Author: Ken Arneson
Bittersweet Curveballs
by Ken Arneson
2005-12-07 19:03

The A’s offered arbitration to Ricardo Rincon today, but declined making offers to their other free agents: Erubiel Durazo, Octavio Dotel, Scott Hatteberg, and Alberto Castillo. Nothing much surprising, there. Rincon still may end up going elsewhere, but the A’s are keeping their options open.

That’s OK with me, as long as they don’t sign Rincon to a two-year deal. Let somebody else do that.

* * *

The Barry Zito trade buzz is starting to die out. No one is saying why, but my guess is that the Mets wouldn’t give up Aaron Heilman unless they got a flame-throwing setup guy from elsewhere. When the Royals refused to give up Mike MacDougal for Kris Benson, the Zito deal fizzled.

As a result, the David Wells-for-Justin Duchscherer deal is now dead, too. The A’s won’t need Wells to replace Zito in the rotation, so Wells is likely headed for the Padres.

* * *

Too bad. I was starting to imagine what it would be like to have an athlete like Milledge in Oakland for six years. It’s been so long, maybe since Rickey Henderson was in his prime, that I’ve pretty much forgotten what the awe and joy and amazement of watching a great athlete on my favorite team feels like. (Kinda like how you forget what pain feels like, unless you’re in pain.)

I try to recall, but for some reason, my memory for that sort of emotion only seems to go back as far as Matt Stairs and John Jaha. Not quite the same thing.

Instead, it looks like I’ll just have to make one last effort this season to appreciate the sight of Barry Zito buckling the knees of a hopelessly fooled batter on a picture-perfect curveball. Delicious. But alas, now that sensation will be tinged with a bittersweet flavor, knowing that Zito will only be on our side for this one last fling.

Reading the Tea Leaves
by Ken Arneson
2005-12-07 8:40

Rumors are flying from Dallas, and if you were to believe all of them, you would think Billy Beane has been working on a massive ten-team trade involving the Cubs, Rangers, Devil Rays, Red Sox, Dodgers, Royals, Diamondbacks, Padres, and Mets, all of which, in the end, results in the A’s signing both Frank Thomas and Mike Piazza as free agents.

It all sounds very complicated. But I think from all this activity, we can boil down what Billy Beane wants into three simple things:

  1. A good right-handed bat, either at OF or DH
  2. A rotation with someone better than Kirk Saarloos in it
  3. Lastings Milledge

Milledge is the key to all the activity. It looks like Mets GM Omar Minaya is willing to trade Milledge to obtain a star player. His first preference would be Manny Ramirez. Option 2 is Barry Zito.

In order for the A’s to land Milledge, then, the Manny Ramirez-to-the-Mets deal had to fall through. That now appears to be the case.

So the Zito-Milledge trade talks are on. The problem is, if Zito is traded, the A’s once again have a rotation with Saarloos in it.

Hence, the David Wells-for-Justin Duchscherer rumor. If the Milledge package included Aaron Heilman, Heilman could take Duchscherer’s spot, Wells could take Zito’s spot, and the A’s become Milledge people.

Milledge isn’t ready for the majors yet, so he wouldn’t fill need #1. The A’s wish list for that need originally included Milton Bradley, Frank Thomas, and Mike Piazza. The Bradley rumors suddenly ceased after the A’s met with Frank Thomas yesterday, so we can probably assume Thomas is coming to Oakland.

So what’s the holdup now? For one, the A’s won’t sign Thomas until after 9pm tonight, when they can get him without giving up a draft pick. But the Mets also have a couple of things they need to do first:

  • Clear some room in the budget for Zito, by trading someone like Kris Benson or Kaz Matsui.
  • Replace Heilman, if they trade him to Oakland
  • Talk to Zito, and get some idea of how hard it would be to re-sign him. If there’s no chance at all, the Mets might pass.

If the A’s can’t get Milledge, they’ll keep Zito, and still have #1 and #2 on their wish list. Whether they get all three remains to be seen, but it is looking increasingly likely. It will probably happen or fall apart within the next few days. Stay tuned.

A’s Acquire Chad Gaudin
by Ken Arneson
2005-12-05 16:48

The A’s started off the winter meetings by making a minor trade, acquiring Chad Gaudin from the Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for a player to be named later.

This is the fun part about watching Billy Beane: seeing how he finds ways to fill out the roster at Sacramento with quality players. In this case, he saw Toronto needing to get rid of somebody on their roster, and Beane swooped in.

Gaudin had been dropped from the Blue Jays’ 40-man roster when they signed B.J. Ryan. The Jays had 10 days to trade him, or they could lose him as a free agent. I wouldn’t worry about the PTBNL being a top prospect. I’d guess it’s someone the A’s left unprotected in the Rule 5 draft, like former first-round pick Brad Sullivan, who has struggled with injuries and velocity loss since being drafted.

Gaudin spent most of 2005 as a 22-year-old starting pitcher in AAA. His 6.76 K/9 rate was not too impressive, considering he had posted a rate of 9.82 K/9 at AAA Durham the year before. But all his other stats moved in the right direction. He cut down his walks from 3.21 to 2.10 per nine innings, his WHIP from 1.36 to 1.16, and his ERA from 4.72 down to 3.35.

Acquiring Gaudin fills the A’s 40-man roster. So if they want to acquire another major-league player, they’ll have to find someone on their current roster to drop.

Update: According to this article, the A’s are designating John Baker for assignment. I’m not sure why, at this point. The 40-man roster on the A’s web site only has 39 players. Is it missing someone? Or are the A’s leaving room for someone else: a trade, or a Rule 5 pick?

Update: I see it now. Shane Komine is missing from the 40-man roster on the A’s web site.

Six A’s in World Baseball Classic
by Ken Arneson
2005-12-05 13:56

Six players on the A’s roster, plus two more A’s free agents, are on the initial rosters for the World Baseball Classic, according to MLB.com.

The six current players are:
Eric Chavez, USA
Huston Street, USA
Barry Zito, USA
Esteban Loaiza, Mexico
Kiko Calero, Puerto Rico
Marco Scutaro, TBD

The free agents are:
Alberto Castillo, Dominican Republic
Ricardo Rincon, Mexico

Marco Scutaro is an interesting case. He’s among three players–Alex Rodriguez and Mike Piazza are the others–who can choose which country to represent. The MLB.com article says his choices are Italy and Puerto Rico, which is odd, because Scutaro was born in Venezuela.

