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An Anomalous Date Leads to Phenomenal Deals

Maybe it’s an example of my sticktuitiveness, maybe an example of stagnancy. Probably both. But, at any rate, I am able to begin today’s Leap Year post by looking at what I wrote about 2/29 the last time it rolled around.

So let’s leap to it!

San Jose's got the spirit!

The year was 2008. While most Americans were busy listening to the 10th anniversary edition of the Baha Men’s epochal Doong Spank LP, the Lancaster JetHawks made their presence felt by staging a Leap Year promo. Most notably, all fans with a leap year birthday received a box seat season ticket!

Not to be outdone, the Altoona Curve soon announced a season-long “Leip Year” celebration, all in honor of skipper Tim Leiper.

Leiper the Skipper

This one had the Rainmain-like fixation on numbers that is a hallmark of any good Minor League promotion, including the provision that if any Curve player was batting .366 after April 29′s ballgame, he (or she, you never know) would be awarded $366.

Maybe I’m just jaded, but I don’t think we’ve reached that level of inspiration in 2012. But a lot is going on. Here is a thorough (but by no means authoritative) rundown of who’s doing what how. Said rundown is in alphabetical order, but starting with “N” and then continuing back around through “M.”

Portland Sea Dogs

Most notably, the above deal includes a $29 Citgo gas card.

Trenton Thunder

$17 all-you-can-eat seats, to any game. I’m just not sure who would want to eat seats in the first place, though.

Stockton Ports

More bang for the buck than a bringing an exploding dollar bill along on a deer hunt! $29 gets four tickets to exhibition game vs. Triple-A Sacramento, four ticket vouchers to opening weekend, and two souvenir caps.

Fort MyersMiracle

Interesting twist to this one, in that the $29 ticket packages includes admission to all games falling on the 29th of the month.

Hagerstown Suns


This offer comes with a $29 concession stand credit. Beet eggs included?

Hudson Valley Renegades

Two extra games included with the purchase of a five or 10-game pack!

Huntsville Stars

A $95 savings!

Inland Empire 66ers

Buy a six or 12-game ticket pack, get an additional game free.

Lake Elsinore Storm

Self-explanatory.

This concludes THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE RECAP OF MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL LEAP DAY PROMOTIONS EVER ASSEMBLED. And yet I still don’t have my own Wikipedia page.

benjamin.hill@mlb.com

twitter.com/bensbiz



Steven Malman Law Team Assists Family in Reaching a $1.75M Settlement

Steven Malman Law announced prosecution successfully reached a settlement between Chicago City Council and Starks family.
Steven Malman Law announced that the Chicago City Council approved a $1.75 million settlement with Arielle Starks’ family, a 13-year-old girl who died a decade ago due to faulty care.

Arielle Starks died after city paramedics allegedly botched her care during an asthma attack. In addition, the paramedics incorrectly inserted a tube meant to help Starks breathe, said Jeffrey Levine, deputy corporation counsel.

Following the incorrect insertion, Starks was rushed to Advocate Trinity Hospital, when in transport, her ambulance collided with a car. Another ambulance picked up Starks and took her to the hospital where after 19 minutes she was pronounced dead.

Initially the Starks case, number 03 L 8587, was represented by another prominent Chicago law firm, however, after the firm dropped the case, the Starks family, facing dismissal, turned to Steven Malman Law. It was only after intense oral arguments that Steven Malman Law convinced the Circuit Court of Cook County Illinois to allow Ms. Starks to proceed with the case.

Steven Malman Law and a team of lawyers attempted to showcase the mistakes caused by the paramedics’ negligence. They successfully proved that the incorrectly inserted tube was meant to go through the esophagus that leads to the stomach, instead of through the trachea that leads to her lungs.

If not for a series of “mistakes” made by the paramedics who treated Starks on that critical day, attorney Brian Murphy argued that the girl would be alive today.

“In the United States, children do not die from asthma. It’s just that simple,” Murphy said.

Experts at the trial testified that even though the tube was incorrectly inserted, Starks could have survived if the ambulance would have driven straight to the hospital, rather than adhere to a rule that states that if a driver is in an accident involving property damage, he must remain on the scene.

About Steven Malman LawSteven Malman graduated from the University of Iowa and the School of Law at Loyola University-Chicago. He celebrated his 20th year of legal practice in November 2011. Since Steven Malman Law first launched in 1994 (with just Malman, one secretary and one assistant), it has grown to include seven attorneys and over a dozen paralegals and administrative staff. The firm has successfully resolved over 8,000 cases, primarily in the areas of workers’ compensation and personal injury, and boasts a 95-percent out-of-court settlement rate. With numerous seven-digit personal injury verdicts to its credit, Steven Malman Law is one the most successful firms serving clients in Illinois Cook, Lake, Dupage and Will counties.

