If you’re keeping score at home
DMZ · January 19, 2010 at 10:00 am · Filed Under Mariners
National news organizations, specifically Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports, have nearly run the table this off-season. The M’s aren’t talking to the local press (the one exception being USSM Endorsed Larry Stone).
Move | Broken by |
---|---|
Felix Hernandez contact | Keith Law, ESPN |
Franklin Gutierrez extension | Ken Rosenthal, Fox Sports |
Casey Kotchman-Bill Hall trade | Chris Crawford, Prospect Insider/Ken Rosenthal, Fox Sports |
Brandon League-Brandon Morrow trade | Ken Rosenthal, Fox Sports |
Milton Bradley-Carlos Silva trade | Larry Stone, Seattle Times |
Cliff Lee Blockbuster | I’m going with Rosenthal here, though this timeline gets really confusing quickly. Rosenthal & Morosi of Fox Sports had the trade, and then later they have the teams and details. |
Chone Figgins deal | Ken Rosenthal, Fox Sports |
Ken Griffey, Jr. re-signs | Larry Stone, Seattle Times |
Update: You can raise the count to two if you wish to count Geoff Baker reporting Aardsma’s 1y deal.
Update update: As others note, Brock & Salk actually scooped Baker.
Update update update: added Griffey
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59 Responses to “If you’re keeping score at home”
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Tough to be a reporter… isn’t this post a little bit of a slap in the face of our local media? Sure, it’s all true, but hopefully we don’t lose any more of our local reporters.
[dupe]
[it wasn’t, but you posted it in the actual relevant thread anyway]
I know I’d be pissed, especially if I was Baker. It kinda makes me sad 🙁 …. kinda
[ot]
Joser:
Amen to that. I have never been very impressed with the competition to break a story a few minutes before it is announced publicly anyway. Ms. Drayer’s ability to get stories that would otherwise go unreported/undiscovered is far more valuable to me.
I don’t know if you have or not (I’m not good at keeping track of who said what, and am always surprised when people do that with my comments). But thank-you: I have little ability to do actual baseball analysis so I fall back on wit and a thesaurus.
Cough. Ok, now this is getting silly. I suspect that Felix contract giddiness is infecting everyone, and we’re all going to wake up in the morning with a metaphorical empty bottle, splitting headache, and dead hooker.
That may be metaphorical for some of us, anyway.
I appreciate the compliment, and I’m glad I can entertain some of you some of the time, but this right here is about the most I do. I’m not even amusing in real life as far as I know, and I don’t think I could initiate an article. At best I could do goofy imitation analysis. It’s like those old westerns: Dave and Derek are the nameless drifters with the fast draw and sketchy pasts, who fortuitously arrive just in time to protect the town from the desperadoes. When the final showdown happens there’s always a town drunk with a rifle who shoots at something and misses…and when that happens there’s a guy in a recording studio making the fake pu-tui noises for the ricochet. I’m that guy.
Of course, “guy currently on team avoids arbitration by signing for a couple of million bucks” is hardly a national press-worthy move.
So the local press gets the re-signs and the arb-avoiding moves, but anything involving other teams – not so much.
Baker may be better than what we had before, but he’s getting quite tiresome now with his transparent attempts to manufacture news and/or controversy.
To customize twitter feeds on breaking news, I stole Dave’s idea and created my own list for Northwest baseball news from the reporters and bloggers I want to follow. I suppose if I wanted to catch news items a few seconds earlier I could follow some of the National writers (like the ones on the table at the top of this blog post) but I don’t need up to the second news.
I have removed a couple of the feeds that Dave has on his page, and I added about three that he does not have. Completely personal preference of course, but now when I want to get my update of NW baseball tweets, I can just ping that web page.
It’s an idea for anyone like me who wants to just see tweets on the web periodically and not all the time on a smart phone.