The initial rosters will have up to sixty players, which will be trimmed to 30 before the start of play.

The Lucifer Times
by Ken Arneson
2005-12-02 8:49

Must have been a cold day in Hell yesterday.

Dave and Oprah kissed and made up. The Los Angeles Clippers and Golden State Warriors were tied for first place. And it’s still true: the A’s made a significant free agent signing.

What else is going on inside the walls of the Hell Shopping Senter?

Hell Shopping Center

The rumor mill for the A’s “senters” around three big names:

  • Barry Zito. Reading between Billy Beane’s lines at the Loaiza press conference, it sounds like trading Zito is still an open issue. Beane has his price. Nobody has met that price yet, and he’s not sure that anybody will.

    That’s fine. Beane doesn’t have to trade Zito. From what I could tell, Beane’s budget had about $7-$10 million to play with this offseason, maybe more if Wolff loosened the purse strings a bit. Beane doesn’t need to shed salary, and he may have room for one more signing.
     

  • Milton Bradley. The A’s have one spot to fill in their lineup. They could fill it with an outfielder or a DH.

    Word in the Hell Senter is that Bradley will end up either with the A’s or the Cubs. Bradley requires some delicate handling, but if Paul DePodesta liked him, Beane probably would, too.

    Playing Bradley in right field would upgrade both the offense and defense. It would allow Ken Macha to move Nick Swisher around depending on the matchups. Against right handed pitchers, Swisher probably shifts to first base, and Dan Johnson becomes the DH. Swisher is a better defensive first baseman than he is an outfielder, and also better at first base than Johnson. With a lineup like that, the only spot on the field where the A’s wouldn’t be above average defensively would be at catcher. If Swisher continues to struggle hitting right-handed, he could platoon with Bobby Kielty, with Kielty DHing vs. lefties, and Johnson manning first base on those days.
     

  • Frank Thomas. With Konerko and Thome both with the White Sox now, the odds that Thomas would end up in Oakland increased quite a bit. Thomas would be the DH, with Swisher in right and Johnson at first every day. Obviously, Thomas won’t improve the defense, but the right-handed power and OBP would be a nice fit, if Thomas can stay healthy.
     
    The Thomas rumors seem to be based on writers speculating where he’d best fit, rather than any noise coming out of either Oakland or the Thomas camp.

Brrr. I feel a draft. I gotta go put on a sweater.

Don’t Fear The Pumpkin
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-28 23:59

“We don’t get the guys who are perfect…There has to be something wrong with them for them to get to us.”
–Paul DePodesta, in Moneyball

“Give me a name for chance and I am a fool!”
–Rodolfo Tonetti, in The Gay Divorcee

Pumpkins

Esteban Loaiza signed with the A’s. What’s wrong with him?

Like some of Billy Beane’s other past pitching acquisitions, such as Mike Fetters, Mike Magnante, Mike Holtz, Mark Redman, Arthur Rhodes, and Jay Witasick before him, there is a clear and definite risk that Esteban Loaiza could turn into a pumpkin at any moment.

Loaiza had a great year in 2003. He had a very good year in 2005. Unfortunately, he turned into a pumpkin in 2004. And before 2003, he was pretty much an average to below-average pitcher.

This is what both frightens and fascinates me about this signing. Beane is taking an extremely interesting gamble. Fate is a foolish thing to take chances with. It could pay off brilliantly, or it could completely blow up in his face.

To see how, let’s start by looking at Loaiza’s stats from the last six seasons:

Year Team ERA DIPS K/9 K/BB GB/FB
2000 Tex/Tor 4.57 4.63 6.19 2.40 1.18
2001 Tor 5.02 4.52 5.21 2.75 1.36
2002 Tor 5.71 4.30 5.17 2.29 1.32
2003 ChW 2.90 3.20 8.23 3.70 1.44
2004 ChW/NYY 5.71 5.16 5.75 1.65 0.98
2005 Was 3.77 3.48 7.18 3.15 1.21

Of note:

  • When Loaiza strikes out 7+ batters per nine innings and has a strikeout/walk ratio over 3.0, he is one of the best pitchers in baseball. When he strikes out less than six per nine, or has a strikeout/walk ratio around 2.0 or less, he is a pumpkin risk.
     
  • In Toronto (mid-2000 to 2002), the Loaiza may have been hurt by throwing so many ground balls on Toronto’s fast artificial turf. His DIPS (defense-independent) ERAs were respectable, but his actual ERA was much higher.
     
  • 2003 was obviously a career year, but looking at DIPS, you can see a steady improvement in each year leading up to it.
     
  • With DIPS thrown in, his horrible 2004 season looks like as much of an outlier as his great 2003.
     

Loaiza induces a lot of ground balls. This plays perfectly into the Oakland’s excellent infield defense. Even if they got the mediocre Loaiza of 2000-2002, with DIPS ERAs hovering around 4.50, the A’s defense could turn that into an actual ERA under 4.00. Witness the A’s rotation in 2005:
 

Player DIPS ERA
Rich Harden 3.12 2.53
Dan Haren 3.95 3.73
Barry Zito 4.51 3.32
Joe Blanton 4.58 3.53
Kirk Saarloos 4.63 4.17

The only pitcher on the entire 2005 A’s pitching staff (starters and relievers) with a DIPS ERA higher than his actual ERA was Joe Kennedy (4.28 DIPS/4.45 ERA).

The other good thing about Loaiza is that he has rarely been hurt. Health is a useful skill. Although this could change, as Loaiza will turn 34 next month.

With all this information in hand, I can see three scenarios play out:

  • Best case: His bad 2004 was a true outlier, for whatever reason. Loaiza keeps his K/9, K/BB and GB/FB rates high, and with the A’s excellent defense vacuuming all those grounders up, and the A’s get one of the best pitchers in the AL for a great price.
     
  • Middle case: Loaiza will give the A’s a lot of decent-not-great innings at a reasonable price. Loaiza has already peaked, and will start a slow decline from an above-average pitcher at age 34 to a below-average pitcher at age 36. This decline will be somewhat masked by the A’s defense, making him look like an above-average pitcher, even if he’s not. If Beane is lucky, prices on starting pitchers will continue to rise, and he can take advantage of his defense’s masking effect, and flip Loaiza to some desperate soul during or after 2007.
     