For additional information, interview, and image requests contact VirtuosOnline.



AirBagIt Lowers its Vehicles, Not Performance

Auto lovers are attempting to hit rock bottom with the aid of Mesa, Arizona-based AirBagIt as it expands industry leading line of vehicle lowering and leveling kits.

Already well-known among auto fans for its selection of lowering control arms, lowering shocks and C-notch kits, AirBagIt recently debuted several additions to its industry leading line of customizable body parts, including: vehicle lowering and leveling kits.

AirBagIt has debuted a new series of coils spring lowering kits for both cars and trucks and expanded its diverse selection of leveling kits to include vehicles produced by a host of foreign makers, including Mazda and Isuzu.

“These are really exciting developments for us,” said AirBagIt President, Joe Morrow. “We’ve always been proud to offer the best products to customers who drive a wide array of makes and models. Creating new products that expand our performance abilities – and increase the number of makes and models we can improve – is really something to be proud of.”

AirBagIt’s coil spring lowering kits are specially designed to lower the stance of a car or track without negatively affecting its performance. The latest developments join an existing product line including axle flip kits, lowering block kits, lowering hangers, lowering leaf springs, shock extenders and more. They are customizable to Mazda, Dodge, Chevrolet, Toyota and Ford trucks, as well as cars by Subaru, Volkswagen, Ford, Hyundai, Chrysler, BMW, Mercury and numerous other vehicle makers.

In addition to leveling kits that have proven popular among Ford, Lincoln, Chevrolet, Hummer and Jeep owners, AirBagIt is now offering leveling kits for vehicles manufactured by Toyota, Nissan and other foreign manufacturers.

“The fact that we’ve been able to increase our product lines like this is all about our designers, engineers and mechanics,” Morrow said.

AirBagIt first launched in 1987 under the name of Ratical Tops, a company specializing in assembling convertible tops for most truck brands of the day. In 1992, the firm expanded its specialty lines to include air-suspension systems and other products; that same year, it incorporated as AIM Industries, originator of the AirBagIt and Chassis Tech brands.

“Constant reinvention and dedication to excellence – that’s how you stay on top,” Morrow said. “AirBagIt.com has always been about innovation. In any business, you have to work hard to stay ahead of everybody else, and nobody works harder than our development staff and field mechanics.”

The latest lowering and leveling kits are just some of the newest innovations to be introduced by AirBagIt and Chassis Tech over the last 20 years.

“It’s innovations like these that allow AirBagIt to tell our customers, ‘If you need a suspension kit to improve your vehicle’s look or performance, we definitely have what you’re looking for!’ And when they buy it from us, they know they’re getting the best, because otherwise we wouldn’t put our name on it,” Morrow said.

For more information on AIM Industries or the AirBagIt and Chassis Tech brands call (800) 842-8789.

About AirBagIt
AirBagIt has been the leader of aftermarket air-suspension kits since 1992. Along with the Chassis Tech line of products, AirBagit offers a full line of suspension kits, spindles, 4Link kits, air-lift suspensions, coil spring lowering kits, lambo doors, leveling kits and more. The Mesa, Arizona-based retailer ships over 600 packages every day and offers a full warranty on all non-electrical parts for as long as the buyer owns them (plus a 90-day warranty on electrical parts), as well as a 100-percent refund for unused parts returned within 30 days of purchase.

For additional information, interview and image requests contact VirtuosOnline.



Gutierrez back in Seattle with pectoral injury

Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedge says there is ”considerable concern” about a pectoral injury suffered by starting center fielder Franklin Gutierrez.

Wedge said following an intersquad game on Wednesday that Gutierrez was back in Seattle meeting with team doctors and looking over an MRI of the injury. Gutierrez left camp on Tuesday after suffering the injury.

Wedge said Dr. Edward Khalfayan wanted to examine Gutierrez in person in Seattle. Wedge said it appears to be an uncommon injury.

Gutierrez was being counted on to bounce back from a disappointing 2011 season where he battled stomach problems that caused him to play most of the season underweight. Gutierrez gained nearly 20 pounds in the offseason and his health was one of the big stories in the early days of spring training.



Prospect Luis Mendoza to start for Royals Sunday

Top prospect Luis Mendoza will start for the Kansas City Royals in their spring training opener on Sunday against the Texas Rangers.

