Darrin Beene is entering his seventh year at The News Tribune, having covered the Tacoma Rainiers in 2005 and Major League Baseball for two years before that. Beene, a former assistant sports editor at The News Tribune, also worked for the Los Angeles Daily News and Los Angeles Times. He lives in the South Sound with his wife and two children.
This blog is about baseball in general but specifically the Seattle Mariners and the Mariners’ Triple-A team, the Tacoma Rainiers. It will contain news, analysis, answers to your questions and audio reports.
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- April 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (1)
- March 2007 (5)
- February 2007 (13)
- January 2007 (4)
- December 2006 (16)
- November 2006 (4)
- October 2006 (3)
- September 2006 (14)
- August 2006 (22)
- July 2006 (13)
- June 2006 (22)
- More...
1. NY Yankees (2) – Lineup gets a hand with Hideki Matsui’s return from wrist injury.
2. NY Mets (1) – Unsung hero is 2B Jose Valentin, who has good stats (.281-15-51) and a 60-game errorless streak.
3. Minnesota (7) – Francisco’s Liriano’s bum elbow is a real bummer for Twins.
4. Oakland (4) – There’s no doubting Frank Thomas has been a most valuable player for A’s.
5. LA Angels (6) – Yankees, who lost to Angels in ’05 and ’02, hoping this team doesn’t make it to the playoffs.
6. Chicago White Sox (8) – We could have told you Freddy Garcia isn’t a perfect pitcher, but a good one nonetheless.
7. Detroit (3) – Are we witnessing one of the great collapses in baseball history?
8. San Diego (9) – Jake Peavy, who goes Monday vs. Dodgers, owns them in his career (6-1, 2.09).
9. LA Dodgers (10) – Rafael Furcal has most RBI by a Dodgers’ leadoff man since Davey Lopes drove in 73 in 1979.
10. St. Louis (5) – So much for his new home. Jeff Weaver is 0-3 in six starts at new Busch Stadium.
11. Philadelphia (11) – Chase Utley and Jimmy Rollins first NL DP combo to have 20+ homers since Rich Aurilia and Jeff Kent did it in 2001.
12. San Francisco (14) – Pitcher Matt Cain (5-0, 0.21 ERA since Aug. 12) deserves mention when talking about best NL rookie.
13. Boston (12) – Weird stat: Gained ground in the standings on Yankees only twice from Aug. 17 to Sept. 13.
14. Toronto (15) – Did you know that John Hattig is the first player born in Guam to play in the majors?
15. Florida (13) – On Monday the Marlins became the last team in majors to reach 1 million in attendance.
16. Texas (16) – There are rumblings that players may be tiring of Buck Showalter’s controlling style.
17. Houston (18) – 40-year-old Craig Biggio, in 0-for-20 slumps, finally shows his age.
18. Cincinnati (19) – Same old story. Griffey’s hurt, there’s not enough pitching, falling out of playoff picture.
19. Atlanta (20) – Last time Braves didn’t win a division title, 1990, pitcher John Smoltz actually had hair.
20. Arizona (22) – After being shown the door, Luis Gonzalez truly is ‘Gonzo.’
21. Colorado (23) – Words you’ve never heard: And now your NL West Champion Colorado Rockies!
22. Seattle (21) – Who knew coaches Dan Rohn and Ron Hassey were the Mariners’ problem.
23. Milwaukee (24) – There’s gotta be hope now that they’re playing two guys named Gwynn and Fielder.
24. Cleveland (17) – Team’s taking no chances with lefty Jerermy Sowers, who’s shut down after 185 2/3 innings.
25. Baltimore (26) – Manager Sam Perlozzo told he’s coming back in 2007. Our question is why he would want to.
26. Washington (25) – More mind-boggling Alfonso Soriano stats: First outfielder to have 40 homers, 30 steals, 20 assists in one season.
27. Kansas City (29) – Here’s what pitcher Runelvys Hernandez throws: Fastball, slider, right hook, upper cut.
28. Pittsburgh (27) – Little known fact that they’ve had a better post-All-Star break record, a 29-26, than the Tigers.
29. Chicago Cubs (30) – No wonder Carlos Zambrano’s back hurts, he’s been carrying the pitching staff all year.
30. Tampa Bay (28) – Just 21, Delmon Young is aptly named and hitting .371 in first exposure to the majors.
This was the lead item on staff writer Larry LaRue's story that appears in today's News Tribune. It addresses the key issue of what is going to happen with the Mariners' coaching staff for next year, and surprise! ... it looks like manager Mike Hargrove might be back.. Here it is:
The news for manager Mike Hargrove and his smaller coaching staff Thursday wasn’t who was fired, but who wasn’t.
Twenty-four hours after Seattle Mariners coaches Ron Hassey and Dan Rohn were fired, all indications were that Hargrove and the rest of his coaching staff – Rafael Chaves, Carlos Garcia, Jeff Pentland, Mike Goff and Jim Slaton – would be back in 2007.
While there was no vote of confidence announced by general manager Bill Bavasi, sources within the organization pointed out that it would make no sense to fire two coaches in mid-September if the manager and his staff were going to be fired the first week in October.
Another indication was that Bavasi and Hargrove have compiled a list of candidates to replace Hassey as the team’s bench coach next season.
Neither Hargrove nor Bavasi would expand much upon the firings, although Hargrove acknowledged telling Hassey he wasn’t coming back next season was emotional for both men.
“Ron is one of my best friends, in or out of the game,” Hargrove said. “Telling him was one of the toughest things I’ve ever done.”
Were Hassey and Rohn sacrificed so that others could keep their jobs?
Apparently not. The debate on Hassey and whether he was a “good fit” as a bench coach began two months ago, and when the decision was made not to bring him back next year, Hargrove gave Hassey the choice – stay through Oct. 1 or leave.
Hassey chose to leave.
The decision on Rohn, who was in a newly created administrative coaching position, was more about a clash of personalities. Sources said Rohn disagreed with Hargrove’s managing and, worse, talked to other coaches and players about it.
When that got back to Hargrove, Rohn’s departure was a matter of time, sources said.
As for Hargrove, he has one year left on his contract and is expected to return next season. That may not sell season-tickets for 2007, but it makes business sense if the Mariners are to stay with Bavasi – as it appears they will.
If Bavasi fired Hargrove and hired another manager to a multiyear deal, that manager would be a lame duck should the team then fire Bavasi next season. As it stands, the Mariners are apparently willing to give both the general manager and manager one more year to return to contention in the American League West.