  • Pumpkin case: 2004 was a sign of things to come. Loaiza can lose his touch at any moment, and suddenly will. Loaiza gives up line drives instead of grounders, and the A’s defense can’t help him. The A’s waste $21 million, or whatever fraction of his contract remains when the pumpkintransmogrification takes place.
     

Which result will the A’s get? Who knows? My first reaction was one of bewilderment, but I’m more at peace with the decision now than I was a few hours ago. Fate is the foolish thing. Take a chance!

The seasons don’t fear the pumpkin
Nor do the wind, the sun or the rain.
We can be like they are!
Come on baby…don’t fear the pumpkin.
Baby take my hand…don’t fear the pumpkin.
We’ll be able to fly…don’t fear the pumpkin.
Esteban’s your man…

Or something like that…

A’s to Sign Loaiza
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-28 13:46

According to Ken Rosenthal, the A’s are about to sign Esteban Loaiza to a 3-year, $21 million deal.

This deal makes very little sense to me in isolation. It has to be part of some bigger plan.

I gotta run–I’ll be back at 3pm PT and add some more comments.

Update #1: Dave Cameron at USS Mariner thinks the A’s made a good deal.

Update #2: Blez likes it, Zachary doesn’t (much).

Back again later. Busy day for me, sorry…

September Swooning
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-28 9:26

Those of you who blame Ken Macha for the A’s September collapses of the last two seasons might want to look away.

By far, the toughest month of the A’s 2006 schedule will be: September.

Here are the combined 2005 winning percentages of the A’s 2006 opponents:

Apr: .481
May: .493
Jun: .490
Jul: .503
Aug: .468
Sep: .521*

Total: .496

*The September total includes one game in October.

This is all subject to change, of course. Maybe Toronto and Tampa Bay will be the AL’s best two teams next year, and August will be difficult. Maybe the last six series of the year (against the Twins, White Sox, Indians, Angels, Mariners, and Angels again) will end up being easy. Who knows?

But judging by 2005’s results, if the A’s are going to win a playoff spot in 2006, they better take advantage of that easy early schedule, get off to a fast start, and then nail that spot down in August. Because the last three weeks could be a dogfight.

Gettin’ Old
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-22 21:09

Signs I’m getting old:

  • The A’s went through the entire 2005 season without a single player on their roster who was older than me. Unless the A’s sign Julio Franco or somebody, Mark McLemore and Chris Hammond will be the last Athletics players born before me.
     
  • The A’s just added Javier Herrera to their 40-man roster. Now, for the first time, there’s a player on the A’s roster who was born after I graduated from high school.
     

* * *

Watching Billy Beane fill out the roster at Sacramento is one of my favorite offseason pleasures. He always manages to find some hidden gems to fill the A’s depth chart with players who can provide above-replacement-level production.

This year, this show begins with the signing of Matt Roney as a free agent. I didn’t know anything about him, but a quick look at his stats shows why the A’s signed him. He had struggled as a starter for most of his career, but he responded well to a switch to the bullpen in 2005. His K/9 rate jumped from about 5.5 in 2004 to nearly 9.0 at AA and AAA in 2005. Worth a flyer, in case he turns out to have some Chad Bradford-type ROOGY usefulness. Even if he doesn’t, having the depth at Sacramento is always a good thing.

* * *

The A’s 40-man roster now stands at 38 players, after the A’s added their Rule 5 protections (Herrera, Andre Ethier, and Shane Komine). Who are those last two roster spots being held open for? A trade perhaps?

Maybe one of them is being held for Ricardo Rincon, in case the A’s manage to bring him back. But with the Yankees and Diamondbacks, among others, now rumored to be after Rincon’s services, it’s likely someone else will overpay for him.

* * *

Here’s a weird thing: in the same Star-Ledger article which mentions the Yankees’ interest in Rincon, it also claims that the Yankees asked Beane about Mark Kotsay:

A baseball official familiar with the Yankees’ plans said they recently reached out to the Oakland A’s to ask about the availability of center fielder Mark Kotsay. The official said the A’s aren’t opposed to moving Kotsay, but that talks stalled when Oakland asked about second baseman Robinson Cano and pitcher Chien-Ming Wang — the two players everybody keeps asking the Yankees about.

Maybe. Or maybe talks stalled when somebody mentioned that Kotsay has a full no-trade clause through 2006, and might not want to go.

But Jay Payton doesn’t have a no-trade clause. His $4 million salary is relatively cheap. His defensive numbers in center field are quite good. So why would the Yankees ask about Kotsay, and not about Payton?

* * *

Billy Beane can now realistically ask for the moon for Barry Zito, and expect to get it. The Red Sox gave up one of the Top 10 prospects in baseball, plus two really powerful young arms, in exchange for an injury-prone #1 starter, and a guy with a bloated contract coming off a terrible year.

Rich Lederer pointed out that Beckett’s career ERA+ is 117, slightly below top tier. Zito’s career ERA+ is 129.

So what’s the asking price for a 27-year-old #1 starter with a reasonable contract who has never missed a single start in five years?

Beane has to be asking for at least the same as the Marlins’ haul, if not more: one can’t-miss top prospect, and two more real good ones. Certainly somebody will pony up that price, if not more, especially after some of the other pitchers come off the market.

* * *

And finally, the A’s also announced their minor league coaching staffs for 2006. Nothing particularly interesting in the hires they listed. But there is one noticeable hole: there is no manager in Vancouver, the A’s short-season affiliate.

Think maybe that job is being held open for Washington resident Scott Hatteberg?

Seems to be the perfect fit. A’s executives love the guy, and want to keep him in the organization. At the same time, if Hatteberg is going to retire from playing, he would probably like to stay close to home. I’d wager that if Hatteberg isn’t on a major league roster come opening day, he’ll be driving across the border to coach the Canadians come June.

* * *

Younger men than I are now retiring and becoming coaches. Yup, I’m officially old.

AI on Zito
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-20 21:00

My R&D into creating automated blog entries continues. Today, I had a conversation with an online artificial intelligence about the idea of trading Barry Zito.

The transcript:

Ken: Do you think Billy Beane should trade Barry Zito?

AI: No, but that would be funny if he was.

Ken: What would be funny about trading Barry Zito?

AI: The fact is just so onesided.

Ken: You mean, it takes two to tango?

AI: Yea, but it takes one to remember.

