San Diego Padres
Writer Zack Arenstein, was recently able to interview “jbox” from Gaslamp Ball to discuss the Padres.
ZA: Adrian Gonzalez hit 40 home runs in 2009 in a huge ballpark well known for being pitcher friendly. How is that possible? The Mets just moved into a pitchers park in Citi Field, and our home run numbers plummeted, most notably David Wright’s.
JB: To be fair, Adrian only hit a dozen of them at home versus 28 on the road, so he hasn’t really avoided the Petco effect. David Wright looked like he had an off season overall in terms of home run numbers, both away and at home. Interestingly enough, pitchers don’t typically challenge Adrian when the Padres play at home and he was able to draw a ton of walks at Petco.
ZA: The Padres of a myriad of young players on their roster right now, mostly for what seem to be financial reasons. Tell us about some of the better ones you think have a future in MLB.
JB:GM Jed Hoyer thinks Mat Latos has the highest ceiling of any of our pitchers. Everth Cabrera is a great young short stop and got some ROY consideration last season. Kyle Blanks is the size of a mountain and could be a great power hitting first basemen in the future.
ZA: Recently Tom Verducci released his list of pitchers who are at risk of succumbing to “The Verducci Effect.” Any 25-and-under pitcher whose innings increase by more than 30 is at risk of having a bad season. Some big names like Joba Chamberlain, Josh Johnson, Rick Porcello, and Felix Hernandez are listed, as well as 2 pitchers on the Padres, Cesar Carillo, and Mat Latos. Mike Pelfrey of the Mets had a bad season like the Verducci Effect suggested he would. Do you think the same thing will happen to these young pitchers?
JB:We’re big believers in weird curses and such, we have little doubt that Carillo or Latos will be lucky to survive the season.
ZA: Tell me a little about your new ownership group. I understand Troy Aikman is now a partial owner of the team.
JB: Jeff Moorad is the chairman of a mysterious 12 person ownership group. As of today they’ve only gone public with eleven names, leaving us no choice but to conclude that they are hiding some terribly evil secret. We pledged that we’d solve this mystery but we kinda forgot about it until now. Thanks for the reminder.
ZA: I was recently in San Diego for the Chargers playoff game against the Jets, and so I got a chance to go to Qualcomm Stadium, or the Murph as locals refer to it, since that stadium used to be called Jack Murphy stadium, after the sports writer. What are some of the best moments for the Padres in that stadium?
JB:Steve Garvey’s 1984 NLCS Game 4 Home Run was probably the most spectacular moment. They hosted two World Series there, so that was cool. Tony Gwynn played every home game there. Rickey Henderson broke several historic marks there and also got his 3,000th hit in the ballpark. One time, one of the Gaslamp Ball writers wondered out loud if he’d have trouble finding Cracker Jacks when an unidentified woman walking nearby said, “I’ll cracker your jack”, which doesn’t even mean anything. The Pads were there over 30 years, so there’s a lot of fond memories within bowels of the Murph.
ZA: There have been tons of rumors about Adrian Gonzalez getting traded. What’s the latest you’ve heard on that? Do they plan to keep him for the rest of his contract now? He actually has a manageable salary.
JB:As of now Adrian Gonzalez is a Padre. The earliest you should expect to see him traded would be the trading deadline. He’s affordable now, so really there is no rush, but when they do trade him they want to milk every little bit of talent out of him and the other team’s farm system.
ZA: Do you see any point in the near future where ownership will be able to take the shackles off of management and let them spend some more money to put a more competitive team on the field?
JB:The Padres will never spend money on big name free agents, but the new ownership has promised to invest every penny they earn back into the team. They will likely do most of their spending on drafting for the future. Don’t forget that the new ownership just committed a lot of money and are phasing themselves into the agreement. Once it’s absolutely final that they’re the majority owner, I’m sure there will be another little bump in payroll. The Padres are also in a very restrictive cable deal that’s ending soon (sometime in 2011), so there will probably be more money freed up once the deal is restructured.
ZA: Talk a little about the work the Padres do with the navy in the area. I know that there is a naval base in San Diego ths is the homeport of the Pacific fleet. Aside from wearing camouflage jerseys, what kind of contributions does the team make?
JB:The way you phrased that questions almost sounds like you don’t think wearing camouflage is a big enough contribution. The Padres are the “Team of the Military“. They support all branches of the military, but especially the Navy, Marines and Coast Guard since they all have bases in town. The past few years the Padres have been the biggest supporters of San Diego’s Veteran’s Day parade and one of the reasons why it continues. The Padres also have many military programs, such as Military Opening Night, Marine Recruit Sundays, Military Discounts, On Field Reenlistments and player appearances. There is even talk of having military sections in the up coming season. Make no mistake, the Padres love America and the military more than your team..
ZA:2010 Outlook for the team. Where do you see them finishing?
JB:It’s hard enough to make that predicition during the season, but in the first few days of Spring Training when none of the teams are finalized it’s impossible. That being said, they’ll be better than the Mets.
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Thanks again to “jbox” for answering these questions for us. Next up: TBA.