Mariners Insider
You will find news, observations, anecdotes, analysis and photographs on this blog. The purpose is to keep readers informed, but also give them a feel for the team and its players, and a place to go to read about baseball.

Contributors:

Ryan Divish has been with Tacoma News Tribune since 2006, covering the Tacoma Rainiers and high school sports. Divish played baseball at Dickinson State University and also earned a journalism degree from the University of Montana.
E-mail Ryan.

Larry LaRue has covered the Seattle Mariners and Major League Baseball for The News Tribune since 1988. E-mail Larry.

    follow me on Twitter
    Blogroll
    Calendar
    October 2008
    Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
     << < Current> >>
          1 2 3 4
    5 6 7 8 9 10 11
    12 13 14 15 16 17 18
    19 20 21 22 23 24 25
    26 27 28 29 30 31  
    Archives
    XML Feeds
    What is RSS?
    Misc
    Who's Online?
    • MrSinister Email
    • kamieniecki Email
    • Dirtdawg Email
    • artman77 Email
    • Guest Users: 337
    Tuesday, October 7th, 2008
    Posted by Larry LaRue @ 11:25:15 am

    Jamie Moyer left Seattle three years ago for two minor league pitchers named Andy, a 42-year-old soft-tossing southpaw with 211 career wins.

    He’d run out of patience with a Mariners team he saw as constantly rebuilding, and Seattle didn’t see much of a future building around a man who survived on his changeup.

    Moyer has muddled along without the Mariners.

    He’s in the National League Championship Series with Philadelphia this week, and it’s not as if they carried his old bones to the post-season. Moyer, who will turn 46 next month, went 16-7 with a 3.71 earned run average for the Phillies this year.

    If you’re wondering, that’s 35 games he’s won since leaving Seattle.

    He worked 196 innings this season, 199 innings last year – so obviously, age is catching up with him at a rate of about three innings a year. For all that, he earned $6.5 million, on a deal he negotiated without an agent.

    Jamie Moyer

    Mr. Moyer will become a free agent once the post-season ends.

    If you didn’t know his age or what he threw, would there be a market for a left-hander coming off a 16-win, 196-inning, 3.71 ERA season.

    Oh, probably. In fact, if the Seattle Mariners could, they’d likely trade Carlos Silva, Miguel Batista and Jarrod Washburn for him.
    When he starts against the Dodgers in the NLCS, tune in. He'll look familiar. He hasn't changed how he throws, or who he is, since his Mariners career ended.

    Categories: General