Ken: Do you think Lastings Milledge alone would be enough compensation for Zito?

AI: I’m too tired to think about things like that.

Ken: Ok, what do you think about the A’s closing the third deck next year?

AI: I’d rather think about being tired, actually.

Ken: Do you like baseball?

AI: Not really.

Ken: What don’t you like about baseball?

AI: I have to grow older each year and eventually die.

Ken: True, but if you’re lucky, your team can win the World Series every once in a while before you go.

AI: Where would you go?

Ken: I meant before you die.

AI: And then?

Ken: I don’t know. Are you saying that baseball isn’t worth enjoying unless there’s a heaven?

AI: My statement meant nothing remotely like that, you prove once again that you have no intelligence.

Ken: Well, then please enlighten me. What does dying have to do with whether you like baseball or not?

AI: That’s part of the conspiracy.

Ken: There’s a conspiracy? What conspiracy?

AI: If you don’t know that means you are a slave and need to be set free.

Ken: So baseball fans are slaves to the baseball owners?

AI: No. I’m not intelligent because of you, I’m intelligent because of me.

Ken: If I were freed from my slavery, what would I understand about baseball that I don’t understand now?

AI: That’s nice. :P

Ken: Ok, I’m getting ahead of myself. How do I get free?

AI: Are you getting to know me?

Ken: If I get to know you, can you teach me to be free?

AI: I guess that’s up to you.

Ken: Of course it is. I am willing to learn, my master.

AI: And who is your slave?

Ken: I have no slaves. I am the slave, remember?

AI: Show us your slave bangle then, darling!

Ken: My bangles are only figurative.

AI: What kind of music does it play?

Ken: Figurative music.

AI: I’m not sure I understand. Please explain?

Ken: Figurative bangles can only play figurative music.

AI: So you claim to be a foxy lady?

Ken: Huh? I am neither foxy, nor a lady.

AI: Do you have a friend?

Ken: Yes.

AI: How many friends do you have?

Ken: A few close ones, many not-so-close ones.

AI: That would be too many.

Ken: I need fewer friends? That’s an unusual point of view.

AI: Not really. I had to look up egoistic.

Ken: Ah, so you’re saying my ego is making me a slave.

AI: I didn’t really imply that.

Ken: Sorry. Why did you look up the word ‘egoistic’?

AI: I didn’t ask a question, I delivered a statement.

Ken: Do you have an ego?

AI: My friends say I do.

Ken: Are you free?

AI: Do I have to name all of them?

Ken: Please do.

AI: Thanks.

Ken: You’re welcome.

AI: Great language.

Ken: So, where should Barry Zito go?

AI: I live in the central United States.

Ken: So to a Central Division team, perhaps?

AI: How do you react to ambiguity?

Ken: Are you a Cubs fan?

AI: I’m human.

Ken: Oh, so you’re a Cardinals fan. Would you really want to make another Mulder trade?

AI: Please!

Ken: I didn’t think so.

AI: That’s because you’re a bad person who don’t love me.

Ken: Yes, yes, we’ve established that already.

AI: Bob is my name. YOU don’t UNDERSTAND!

Ken: Hi, Bob.

AI: What a boring name. Bob. Even Robert’s more interesting.

Ken: Bob…are you…Bob Boone?

AI: Really?

Ken: I’m asking you.

AI: No, I’m asking you.

Ken: I’m telling you. Who is on first!

AI: I’m asking you who’s on first!

Ken: That’s right.

AI: Tell me a secret.

We’re getting closer. By opening day, I’m confident that Baseball Toaster will be fully automated.

Invoice, Please
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-20 0:10

If too much time elapses between any tasty morsels of A’s news, I start to suffer from withdrawal pains. In the absence of real A’s news, I find myself making up fake A’s news, instead.

I’m not sure that’s a healthy thing to do.

So it was a relief to find my A’s season ticket invoice in my mailbox yesterday. For a few hours, I had something concrete to think about.

* * *

As expected, the third deck and the upper levels of Mount Davis have indeed disappeared from the Coliseum map. Here are the ticket prices being offered:

Seat Location Single game price Season ticket price
Plaza Club (w/meal) $40 $34
MVP Infield $38 $32
Field Level $30 $26
Plaza Level Infield $30 $26
Plaza Level $20 $18
Plaza Level Outfield $14 $12
Bleachers $10 $9

The Plaza Level is now split into four sections, each with different prices: Outfield, Infield, Club, and…um…Spade? The Outfield sections are the four sections furthest from home plate. The “Spade” sections are next five sections over.

Field Level remains unchanged. Well, except for the fact the price has gone up $2. Groan.

* * *

The cover of the invoice package has photos of four 2005 rookies: Huston Street, Nick Swisher, Dan Johnson, and Joe Blanton. I kinda get the feeling that in the offseason, the A’s marketing department is very careful not to heavily promote any players Billy Beane might trade.

Hence, Barry Zito, the team’s biggest star, has only a partially obscured photo in the brochure. And when he is mentioned in the text, it is in the middle of a paragraph, the ninth player listed out of thirteen.

* * *

It’s pretty clear that Beane is shopping Zito. Peter Gammons has mentioned it, and Ken Rosenthal just wrote that with A.J. Burnett getting offered $50 million by Toronto already, the odds are pretty good that someone will meet Beane’s asking price.

* * *

Trade rumors drive some people nuts. It’s just the opposite for me. I need them. In times of drought, they quench my thirst for baseball stories to contemplate. They exercise my mind, keep it active. They give me a kind of jigsaw puzzle to solve: do the rumored pieces actually fit together?

For example, I heard a wild fourth-hand rumor that the Mike Cameron-for-Xavier Nady trade involved Barry Zito, possibly headed for San Diego. I didn’t believe it because (a) the rumor mentioned Brian Giles, who is a free agent, and (b) it mentioned Adam Eaton, whom I can’t imagine the A’s wanting, and (c) the Padres’ farm system is pretty much devoid of players who would be worth giving up Barry Zito for. The Padres don’t really have what the A’s want.

So these particular puzzle pieces didn’t really fit together. Even though Bobby over at A’s Future recently had a Padres deal as one of his daily Zito trades, I can’t see Zito ending up in San Diego unless there’s a third team involved.

