John Fisher Really, Really, Really Sucks

By Gary

In life, it's best to go about it removed of preconceptions. Things tend to work out better that way. Besides purging potential disappointment...Ah, fuck it...welcome to the well-worn, mundane path of innocuous disagreement known as Hot Stove Baseball Talk. If this is a time when Oakland fans are supposed to stand back and admire "The Process" and the genius(es) behind it, then let's face it, these are moves you imagine and contemplate while hammered at the bar with buddies. Of course, you laugh at the inadequacy, stupidity, and audacity the next day, if not in the present moment. But damned if this isn't *ahem* reality, or as I like to call it-the "Moneyball Hangover" set in motion due to piss-poor ownership.

Do the "geniuses" ( Is Brad Pitt still part of this process? Inquiring minds want to know)
have deeper insight than I do? Do they feel the same deflation or laid-back apathy? Because the passage of time and the numbers on a page usually tell you the value of a player and his present capabilities. And hardly ever, if ever...lie. And as a fan, you can be caustic and cynical, but also supportive. I believe this is called tough love.

Elvis Andrus: The epitome of average with a career .702 OPS and that includes the younger, career-high years. (The sad thing is that the A's would settle for that OPS, and for readers that aren't complete geeks-those numbers would quantify as average-not special, and not a beautiful and unique snowflake.) Every time this guy takes hacks against a Rangers pitcher this season half of his salary would be paid by the team he was trying to hurt-a shocking sign of the absolute desperation to wash their hands of him, and since they are AL West rivals, confidence in the inability to perform against them 18 times. The press releases say he "smiles a lot" and "appears to have a good time." Oh, goody! We got an old guy with back problems who can't hit and smiles a lot. I'll have to remember that next time I'm contemplating watching a game. "We're getting our asses kicked, but at least ol' blue suede shoes is out there smiling and having a good time. My mind is at ease now." That may be fine for the casual fan, but give me a guy like Mark Ellis who never smiled.
silver lining: we needed a SS...nothing more. He's a body. A very expensive body. D+

Adam Kolarek: He's a pretty darn good LOOGY (google it) in an era when the LOOGY is dying because the higher strikeout rates soar, the less that exploiting lefty-versus-lefty matchups matters. (And this makes Kolarek especially vulnerable as a ground ball pitcher) Conspiracies aside, he averages less than an inning per appearance but can be a valuable late-inning asset in a tough situation with a left-handed bopper at the dish as they had a minuscule 0.34 WHIP against the guy. If this tall drink of water can give us 50 innings and an ERA a little above or below 3.50 I would consider this a win.
silver lining: shut down the lefties and send their ass to the bench shaking their heads B-

Sergio Romo: Here's a situation of, "whatever happened to...?" and then you find out he's a 37-year-old has-been who was dumped by the Marlins and the Twins and is currently doing Kenny Powers cosplay in the Mexican League....because he has risen from the baseball graveyard. At this point in time, he is undoubtedly a gas can as proven in the AL Wildcard last season when he destroyed the Twins chances in the 9th inning of Game 1, essentially giving the Asterisks the win and all the momentum they needed to take the series. Probably not thought of too fondly in Minnesota. This guy was also a prominent SF Giant during their fugazi dynasty, so the fans may not accept him (may even boo him mercilessly, just ask Jim Johnson) if he struggles right away because of provincial disputes.
silver lining: he's known to have a really good slider and we needed a bullpen guy. I don't know....apparently any guy. C-