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5 TAMPA BAY Devil Rays
Stephen Cannella
March 25, 2002
An out-with-the-old, in-with-the-new plan offers hope—just not for this year
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March 25, 2002

5 Tampa Bay Devil Rays

An out-with-the-old, in-with-the-new plan offers hope—just not for this year

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THE LINEUP

Projected roster with 2001 stastistics

PLAYER

B-T

PVR

BA

HR

RBI

SB

BATTING ORDER

LF Jason Tyner

L

195

.280

0

21

31

2B Brent Abernathy

R

250

.270

5

33

8

RF Ben Grieve

L-R

142

.264

11

72

7

DH Greg Vaughn

R

114

.233

24

82

11

C Toby Hall

R

107

.298

4

30

2

IB Steve Cox

L

159

.257

12

51

2

CF Randy Winn

S-R

223

.273

6

50

12

3B Jared Sandberg

R

253

.206

1

15

1

SS Chris Gomez*

R

263

.259

8

43

4

BENCH

OF Jason Conti?

L-R

259

.324

14

70

5

IF Russ Johnson

R

276

.294

4

33

2

PITCHER

PVR

W

L

IPS

WHIP

ERA

STARTERS

RH Tanyon Sturtze

120

11

12

6.6

1.43

4.42

LH Joe Kennedy

148

7

8

5.9

1.33

4.44

RH Paul Wilson

184

8

9

5.5

1.43

4.88

LH Wilson Alvarez?

174

9

9

5.7

1.49

4.22

LH Nick Bierbrodt (R)*

199

5

6

5.3

1.65

5.55

PITCHER

PVR

W

L

S

WHIP

ERA

BULLPEN

RH Esteban Yan

96

4

6

22

1.20

3.90

RH Victor Zambrano

177

6

2

2

1.09

3.16

RH Jesus Colome

196

2

3

0

1.27

3.33

#New acquisition

(R) Rookie B-T: Bats-Throws IPS: Innings pitched per start

WHIP: Walks plus hits per inning pitched

PVR: Player Value Ranking (explanation on page 154)

*Combined AL and NL stats ?Tripal A stats ?1999 stats

What's manager Hal McRae's thumbnail take on 22-year-old lefty Joe Kennedy, who started the 2001 season in Double A and, after a June call-up, finished with a 7-8 record for Tampa Bay? "He showed a lot of composure, and he has a decent idea of how to pitch, but he has to get better," says McRae.

How about 26-year-old catcher Toby Hall, who batted .298 in 46 games after he was summoned from Triple A? "He's a young player who has to get better."

Sense a pattern? Ask about virtually any player on the Devil Rays' roster, the youngest in the majors, and McRae responds, "He has to get better." What other spring theme could there be for a team that lost the most games (100, a total matched by the Pirates), hit the fewest homers (121), scored the third-fewest runs (672) and had the fifth-highest ERA (4.94) in the majors in 2001? As it begins its fifth season, Tampa Bay still hasn't cracked the 70-win barrier.

Midway through last season's train wreck Tampa finally ditched its misguided plan of stocking the lineup with veterans and turned things over to prospects. "We got into the free-agent market before we were ready," says G.M. Chuck LaMar.

First baseman Fred McGriff, 38, and righthander Albie Lopez, 30, were traded. Third baseman Vinny Castilla, 34, and outfielder Gerald Williams, 35, were released. (Outfielder Greg Vaughn, 36, hampered most of last season by hamstring and shoulder injuries, was shopped, but LaMar couldn't move him.) In their place came a wave of kids like Kennedy, Hall, 24-year-old outfielder Jason Tyner and 23-year-old lefthander Nick Bierbrodt (3-4 in 11 starts). The results were encouraging. After a 38-77 start, the Rays went 24-23 down the stretch.

The most significant development was Hall's emergence. A good hitter but a mediocre third baseman at UNLV, Hall was converted to catcher after Tampa Bay drafted him in the ninth round in 1997 "At first I thought it was crazy—why would I want to put gear on and get beat up?" he says. "Now that I see the third basemen in the big leagues, I know I wouldn't be able to sniff them."

The Devil Rays were confident Hall could handle major league pitching; he hit better than .300 in three of his five minor league seasons, and he hit 19 home runs for the Durham Bulls en route to being named MVP of the International League last year. His defensive play was a pleasant surprise. He threw out 11 of 38 would-be base stealers after his call-up and impressed the Tampa Bay brass with his pitch selection and smooth handling of its young staff. Hall was promoted on July 26; Tampa Bay's 4.12 ERA after the All-Star break was the American League's fourth best. "He has presence behind the plate; his pitch calling is great," says righthander Tanyon Sturtze, 31, who started regularly in the majors for the first time in his 12-year pro career and led the Devil Rays with 11 wins.

The best Tampa Bay can hope for this season is the continued development of the kids. The good news is that the farm system hasn't been depleted by the major league youth movement: Outfielders Josh Hamilton and Carl Crawford and righthander Dewon Brazleton are on the horizon for 2003. In the meantime LaMar will whittle the payroll even further. As soon as he can find takers, Vaughn (team-high $8.75 million salary this year) and catcher John Flaherty ($3.25 million) will be dealt. "By the end of the year we'll have one of the two lowest payrolls in baseball," LaMar says.

That falls in line with the five-year plan that LaMar says he had when the team was born in 1998: to have a lineup built around youth, with the veterans brought in for (attempted) respectability in the early years weeded out. "We thought we'd at least have a winning season by now," LaMar says.

He'll have to wait on that one.

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