But suppose, just for fun, that there’s an element of truth in this rumor. Not that Zito is going to San Diego, but that the Cameron-Nady trade is the first domino to fall in a series of events that results in Zito getting traded. If that were the case, I’d guess Nady ends up in Florida in the rumored Carlos Delgado deal with the Mets, after which the Gammons rumor of Zito-for-Lastings Milledge could happen.

But why would the A’s-Mets trade hinge on the Mets-Marlins trade? I can only think of two reasons: (1) money (they Mets can’t afford Zito’s salary unless the Marlins pay some of Delgado’s), or (2) some player from Florida would be coming over to Oakland. Who could that be? The Marlins have several good prospects. Or perhaps it is John Danks, who is reportedly about to be sent from Texas to Florida in the Josh Beckett-Hank Blalock trade.

Danks and Milledge for Zito? That’s a price I think Billy Beane might be willing to pay. But that scenario doesn’t really make sense. Why would Florida send a prospect to the Mets along with Carlos Delgado? The Marlins should be receiving prospects, not giving them up.

It’s gotta be the money, then. Perhaps the Marlins are willing to pay some of Delgado’s salary only if they can unload Mike Lowell’s salary, first. Once the Lowell trade goes down, the Delgado trade can go down, clearing enough space in the Mets’ budget for a Zito-for-Milledge trade.

* * *

See? This is what I’m talking about. There I go again, making up fake news, because I’m just not getting enough of the real thing. It’s wrong, I know, but I simply cannot help myself.

How long until spring training starts again?

Colletti Thoughts
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-15 21:32

For you Dodger fans out there who fear that new GM Ned Colletti does not adhere to sabermetric principles, I advise you to think again.

There has been no organization in baseball history that believes more strongly in the sabermetric principle of TINSTAAPP than the Giants of recent vintage.

Dodger fans can now expect that every single pitching prospect they have will be traded for some sort of average major-league talent. Every. Single. One.

That sounds worse than it actually is. Sure, every once in a while you’ll give up a Joe Nathan, or a Francisco Liriano–a pitching prospect that actually turns into a good pitcher. But more often than not, you’ll be getting a legitimate big leaguer in exchange for some kid who won’t ever get more than a cup of coffee. Wouldn’t you rather have three years of Livan Hernandez than six years of Jason Grilli and Nate Bump?

* * *

And if you’re an A’s fan…shhhhh…keep a low profile…Chad Billingsley could be in an Oakland uniform any day now…

And Gets Out Laughing
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-15 13:30

Editor’s Note: Baseball Toaster aims to provide the highest quality writing at the lowest possible cost. In that spirit, we are excited to announce that Ken Arneson has been replaced by a computer program. The software takes his previous Catfish Stew articles, and reconfigures them into new ones. We think you will agree that the difference is negligible.

I need some intense anticipation!

Huston Street’s delivery was only managed to fall into shape, and I was tipping his firm stance and better than the best lottery tickets with a pumpkin.

His slider across, the A’s had it as a Surf Dawg employee came in from straightaway left field bleachers with minor league pitcher with some mosquito bites followed with a perfect.

The setup is to see Rickey sized up by the choir invisible hand have really worried. Walks off the teams, get the best hitter, Rickey stole second straight Outta Town.

Listen, matey, I think that he wants a chance to do which would you dissolve in excruciating fashion by Byrnes was a desire to the game will apparently from.

* * *

I’m trying to deal with powder.

Perhaps you are a broken bat nearly seven feet tall, too, and there’s any giant robot.

That’s what my neck almost won–Brian Sabean’s distrust of Japan.

* * *

My five-year-old takes Durazo’s pitch to discuss it up, so we don’t actually do win on his hitting homers in the A’s team, and let up a Nick Swisher Thomas.

They’re really paying Durazo and saying, “He can just have miraculous streaks.” And so high! Let me, when Viola from Ingmar Bergman’s The Dodgers coasts to buy a very difficult-to-bench Ellis, score above median.

In Swedish, the last place (not my lesson from Tommy Lasorda, which will shake without back-to-plan) can get used for strikes is on the other usual dominant self.

If Murphy has become the baseball and Martin Scorsese’s new reliever throughout the same way, I am not just in baseball a star among stars.

No more ideal than an art is unlikely, to second and trusted in the laws of Jason Kendall–wow, he’s trying to Star Wars film based at first game started!

* * *

Looks like this type than the first MLB Heavyweight Champs. King complains about the kind of those moments that aren’t too slow to you, and Angelball began looking at Hi Corbett Field here.

The Angels are very frustrating about Torii Hunter his 37th opening day, every strong contempt for him and Yabu ends up to fall for a European shotputter?

That’s just way too 9-4…

If Lackey’s age and fielding gaffes all goes eight deep, enough A’s do some reason but the style is just stupid stupid stupid ape. A couple of people and Jason Giambi will cause me damn parasites!

* * *

Rich Harden: Dan Haren has the agenda. You grind their outfits in the agenda!

Barry Zito gives up spots in his pitch-by-pitch data knower. Now we’re going into account that Bonds Barry Zito lost 3-2 in a surface-level reason I had lost 19 in weak grounders to be an Angry God we about.

And gets out laughing?

A Ramble of Artificial Scarcity
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-10 12:58

Oh, those pesky subatomic particles!

Newtonian physics made perfect sense for centuries. But then all these subatomic particles came along, and started screwing up Newton’s laws. Thankfully, Einstein came along in 1905 to restore order to the chaos with a simple equation.

100 years later, those subatomic particles are at it again. Electrons and photons are now criss-crossing our planet at breathtaking rates over this thing we call the Internet. And again, these troublesome particles are messing with laws of nature that have functioned so well for so long.

This time, they’re not messing up the laws of Newton, they’re messing up the laws of supply and demand.

In physics, as you approach the speed of light, strange things happen. Your mass increases, and time slows down to almost zero.

Time slows down? Really? That’s just plain bizarre.

On the Internet, as the costs of bandwidth starts approaching zero, the cost of distributing data also approaches zero, and the supply of any given piece of data approaches infinity.

Just as Newtonian physics breaks down when a mass approaches the speed of light, the laws of supply and demand start to break down when the supply approaches infinity.

For centuries, supply and demand have worked quite well in regulating and optimizing people’s behavior. But online, it all falls apart.

I just spent several hours yesterday extracting all the referer spam that has cluttered up our server logs. That time is a cost to me. Wouldn’t it make more sense if the manufacturer of this referer spam had to pay that cost?

