The Kansas City Tornadoes were a surprise last season when
they pushed the Hornets for an entire season, eventually finishing 2 games
behind the team from Eureka with an 86-76 record. This filled the team with hope coming into
the 2014 season. The first 69 games have
been an interesting journey, which can best be laid out into three
chapters: The Surge, The Scourge, and
The Purge.
CHAPTER ONE: THE SURGE – The Tornadoes certainly felt
ready to compete as the season began, but even their most ardent supporter
probably wasn’t expecting the type of early SURGE this team
experienced. After 45 games, the
Tornadoes had a blazing 30-15 record on the year. With the season more than 27% done, the team
was on a blistering pace that would extrapolate out to 108 wins. And while the GM would be the first to admit
he was not predicting 108 wins after just a quarter season, there was every
reason to believe the team was legit and formidable. The pitching and defense was performing
sensational, and the hitting was also holding its own despite some early
struggles for Jesus Cruz and Ricardo Marquis.
“I never doubted them for a minute,” said Manager Damian Connor about his
sluggers. “They’re dependable, and it
was just a matter of time before their bats started ripping.” Cruz batted just .250 in the opening month of
the season, but improved to .343 in May, and then .391 in June. When you have a well-rounded team with a
hitter like Cruz in the heart of the order, and an arm like Antonio Gomez at
the top of the rotation, you have a recipe for success. And that’s exactly what the Tornadoes
experienced on their way to blitzing out of the gates this year with a 30-15
record.
CHAPTER TWO: THE SCOURGE – Since that red-hot start,
the Tornadoes have gone just 9-15 in their next 24 games. One of the big reasons that the team began to
struggle was the terrible SCOURGE of injuries. After going the entire season with any
injuries hitting the farm system, the big league club finally began to suffer
some serious losses. In the last three
weeks, the Tornadoes have lost MR Marshall Olson for 11 months, SP Rodney
Armstrong for 2 months, 2B Armando Rodriguez for 3 months, and CF Bob Watkins
for 3 weeks. The most devastating of these
injuries is to Rodriguez who has played Gold Glove caliber defense this year,
while batting .332 with a pace for more than 20 HR’s, and 100 RBI’s and
Runs. A team as good as the Tornadoes
should be able to overcome almost any injury.
But when you get four big injuries at about the same time, the team
finds itself just trying to hold together long enough to get some of this
talent back.
CHAPTER THREE: THE PURGE – The early season surge got
this team in a position to think about contending for a title. But the scourge of injuries which hit the Tornadoes
in recent weeks has left the team a little vulnerable to their division
foes. Add in a bullpen that has gotten
worse and worse as the season rolls on, and the GM has decided to make some
adjustments--- some BIG
adjustments. In the last couple weeks,
the Tornadoes have made three trades involving a total of 15 players. These trades served to PURGE much of the
prospect talent for an organization whose minor league talent ranked 6th
in the ABL. Only time will tell how much
this ranking drops as a result of these trades.
But the real story that will be written for this franchise is whether
the trades will serve to give the team a boost in their efforts to make the
2014 post-season. Here is a brief
summary of the trades:
1.
The Tornadoes traded SP/MR Gerald Webb (ML) to
the Nottinghamshire Outlaws for RF John Byford (AAA) and C Wayne Strickland
(AAA). This deal was made prior to
the injury to SP Rodney Armstrong, or it likely never would have happened. With the trade, the Tornadoes were trying to
bring in an exciting RF prospect that was close to ready and performing well in
AAA, with plans to groom him as a replacement for the aging Ricardo Marquis,
who has just one year left on his deal.
2.
The
Tornadoes traded CF Shinsaku Kamida (A) to the Seattle Sasquatch for SP/MR Dave
Sharp (ML). Sharp was not good
enough to make the rotation in Seattle, but the Tornadoes were fresh off the
trade of Webb and the injury to Armstrong, and became a little desperate for a
starter that can help them get through
this tough time. After exploring
some options that were more expensive, the Tornadoes settled on Sharp, who
comes with a manageable price tag of just $850k this year and $950k next
year. While Sharp has had an ERA over
5.00 in his career in Seattle, Sick Stadium is one of the bigger hitter-heavens
of the ABL, and the Tornado braintrust is gambling that he can keep his ERA
under 4.50 in a more pitcher friendly park.
3.
The
Tornadoes traded SP Kazuhiko Kanno (AA), C Takaaki Hirayama (ML), 1B Takuji
Hakui (AA), RF Chance Parks (AAA), RF Taylor Thompson (AA), and 3B Jeff Hall
(ABL) to the SoCal Republic for SP Pepe Lopez (ABL), MR Dave Walton (ABL), C
Freddy Castillo (ABL), MR Peter Anthony (AAA), and $5 million. The Tornadoes parted with six prospects in
this trade, not a single one over 24 years old.
The real gem of the trade is MR Dave Walton, who has kept his ERA under
2.30 for each of the past two seasons, and is just 32 years old with a very
team-friendly contract. He becomes an
immediate shot in the arm for a bullpen that has been in a terrible slump. SP Pepe Lopez should give the team some more
depth that might help down the stretch, as does Freddy Castillo, whom the
Tornadoes traded to the Republic just a year ago. Finally, Peter Anthony is a good young arm
that the team hopes to have developed in time for next season, which the
Tornadoes see as their very best opportunity to compete for a title.
One thing is for sure:
By making so many deals in such a short span of time, the Tornadoes have
definitely put the league on notice. “We
feel we have a window over the next two years where we think we have a real
opportunity to compete for ABL Title,” said GM Tim Ervin. The SURGE, SCOURGE, and PURGE got them through
the first 69 games. But it’s the next 93
games that will write the final chapter in this story for the 2014
Tornadoes. And if they can stay close in
the next two months while they work some of their injured players back into the
lineup, this team may just claim the ultimate prize.
Nice article that articulates the Tornado strategy very nicely. Injuries are probably one of the most challenging aspects of managing a season never knowing when they start and when they will end.
ReplyDeleteGood luck reaching the post-season.