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06.25.2009 6:25 am

A Holliday To Forget?

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After watching the Cards flail helpless at the plate against no-name Mets pitching, fans might be wondering what Oakland A’s outfielder Matt Holliday is up to.

Not so much, as it turns out.

He has two RBI in his last 17 games. He hasn’t hit a home run since June 5.

Holliday has drawn some walks (34) and stolen a few bases (eight) this season, but he is batting .269 with eight homers and 39 RBI in the clean-up spot in Oakland. Those numbers would NOT translate into iron-clad protection for Albert Pujols.

And yet Holliday will be the No. 1 trade target next month when the A’s hold their annual talent auction before the trade deadline.

(On the other hand, one of the players A’s mastermind Billy Beane traded to get Holliday, reliever Huston Street, could offer more current trade value than Holliday. Street has converted 16 of 17 save opportunities for the streaking Rockies.)

THE SHAQ ON LAKE ERIE

The Cavaliers managed to pull off that deal for Shaquille O’Neal, setting the stage for great NBA fun during the 2009-2010 season. The Big Aristotle’s job will be to get LeBron James get past Superman, Dwight Howard, and the rest of the Eastern Conference.

Shaq’s task is to deliver the LeBron-Kobe showdown fans clamored for this season. FoxSports.com columnist Mark Kriegel offered this take:

Every storyline is heightened, from New York to Los Angeles. Will this be enough for Cleveland to get past Orlando? How about Boston? Will it be enough for LeBron James to stay? Even as these questions are answered, the more hypothetical discussions promise to become even more vitriolic. There’s still Shaq vs. Kobe, Shaq vs. Dwight Howard, Shaq vs. Stan Van Gundy, and most revealing but least remarked on, Shaq vs. Father Time.

He’s the exception here. Ordinarily, the pressure would be on a guy like James, the young star in his prime. But O’Neal has been talking so loud for so long, he doesn’t get to play with house money. The burden of proof is on him.

At the very top tier of NBA life, players seem to have forsaken the sillier forms of rivalry — salaries, cars, groupies — for the more meaningful ones. Guys like Kobe, LeBron and Shaq, just to name a few, are clearly playing for their legacies.

Let’s hope he takes his conditioning more seriously than he has in the past.

MYSTERIES OF THE UNIVERSE

Questions to ponder while trying, unsuccessfully, to locate a positive note about the Cardinals’ Wednesday night loss:

SAD NEWS AT WIMBLEDON

Not only did Maria Sharapova exit in the second round, but the Tennis Gods are cracking down on the traditional female tennis grunt. In a nutshell, here is what fans will miss as a result:

QUIPS ‘R US

Here is what some of America’s leading sports pundits have been writing:

Steve Rosenbloom, ChicagoSports.com, predicting labor unrest: “The owners hate losing, no matter that they ought to be used to it. The owners also have egos and arrogance. They believe they own the game and all the people and money in it. If they felt otherwise, there would be a commissioner instead of a sock puppet. So, you can easily see the owners plotting to battle (Donald) Fehr’s successor, likely to the detriment of the game. I’m not saying it makes sense. I’m just saying it’s what they do.”

Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle: “Yankee Stadium is a homer heaven partly because it’s smaller. The wall in right field is shorter than the old wall, and the new wall doesn’t curve like the old wall, so it’s closer to home. The N.Y. Daily News held a new-nickname contest. Winner: Jack-in-the Bronx. I would have submitted EZ-Park Park, or The House That Someone Who Flunked Out of Engineering School Built, or Yanker Stadium.”

Greg Cote, Miami Herald: “Auto-industry cutbacks already are beginning to significantly affect NASCAR. Mark Martin won last week’s race in Michigan driving a Hertz rental car.”

Richard Sandomir
, New York Times: “Networks don’t want majors to be won by golfers like Lucas Glover. Casual fans couldn’t tell him from John Glover, who plays the leashed and downtrodden Lucky in the Broadway revival of ‘Waiting for Godot.’ Monday was really about Waiting for the Collapse of Glover, and, even more so, Ricky Barnes.”