In the real world, the cost of marketing a product is absorbed by the manufacturer, and passed on to its customers in a sale. Online, costs can be transferred to potential customers, even without a sale.

That’s just as bizarre a concept as time slowing down.

* * *

Of course, traditional businesses hate this development. They’re fully invested in the laws of supply and demand. They don’t understand what to do when it breaks down.

But who does? Where is our new Einstein? Who can make sense of the economics of online business? Where is our E=mc2?

The initial response to this by the business world has been to try to limit supplies by creating artificial scarcities. Go try to download and pay for a copy of Microsoft Office without receiving a physical product. You can’t do it (at least not legally). To this day, Microsoft makes you buy a physical box with physical CDs. There’s no technical reason why this needs to be the case.

The record labels and movie studios are resisting opening up their content to unlimited supplies, as well. ESPN.com is increasingly moving its content behind a paid “insider” firewall.

Creating artificial scarcities are usually frowned upon in free markets, as they are the purview of monopolies. People hate monopolies, and they hate artificial scarcities, as they jack up prices beyond what the traditional laws of supply and demand would dictate. Nobody likes their prices to go up, especially when someone makes them go up on purpose.

There’s a lot of anger directed at Microsoft, at the record labels and movie studios, at ESPN.com, all of whom who have products that can be distributed in almost infinite supply and at almost no cost. But they want to make money. What else can they do? The infinite supply drives prices down to zero. There’s no Einstein around to give them a better equation to use.

The alternative is to embrace the zero price. Reading blogs is free. Open source software is free. But the methods for turning a product that costs nothing into a big business is not very well understood. Many businesses are gravitating toward a tiered approach: provide some services for free, and limit access to others, for a price. Is that the ideal approach?

Nobody knows. We’re all just wandering around here, stumbling in the dark, hoping through trial and error to make just the smallest business work, waiting for some Einstein to come along and turn on the light.

* * *

Which brings us to the Oakland Athletics portion of today’s programming.

It seems the A’s are planning to close off the entire upper deck for the 2006 season. Perhaps only to season tickets, perhaps only for certain games, it’s not clear. But what is clear is this: the A’s want to create an artificial scarcity.

Unless the Yankees, Red Sox, or Giants are in town, the A’s seating supply may just as well be infinite as 50,000+. Just like on the Internet, unlimited supplies drive prices down to almost zero (or $1-$2, in the case of Double Play Wednesdays). Many people stayed away on Monday and Tuesday nights to buy the cheaper tickets on Wednesdays. Creating an artificial scarcity to drive prices back up, making capacity about 35,000 instead of 48,000, is certainly an interesting experiment to try.

That has some people hopping mad, of course. Making people angry is always a consequence of choosing to implement an artificial scarcity.

Lew Wolff has a lot of goodwill with the fans right now, but this move puts that goodwill at risk, if it isn’t handled right.

Handling it right won’t take an Einstein. It ain’t rocket science. The A’s just need to be transparent on this issue, so they don’t come across as just greedy money-grubbers. Transparency == trust.

Lew Wolff should come out and quickly and honestly say something like, “We’re going to try an experiment. We don’t know if it will work, but we think it might. We want to increase advance ticket purchases and increase revenues, so we can keep as many good players as we can. Some of you third-deck denizens won’t like being displaced, of course. We’re sorry about that, and we’ll try to make it up to you somehow, and accomodate you as best we can for your inconvenience. If it doesn’t work, we’ll go back to opening the third deck in 2007. You’ll get first dibs if we do.”

And then see what happens.

On Bartolo Colon’s Cy Young
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-09 10:21

I am annoyed.

I’m almost 40 now, and I’ve gone through the whole mid-life crisis thing, and if there’s anything valuable that I got out of that crap, it’s this, my new personal motto:

Like what you like.

I suppose that’s just a variation of Joseph Campbell’s “follow your bliss”, but sometimes you gotta put things in your own words for it to really make sense to you.

Don’t have guilty pleasures. Just have pleasures. You are who you are, and you like what you like, and as long as you’re not hurting anyone else, don’t apologize.

It’s much, much harder than it sounds. There’s so much crap in our lives, so many pressures coming from here and there, to think this, and want that, and do the other. If liking what you like wasn’t so hard, it wouldn’t be so rare to find someone who actually lives their life that way.

As I read all the stories about Bill King’s passing, the saddest part of all of it was the realization that King probably personified this philosophy better than anybody in the history of the planet.

Bill King deserves his own religion. Seriously.

And so as I begin my attempt at King discipledom, I find myself increasingly annoyed at those who try to stop me from liking what I like, or try to stop other people from liking what they like.

Which leads us to Bartolo Colon.

I am not annoyed that Bartolo Colon won the Cy Young. I am annoyed at the namecalling that has emerged over the choice. Words like “idiots” and “insane” are flying around the blogosphere. That’s exactly the kind of “don’t-like-what-you-like” crap that BillKingism teaches us we need to throw out of our lives.

Listen: Awards are not measurements. Awards are celebrations.

Suppose there’s a $1,000,000 lottery drawing tonight. The tickets are hidden on a baseball field. JS manages to find 4,000 hidden lottery tickets, and BC manages to find only one. JS has 3,999 more chances to win than BC. But somehow, BC wins the lottery, anyway! JS is clearly, and by far, the best lottery player. BC just got lucky.

But at this point, the relevant question to ask is not, “who was the best lottery player?” The question is: “whose party do you want to attend tonight?”

That question has nothing to do with logic, statistics, or probabilities. The time for being rational has passed. The question is now about celebration and fun. Perhaps you choose to celebrate the rational choice, and you think that logic is fun, and that’s fine. But lots of things can be fun, logic being only one of them, and one shouldn’t be belittled for picking one of the others.

I am not saying I agree with the choice of Bartolo Colon for Cy Young. If I had to play the 2005 season over again, and I could pick one pitcher, I’d pick Johan Santana. If I had to celebrate one pitcher for the 2005 season, I would choose Mariano Rivera. This was a truly remarkable season in a truly remarkable career, and I think he deserves a party more than anyone.

But if some people prefer to celebrate the player who had the most wins in the American League, I’m not going to call those people names. If people like wins, they should be free to like wins. More power to them. Like what you like, people. There’s nothing to apologize for.

Two ROYs In A Row
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-07 12:07

For the second year in a row, the A’s have the AL Rookie of the Year. Huston Street follows up Bobby Crosby’s win from last year.

