Wednesday, December 22, 2010

CHISOX GIVE LONGTIME ATLANTIC LEAGUER PETE ROSE, JR. A MANAGING JOB

What an interesting hiring by the Chicago White Sox right before the holidays.

They gave 41-year-old Pete Rose, Jr., who spent 2005-09 in the Atlantic League, the job of managing their advanced rookie team in Bristol, VA (Appalachian League).

The Chisox only had the son of the all-time hit king in their minor league system for two stints early in his career (1991-96)so they deserve credit for not holding anything his major league-suspended dad did against him. Rose, Jr., played professionally for 21 seasons and only got 14 major league at-bats, all with Cincinnati in 1997.

Rose first stepped onto an Atlantic League diamond when he was 35 to play for Long Island in 2005. He also played for the Ducks in '07 and '08, driving in 95 runs in each of those years. He had shorter stints for Bridgeport, Newark and York. The left-handed hitter, who swatted 53 homers in the Atlantic League, quit playing after 2009 and became a hitting coach at Florence, KY of the independent Frontier League last season.

'SURPRISING' BARTON GETS NEW AFFILIATED OPPORTUNITY

When Brian Barton was playing for Bridgeport early last season, the 28-year-old gave this typist the impression he was a strikeout machine. That is not good for an outfielder hopeful of returning to the major leagues. He fanned 34 times in 91 at-bats with only seven runs batted in (.264, three homers).

But Barton ended up in a Newark uniform, and although the Bears were struggling he caught fire to hit .375 with 24 doubles, 16 homers and 65 RBI in 77 games. He did fan another 72 times in his 277 times at bat, but the production was sufficient that Cincinnati has signed him and placed Barton on their Louisville (Triple A) roster. He has seen limited duty in Venezuela this winter (5-for-17) in trying to be ready to shoot for the majors once more. He already has played for St. Louis and very briefly for Atlanta.

OTHER SIGNINGS

Among other recent signings of former Atlantic League players:
**Minnesota inked catcher Rene Rivera to a Triple-A pact. He started last season with Camden and finished in Class AA with the New York Yankees.
**Baltimore gave former major league receiver Michel Hernandez (Somerset) another Class AAA contract.
**Houston handed onetime Somerset lefty Andy Van Hekken another contract although it is with Class AA Corpus Christi. He had been on the Triple-A Round Rock roster.

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Friday, December 17, 2010

YORK'S CASTRO STILL HAS HOT BAT; OTHER ATLANTIC LEAGUERS EARN PROMOTIONS

One of the centerpieces from York's championship team, infielder Ramon Castro, has not let up this winter. Castro is the third leading hitter (.339) in the Venezuelan League.

Castro and 38-year-old DH Jose Herrera were two focal points in a piece Jim Seip did a few days ago for The York Daily Record in which he pointed out the Revolution could look quite similar (with the regular lineup) next season if that pair of hitting machines come back.

"I think we've got to at least give (most of) them (position players) a shot to come back", Director of Baseball Operations Michael Kirk told Seip.

GRUBE NOT LIKELY TO RETURN

It is difficult to imagine right-hander Jarrett Grube will be back in the Atlantic League anytime soon. On Seattle's Triple-A roster, the onetime Southern Maryland hurler also is having a jolly time in the Venezuelan League. Grube is 5-1, 3.20 after nine starts and has allowed only eight walks and 41 hits in his 45 innings.

SIGNINGS AND PROMOTIONS

Former Atlantic Leaguers are making news all around the affiliated baseball world. A few key items:

--Lefty R. J. Swindle (Newark) has once again been invited to major league spring training camp with Tampa Bay.
--After helping Shreveport-Bossier, LA win the independent American Association title, former Bridgeport backstop Brian Peterson has returned to the affiliated ranks, this time with Kansas City. The Royals are the 32-year-old's eighth major league organization. He was an ironman in Louisiana, playing in 89 of 95 games and leading all American Association catchers with 64 assists while ranking second by throwing out 27 would-be base stealers.
--In non-playing positions, former Newark Manager Marv Foley has been promoted to major league catching instructor with Colorado, onetime Somerset player Alan Zinter has jumped a level to Double-A as a coach in the Arizona chain and Mariano Duncan (Bridgeport) is now with the Chicago Cubs as hitting coach for Class AA Tennessee.

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

AS WINTER MEETINGS CLOSE, CAMDEN'S SAM NARRON HAS A NEW CONTRACT AND JOE KLEIN IS IN THE LIMELIGHT

The Winter Meetings are virtually all about the major leagues and the affiliated minors, but there are a couple of nuggets worth sharing with Atlantic League fans before I leave a slowly warming Orlando.

Southpaw Sam Narron has gotten a new Triple-A contract from Milwaukee. The 29-year-old is finishing up what has been a 15-win season by working in the Venezuelan Winter League, and Brewers brass obviously are happy. Narron was 4-2(1.61) in seven starts for Camden early in the season, with consecutive nine-inning shutouts at the end before his contract was sold about June 1. Then he went 9-7, 4.14 for Nashville, and has won two of three decisions for Caracas (3.82) although he has not pitched since November 19. That is a long season.

JOE KLEIN ACTIVE

Executive Director Joe Klein always brings attention to the Atlantic League during the winter meetings, and this year was no exception. As one of five members of the Scout of the Year Advisory Board, Klein is part of the impressive dais for the annual Scout of the Year reception, which was held Wednesday evening.

This is an ideal post for Klein since the scouts work the Atlantic League all season for players. The room also was filled with major league scouting directors.

NO ONE WAS DRAFTED

The annual Rule 5 draft was conducted Thursday morning, but not a single Atlantic Leaguer was taken. Independent Baseball did have five of its graduates chosen at the Triple-A level. (Note: They are featured on another of this typist's sites, www.IndyBaseballChatter.com.)

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Thursday, December 2, 2010

BLUE CRABS GET A SECOND HURLER TO A MAJOR LEAGUE SPRING TRAINING CAMP

If Southern Maryland needs any added recruiting tools for new Manager Pat Osborn, the Blue Crabs can point to the fact a second member of their 2009 pitching staff will be in a major league spring training camp come February.

Not only did Dane DeLaRosa (1-1, 3 saves, 1.11 ERA, in 18 games) recently learn he had been promoted to Tampa Bay's 40-man roster, but the New York Mets have given lefty Mike O'Connor a new minor league contract and an invitation to their major league camp. O'Connor spent '09 with five different minor league teams, including Southern Maryland, where he won his only two decisions and posted a 3.13 ERA in four starts.

The 30-year-old seems to be setting himself up nicely with a strong winter baseball showing, which we will go into in more depth in this week's Independent Baseball Insider column, which subscribers receive later today.

DUCKS SALES IMPRESSIVE

One reason the Long Island Ducks are the envy of most everyone in the Independent Baseball game showed up again Wednesday. The team reports more than 65,000 group tickets were sold in the first six hours of availability. How impressive is that?

DE RENNE HOPES TO RETURN TO PHILLIES

Popular York infielder Keoni DeRenne, a mainstay for the Revolution in 2007-08-09, told The York Daily Record he hopes to get another chance next season in the Philadelphia organization. He had the distinction of playing--and sometimes coaching--with the Phils' top four minor league teams this summer. "I was also in extended spring (training), so it's almost like I was playing for five teams", DeRenne told Jim Seip.

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