MEGAPHONE

“There’s a lot of season left, but as good as the Dodgers are playing right now and if you look at what wild-card teams have done in the past - some have won the World Series - the important thing is just to get to the playoffs. Considering the struggles of this organization in recent years (four straight losing seasons), if you’re getting in via the wild card, it would be pretty exciting for the team, the ownership and the fans. You get there however you get there. Then every playoff team starts from scratch.”

Giants pitcher Randy Johnson.

18 comments

Comments are closed.

Looks like Ankiel needs to spend a week or two with Khalil Greene’s shrink. Probably could not hurt for Ludwick and Duncan to see the shrink too. Perhaps they can get the group rate and save DeWitt some $$.

— Tony
11:24 am June 25th, 2009

good stuff radar 1a, especially after comments from the first-grade dropout crew (fake S.W., Josh Cockless, and Re Pete). With some of the crap that comes out of Hollywood these days, how is Moneyball movie not worth a shot? …Ank not only has a slower bat, but he continues to chase high cheese when he can’t make contact with anything above his waist because of that slow uppercut (which also leads to ton of popups)…

…I know there’s not a lot of NBA fans on these boards but I’m pretty exicted about the Shaq trade. Even at this age/shape, he’s a force in a league that lacks true centers plus his comments/history amps up several rivalries that were mentioned in the article. Should be another strong NBA season next year, even with all the crooked refs :-) besides, if you don’t realize money/gambling/TV contracts impact at least a few certain results in all sports at this point, you are living a dream. Steroid era, BCS polls/NCAA tourney selections, obviously bad flags/non-calls in NFL like the Tuck Rule, etc., etc…..

— 2020vision
12:35 pm June 25th, 2009

Congratulations to the US Soccer team for beating Spain and heading to the championship of the Confederations Cup, whatever that is.

Last I checked (today) the Cards were in first place. Relax everyone!

— Drunken Sailor
1:13 pm June 25th, 2009

I think Billy Beane and Moneyball has lost credibility because 1) The A’s have been about 27 games under .500 the since the start of 2007 and 2) The key players on the great Beane teams (Jason Giambi, Miguel Tejada) were on roids.

You also wonder about Mark Mulder and Barry Zito, considering how awesome they were in their mid 20’s, but how lousy or injured they’ve been in what should be their prime years. You know the Jose Canseco/Mark McGwire clubhouse of the late ’80’s and the closely located BALCO office is a telltale sign that the Oakland A’s probably have more history of roids.

— Michael Bolton
2:38 pm June 25th, 2009

If Jeff Gordon thinks that Billy Beane can be dismissed as “the general manager of a perennial also-run” (sic), then Jeff obviously doesn’t pay much attention to baseball.

First of all, it is grossly inaccurate. This is the 12th year that Beane has been the GM of the A’s. During the first 11, the team has won four division titles and one wild card berth. All of this despite a payroll near the bottom of the league in each of those years. That’s hardly the record of a perennial also-ran. consdering the payroll level, it’s an outstanding record.

Secondly, Beane has had a great influence well beyond Oakland. Other teams have studied and, at least to some extent, copied his methods. The Boston Red Sox have demonstrated that adherence to sabermetric principles in combination with a healthy payroll level produces a team that is a powerful contender on an annual basis.

There’s an old saying that goes something like this: “it’s better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.” Somehow it seems relevant here.

— JohnnyMac
3:31 pm June 25th, 2009

Whilst all you honkeys were wasting your time yapping at each other, I was goig around to your hoods and taking your tasty bitches up the ass. That ain’t the runs they got while squatting on the toilet y’all…

— DJ Axeom
3:46 pm June 25th, 2009

a gordo to forget

— don johnson
7:52 pm June 25th, 2009

You know its a bad day in StL when the team has a bad series, Gordo has a slow news day to drag out some information and the comment section is worthless and full of complete idiots. Yeah me too.

— ForEverRed
11:48 pm June 25th, 2009

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