Friday, December 29, 2006
Nomar and D'Lowe Party On


INSIDE TRACK FLASHBACK
And speaking of over-served, there was the night in 2001 that shortstud Nomar Garciaparra, much to the chagrin of his then-galpal Mia Hamm, got shattered on shots of his favorite Jose Cuervo Tequila Reserva in Barclay’s office.
“Oh, yeah, I heard him hiding in the back hallway telling her (on the phone), ‘I’m not undermining you, I’m just hanging out with my friends.’ ”
(Add whip sound effects here . . .)
During the night in question, No. 5 drank himself silly and then a few hours later found himself - and his hangover - in the Rose Garden at the White House!
“I got up around 11 that morning, turned on the TV and there’s Nomar in the Rose Garden with President Bush dedicating a T-ball field,” the Rackie reminisced. “I’m looking at his face, and he looks green around the gills, so I call his cell phone. ‘I’m in the Oval Office right now,’ he said. ‘And when I get home, I am going to kill you.’ ”
“Oh, yeah, I heard him hiding in the back hallway telling her (on the phone), ‘I’m not undermining you, I’m just hanging out with my friends.’ ”
(Add whip sound effects here . . .)
During the night in question, No. 5 drank himself silly and then a few hours later found himself - and his hangover - in the Rose Garden at the White House!
“I got up around 11 that morning, turned on the TV and there’s Nomar in the Rose Garden with President Bush dedicating a T-ball field,” the Rackie reminisced. “I’m looking at his face, and he looks green around the gills, so I call his cell phone. ‘I’m in the Oval Office right now,’ he said. ‘And when I get home, I am going to kill you.’ ”
One of our fave tales concerns former Red Sox [team stats] whipping boy Derek Lowe, who, thinking he wouldn’t start against the Yankees the next day, was in a jolly mood when he arrived at the Rack at 10 p.m. one night in 2004.
“ ‘You don’t have to worry about me,’ ” the happy hurler declared, according to Barclay.
“He was in a good mood and drinking heavily,” the Rack maestro recalled. “At one point he was behind the bar pouring drinks and then checking coats. He was having a helluva time.”
But wouldn’t you know it, the next day the hungover party boy got the call to the mound to start against the Bronx Bombers. Do we even have to tell you he went four innings, giving up 10 runs?
“I’ll never forget the headline in the Herald the next day, ‘Lowe Down Dirty Shame,’ laughed the Rack owner. “I thought, ‘Whoops, I hope we don’t get blamed.” (You didn’t.)
“He was in a good mood and drinking heavily,” the Rack maestro recalled. “At one point he was behind the bar pouring drinks and then checking coats. He was having a helluva time.”
But wouldn’t you know it, the next day the hungover party boy got the call to the mound to start against the Bronx Bombers. Do we even have to tell you he went four innings, giving up 10 runs?
“I’ll never forget the headline in the Herald the next day, ‘Lowe Down Dirty Shame,’ laughed the Rack owner. “I thought, ‘Whoops, I hope we don’t get blamed.” (You didn’t.)
Labels: Derek Lowe, Nomar, Red Sox Nation
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Sage Advice For Both Theo And The Dirt Dogs
SIGN 'EM EARLY AND OFTEN
Nomar Garciaparra had a similar situation with the Red Sox in 2004. Nomar was making a superstar's salary of $11.5 million that year and during the season the Sox offered a $60 million, four-year extension. Nomar said no, figuring he could get more on the free-agent market. That forced the Sox' hand. Knowing he wouldn't likely leave, they traded him to the Cubs midway through the season. Then he got hurt. He was hurt again in 2005 and landed with the Dodgers last season. After a good comeback year Nomar signed a two-year, $18.5 million deal to remain in L.A. Not bad, but still short of that $60 million package he turned down with the Sox.
So the smart thing is to re-up when your team offers you a fair-market deal. That's what Vernon Wells did. It's an old story. A bird in the hand... You know the rest.
So the smart thing is to re-up when your team offers you a fair-market deal. That's what Vernon Wells did. It's an old story. A bird in the hand... You know the rest.
Nomar screwed up big time by rejecting the Sox deferred $48 million deal, but he still gutted it out and wound up with around $40 million from 1 and 2 year deals. As for the Sox, they obviously made one of their best moves here, dealing Nomar for a World Series Championship. The Lesson? Sign the players that you would like to keep at least 1 year before free agency, and deal the ones that you don't plan on resigning. With an average 9% salary increase over the last few seasons, waiting is extremely costly. Exhibit A is Iron Man Johnny Damon, who signed for what the Sox thought was an outrageous $52 million over 4 years with the Yankees. Fast forward to 2006, and the Sox are now forced to give a talented but brittle(He has only played over 140 games once in 8 full big league seasons) J.D. Drew $70 over 5 years to fill a hole that was essentially created by Damon's departure.
Exhibit B is Pedro Martinez, who would have signed for Schilling money (3 years and $33 million) before the 2004 season. Sure they would have lost the 2006 season, paying him $11 million to sit on the D.L.. Instead, they ended up paying Matt Clement $9 million last season to sit on the D.L., and another $10 million this season to rehab for a 2008 season with another club. The most important point is that Pedro was healthy in 2005. Adding Pedro to the 2005 rotation would have given the Sox a great shot at back to back World Series titles. A little hindsight? Maybe, but the sign 'em or deal 'em formula pans out much more often than not. Just try it. The Red Sox seem to finally be getting this, as they signed Crisp and Beckett to deals that are now below market value. Nice job Theo.
-RED SOX HUB
Labels: Curt Schilling, J.D. Drew, Johnny Damon, Josh Beckett, Nomar, Pedro Martinez, Red Sox Nation, Yankees
Saturday, December 09, 2006
RED SOX THROWBACK:NOMAR BEING NOMAR



This archived Globe article captures the misunderstood Ex-Red Sox star.
Labels: Nomar, Red Sox Nation
Monday, November 20, 2006
NOMAR NAMED
GARCIAPARRA TESTS POSITIVE...

FOR DODGER BLUE AND LOYALTY TOO.

FOR DODGER BLUE AND LOYALTY TOO.
Nomar named Dodgers first baseman for at least the next 2 seasons, as he has re-signed with the Dodgers. Nomar could shift to the outfield or third base, depending on the Dodgers offseason moves.
Yeah, we have a Nomar bias, but still think that Nomar at 1b/3b, or the outfield would have been a smart short term option for the Red Sox over giving $50-60 million to J.D. Drew, who makes Nomar look like Cal Ripken. -Red Sox Nation
Labels: Nomar