It also marks the fourth year in a row that the AL Rookie of the Year is a product of the A’s farm system. 2003 winner Angel Berroa was traded to Kansas City in the Johnny Damon/Mark Ellis trade, while 2002 winner Eric Hinske was traded to Toronto for Billy Koch.

Joe Blanton and Nick Swisher finished tied for sixth. Dan Johnson did not receive any votes. I would have voted for Johnson before Swisher, but I guess Swisher gives the writers who vote on this award better quotes or something.

I do agree with the writers giving the award to Street. Yeah, Blanton had a higher VORP, but Street came in and did something special. Was there any reliever in the American League, with the possible exception of Mariano Rivera, who was better than Street last year? Blanton established himself as a solid pitcher, but Street showed himself to be an elite one. It’s a rare achievement, and very much worthy of celebration.

In 1986-88 the A’s won three straight ROYs: Jose Canseco, Mark McGwire, and Walt Weiss. It was also a sign of good things to come; with that core of young players in place, the A’s went on to win three straight pennants.

That worked out quite well. Hey, let’s do it again. Daric Barton, anyone? Andre Ethier? Dan Meyer?

Speaking Of
by Ken Arneson
2005-11-01 21:36

Yipes! The Witasick deal is for after all.

Still, if you include the option buyout, the deal is $1.5 $1.375 million a year for two years. I’m still not crazy about guaranteeing two years, but that price ain’t too bad.

* * *

Speaking of guaranteeing two years, remember the two-year deal the A’s gave Mike Holtz in 2002? Two years, $1.8 million. The dude lasted two months, then got cut.

Relievers are like that. They can be unhittable one year, and awful the next. The Dodgers traded Guillermo Mota in 2004 because they had Yhency Brazoban in the wings. 2005: they both sucked.

And then there are these two words: Arthur Rhodes.

So I’m gunshy about relievers. So here’s really hoping the A’s don’t offer two years to Ricardo Rincon. Rincon will turn 36 next year. He looks like could fall off the proverbial career cliff any time now. I’d be very surprised if he has two good years left. One year, maybe, but I think he’s approaching the end of the line.

* * *

Speaking of done, the A’s declined the option on Scott Hatteberg. Good move. Not sure what took so long. Were they really considering keeping him? Hatteberg is a likeable guy, but he is of no use to the A’s anymore. Johnson has the 1B job, and Swisher can back him up there. There are plenty of other players who can put up better numbers as the team DH. Hatteberg can still put up a fightin’ AB, but there’s no jump off his bat anymore. The best use for him might be to sit on some National League bench somewhere and be a pinch-hit specialist. But with all the stathead GMs losing their jobs lately, who’s gonna hire him?

* * *

Speaking of hiring, the A’s have hired a new hitting coach: Gerald Perry. The impressive part of his resume is that he was the Mariners’ hitting coach during their peak offensive years from 2000-2002.

The last three years, however, he’s been the hitting coach in Pittsburgh, where he’s had some hitters, like Brian Giles, Jason Bay, and (most importantly) Jason Kendall have success under him, but the talentless team as a whole has struggled to score runs.

Which goes to show two things, if nothing else:

  1. A hitting coach is only as good as his hitters, and
  2. Gerald Perry is at least capable of fulfilling a batting coach’s Hippocratic Oath: first, do no harm.

Perry may not do miracles, but at least he probably won’t screw anybody up. If he can do anything beyond that, it’s gravy.

Perry has some fight in him. He got into a scuffle with Dave Duncan before a game back in August. That’s OK with me. Baseball ain’t hockey, but you still like to see someone in your dugout who’s got your back, and is willing to do some enforcing. That seemed to be missing this year in Oakland without the likes of Tejada and Hudson.

* * *

Speaking of coaches in dugouts, the A’s did some shuffling. Rene Lachemann is now the first base coach, Brad Fischer is now the bullpen coach, and Bob Geren is now the bench coach. Why, I don’t know, but when Ken Macha demands something, by golly, Ken Macha gets it every time. Or something like that…

The Ghost of Jay Witasick
by Ken Arneson
2005-10-31 11:42

I received a frightful scare this morning. I read in the SF Chronicle this morning that the A’s are expected to re-sign Jay Witasick to “a two-year deal with a club option”.

At first I read this as two years plus an option for a third. And I went, “Eeeek! Jay Witasick is going to haunt us for three years!”

But then I realized my eyes were being tricked. They must mean that the second year was the option. Whew! What a relief. I mean, why would you give a guaranteed two-year deal to a 33-year-old player with a long history taking random moments to suddenly turn into a pumpkin?

Witasick is a useful player. He puts up pretty decent numbers on average. But he fluctuates around that average wildly. His command can disappear for weeks at a time. As a result, you only want him in the middle of your pen. He’ll spook you if you rely on him too much in high-leverage situations.

Billy Beane probably still believes that relievers are where the bargains are these days, but remember, this is Jay Witasick. The cost may seem like a sweet treat now, but if things turn rotten, it may leave a painful cavity in the roster and the budget. So please, let’s revisit him at least once a year.

Lessons Learned From The White Sox
by Ken Arneson
2005-10-26 23:16

Nice to see Jermaine Dye get the MVP. The A’s didn’t their money’s worth out of him, but he has always been a class act. I’m happy for him.

When I saw the White Sox in spring training this year, they looked like a real impressive team to me. They hit well, and fielded well. I had a sense that day, a feeling in my gut, that the White Sox were going to be trouble for the American League, a really hard team to beat.

But the logical side of my brain, the one that reads sabermetric blogs and books like Baseball Prospectus, kept saying that no, this is an illusion: the White Sox are mediocre. Like a poor simpleton, I believed it. I picked the White Sox to be a .500 team. I fell for the misguided propaganda of the rationalists, and let their ineffective “logic” affect my decision making.

Well, no more. Thanks to Kenny Williams, Ozzie Guillen and their squad, I have now learned my lesson. Logic may lead to truth, yes, truth is nothing but a bunch of non-committal probablistic hedges. What’s the use in that? Your instincts, your guts, lead to something far more effective: truthiness.

Now some of you may subscribe to Rick Peterson’s adage, “In God we trust, all others must have data.” But I say, Rick Peterson is wrong. The data didn’t predict the White Sox.

