run in five innings while striking out seven -- and the Orioles July 31, two of the weakest teams in the league. His losses came against the Orioles, Nationals, Rangers, A's and Yankees.
Smoltz, who threw in the upper-90s with perhaps the best slider in baseball during his heyday, struggled with his command during his time with the Sox, and his pitches lacked their familiar bite. He especially struggled against lefthanded hitters, who batted .440 against him with six home runs and a 1.248 OPS in 91 at-bats.
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Comments
<< <i>Hopefully he will sign a 1 day contract with the Braves, then retire. >>
That would be a good way for him to retire, I can't see another team picking him up at this point.
The Red Sox and Smoltz rolled the dice and lost, it is just one of those things.
<< <i>The Red Sox and Smoltz rolled the dice and lost, it is just one of those things. >>
Smoltz made $5.5 MILLION for a one year contract ... Maybe the Red Sox rolled the dice and lost ... I wouldn't agree that Smoltz lost!
Doug
Liquidating my collection for the 3rd and final time. Time for others to enjoy what I have enjoyed over the last several decades. Money could be put to better use.
<< <i>
<< <i>The Red Sox and Smoltz rolled the dice and lost, it is just one of those things. >>
Smoltz made $5.5 MILLION for a one year contract ... Maybe the Red Sox rolled the dice and lost ... I wouldn't agree that Smoltz lost! >>
Ending your career as a failure is not the way he wants to be remembered and I would bet the money he got
is not making him feel any better about it.
<< <i>Ending your career as a failure is not the way he wants to be remembered >>
Of course NO ballplayer wants to have a last bad year.
But do you REALLY think that people are going to remember him for his last bad year? My guess is they will remember him for his HOF career!
Here are the COMBINED stats for the last year for MAYS, MANTLE, REGGIE and BANKS:
AB:....... 1,063
HITS:........237
AVG:........ .223
HR .............42
RBI ...........128
I am SURE you do not remember these four guys for their last year.
Doug
Liquidating my collection for the 3rd and final time. Time for others to enjoy what I have enjoyed over the last several decades. Money could be put to better use.
ISO 1978 Topps Baseball in NM-MT High Grade Raw 3, 100, 103, 302, 347, 376, 416, 466, 481, 487, 509, 534, 540, 554, 579, 580, 622, 642, 673, 724__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ISO 1978 O-Pee-Chee in NM-MT High Grade Raw12, 21, 29, 38, 49, 65, 69, 73, 74, 81, 95, 100, 104, 110, 115, 122, 132, 133, 135, 140, 142, 151, 153, 155, 160, 161, 167, 168, 172, 179, 181, 196, 200, 204, 210, 224, 231, 240
/s/ JackWESQ
ON ITS WAY TO NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92658
I guess you are right, he will probably struggle a bit with "why didn't I just retire last year?". To go out
in such a fashion as he is now is probably embarassing to him.
Mechanically he's 10% worse than he used to be - and that small margin at this elite level is the difference between great and mediocre.
Bosox1976
<< <i>"But do you REALLY think that people are going to remember him for his last bad year? My guess is they will remember him for his HOF career"
I guess you are right, he will probably struggle a bit with "why didn't I just retire last year?". To go out
in such a fashion as he is now is probably embarassing to him. >>
I AGREE WITH YOU! NO player wants to end a GREAT career like this. Unfortunately MANY of them do! (And if someone wants to keep paying them millions, then I can't blame the players.)
Doug
Liquidating my collection for the 3rd and final time. Time for others to enjoy what I have enjoyed over the last several decades. Money could be put to better use.