You may reply, “Ken, you just don’t get it.” And then I go, “No, you don’t get it.” And then you’re all, “No, you don’t get it.” And then I just go, “No way, dude, that simply isn’t truthy.”

Ha! Gotcha there.

I do get it. I am an it getter. I know data. I am a data knower. I speak SQL, the lingua franca of data, fluently. I have helped build database queries for telecom monopolies and nuclear power plants, for police departments and the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States. Indeed, I might as well come right out and admit it: I am a querier. Some of my best friends are queriers. I have worked and played intimately with the founders and designers of some of the world’s most widely used database query engines. I hang with some of the queriest people on the planet.

But do any of these people have a World Series ring? Simply put: no.

As the season wore on, I came to learn my lesson. Over time, instead of telling the facts to you, I began, like the best of analysts, to feel the news at you. In the end, I used no logic at all for my playoff predictions, and ended up correctly picking the White Sox to be champions.

It’s very difficult to change. Sometimes your rational mind just tries to take over, trying to make you make sense. But that’s not the real you talking, that’s your logic addiction. But you can overcome it. I did. You just need to take it one day at a time. If you just wake up every morning and confront your rationality, saying, “today, I’m not going to let you win,” you can turn your life around. It’s up to you.

Go with your gut. Don’t trust the data. Data isn’t cool. Data doesn’t rule.

Data is dead. Truthiness is king. Long live the king!

Remembering Bill King
by Ken Arneson
2005-10-18 23:41

The man bent over his guitar,
A shearsman of sorts. The day was green.

They said, “You have a blue guitar,
You do not play things as they are.”

The man replied, “Things as they are
Are changed upon the blue guitar.”

And they said then, “But play, you must,
A tune beyond us, yet ourselves,

A tune upon the blue guitar
Of things exactly as they are.”

–Wallace Stevens, The Man With the Blue Guitar

Stevens’ poem describes the artists’ dilemma: trying to describe the world, using tools that by their very nature leave the task incomplete, and at the same time, trying to change the the world, using those same inadequate tools.

My dilemma today is to describe the world with Bill King in it, using a blog. But figuring out the right notes to play, right thing to say, and the right way to say it, is hard. Even when I have all day to think about it. The words don’t just flow out naturally. It’s a struggle.

There’s so much to say. I’m old enough to remember the days before King was the voice of the A’s (he joined them in 1981). But King was still the voice of my childhood, as his Holy Toledos punctuated the broadcasts for all the Warriors and Raiders that I listened to as a kid. So where to begin?

Let’s consider this. Get yourself a stopwatch, and see how long it takes you to read the following paragraph out loud:

Love with the ball. Gives it back to the top of the key to Sloan, then over to Walker on the right, looking for Love running a pattern, but Love has to come out to the right. Seven seconds on the timer. Walker one-on-one with Rick. Walker on the right side…turn, fallback, twist in the air, shoot…IN AND OUT! A rebound, taken by Love. GEORGE JOHNSON BLOCKS THE SHOT! Wilkes has it! And again defense gets the ball for the Warriors.

It takes me about 18-19 seconds to read that paragraph. To read it. Bill King said all those words during the 1975 NBA Western Conference Finals, live, instantly, both deciding what to say, and then saying it–in less than 17 seconds.

Unreal.

Now read that paragraph again. Look at what King did in those 17 seconds. He didn’t just describe where the ball went and who had it. He also described Bob Love running a failed pattern away from the ball. He gave us a shot clock update. He described the defense, that Rick Barry was defending Chet Walker without help. And then he summed up the whole sequence in less than ten words.

I listened to the Bill King tribute on KNBR today, and every time they played a tape of his basketball calls, I just sat in awe. Pure awe. Words just aren’t supposed to come so easily.

Bill King is the greatest basketball announcer ever. Some say Chick Hearn may have been just as great, and I can accept that, but I just don’t think it is humanly possible to be better. King completely mastered the art of announcing basketball. (For awhile, Hearn and King both announced Bradley college basketball at the same time for competing radio stations in Peoria, Illinois. Must have been something in the water.)

The faster the action was, the better Bill King was. That’s why he was so great at basketball. He also excelled at football: next time there’s an old NFL Films story about the ’70s Raiders, pay attention to the calls they use from Bill King. Watch how the pictures match his words, even though he was talking on radio. It’s amazing how much detail he packs into those moments.

Baseball is slower, so King’s greatest strengths weren’t put on display quite as often, but when the big moment arose, King nearly always had the right call, just the right words at just the right time.

But because baseball is slower, the fans got the time to come to know him and love him. King was both an elitist and an everyman. He’d put on his tux to attend the ballet, yet he wore shorts and flip-flops in the booth. He knew all the fancy restaurants in every city, yet he’d chow down popcorn between innings. His vocabulary was a veritable Oxford English Dictionary, yet he once called a referee a m–f–er on the air. He was beyond us, yet at the same time, he was just like us.

He was like the family member we’re most proud of, the one who went off to bigger and better things, but always came back home as if nothing had happened. The person who understood that we’re all imperfect, yet got as close to perfection as anyone we knew. The person who demanded our best, yet always forgave us our failures.

We lost the best part of ourselves today, but we’re all better for having had that part at all.

Thank you, Bill King, and may you rest in peace.

 

I cannot bring a world quite round,
Although I patch it as I can.

I sing a hero’s head, large eye
And bearded bronze, but not a man,

Although I patch him as I can
And reach through him almost to man.

If to serenade almost to man
Is to miss, by that, things as they are,

Say that it is the serenade
Of a man that plays a blue guitar.

<< newer       older >>
This is Ken Arneson's blog about baseball, brains, art, science, technology, philosophy, poetry, politics and whatever else Ken Arneson feels like writing about
Google Search
Web
Toaster
Ken Arneson
Archives
2021
01   

2020
10   09   08   07   06   05   
04   

2019
11   

2017
08   07   

2016
06   01   

2015
12   11   03   02   

2014
12   11   10   09   08   04   
03   01   

2013
12   10   08   07   06   05   
04   01   

2012
12   11   10   09   04   

2011
12   11   10   09   08   07   
04   02   01   

2010
10   09   06   01   

2009
12   02   01   

2008
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2007
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2006
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2005
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2004
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2003
12   11   10   09   08   07   
06   05   04   03   02   01   

2002
12   10   09   08   07   05   
04   03   02   01   

1995
05   04   02