Mendoza led the Pacific Coast League with a 2.18 ERA last year. He is scheduled to work two innings, while right-handers Sean O’Sullivan, Vin Mazzaro and Nate Adcock are also scheduled to pitch.

Manager Ned Yost said left-handers Bruce Chen, who led the staff with 12 victories, and Mike Montgomery will pitch Monday against the Rangers. Luke Hochevar, the first player picked in the 2006 draft, is scheduled to work two innings of a split-squad game Tuesday against San Diego. Left-hander Will Smith will start the other game that day against Cleveland.

Felipe Paulino, who is a candidate for the rotation after making 20 starts last season, has been setback by hamstring tightness and will be held out of the early games and intrasquad games Thursday and Friday.



Rangers’ Darvish uses all seven pitches in session

Texas Rangers right-hander Yu Darvish threw 35 pitches to two minor leaguers in a 10-minute session.

Catcher Mike Napoli said Wednesday Darvish used his entire seven-pitch repertoire in facing Joey Butler and Chris McGuinnes. Darvish, who had an ERA of less than two the past five seasons while pitching in Japan, throws a two-seam fastball, a four-seam fastball, a split-finger fastball, a curve, slider, cutter and change up.

Darvish is next scheduled to throw the third inning of the Rangers intrasquad game Friday in Surprise. Darvish went 93-38 with a 1.99 ERA in 167 games in seven seasons with Hokkaido.

He is scheduled to face major leaguers from another team for the first time on March 7. The Rangers have said Darvish will get the start against the San Diego Padres in Peoria, Ariz.



Braun should have quit while ahead

Turns out, The Collector has a name. And a reputation. And a story.

The PR battle Ryan Braun lamented is raging anew. For this, he has himself to blame.

I dont know if Braun knowingly used the synthetic testosterone that showed up in his October urine test. But he is guilty of a blatant refusal to quit while he was ahead.

In the news conference that followed his successful appeal of a 50-game suspension, Braun all but accused The Collector whom he very carefully didnt name of actively or passively tampering with his urine sample.

There were a lot of things we learned about the collector, about the collection process, about the way the entire thing worked that made us very concerned and very suspicious about what could have actually happened, Braun said Friday.

Major League Baseball subsequently released a statement that said neither Braun nor the players union argued in the grievance that the sample had been tampered with. Instead, sources say Brauns appeal was successful because arbitrator Shyam Das ruled The Collector didnt take the package to FedEx immediately after leaving Miller Park.

At the hearing, Brauns lawyers argued The Collector didnt comply with the letter of the law. In public, Braun all but accused him of contaminating the sample. (Multiple sources have said the original seal on Brauns sample was intact when it arrived at the lab in Montreal for testing.)

Predictably, this created considerable public fascination about the identity of The Collector. It didnt take long for reporters to learn his name. And given the times in which we live, Dino Laurenzi Jr. had little choice but to tell his side of the story or risk becoming the doping version of Steve Bartman.

So, on Tuesday, he issued a statement through attorney Boyd Johnson. Laurenzi said he followed the procedures of his employer, Comprehensive Drug Testing, in obtaining and processing Brauns sample. He said he stored the FedEx Clinic Pack in a Rubbermaid container in his basement office, per CDT regulations, until a day when the package could be shipped out.

The FedEx Clinic Pack containing Mr. Brauns samples never left my custody, Laurenzi said. He added: At no point did I tamper in any way with the samples. It is my understanding that the samples were received at the laboratory with all tamper-resistant seals intact.

Clearly, Braun and Laurenzi have different versions of the truth. I dont know which is correct. I do know Braun amplified a side of the story that might have gone untold without his hyper-aggressive public stance.

It wasnt necessary for Braun to incriminate Laurenzi whether he erred or not. If Laurenzis alleged malfeasance wasnt a necessary component of Brauns innocence in the hearing room, it didnt need to be part of his statement to the public.

Braun could have said that hes never used steroids, that the appeal process proved him right, that an unexplained error was to blame, and that he hopes baseball can make adjustments to the testing program going forward. To fans in Milwaukee the people he counts on to cheer for the Brewers and eat at Ryan Brauns Graffito that would have been more than sufficient.

But he didnt stop there. Braun, who signed a 105 million contract last year, questioned the honesty of a former teacher and athletic trainer from Kenosha, Wis., without presenting concrete evidence of wrongdoing.

Braun made a point of closing his Friday statement by saying that hes considering his legal options. Why would he need to do that? He won. He side was proved right by the arbitrator. Does Braun need to text Matt Kemp a photo of the MVP trophy to prove that he won it?

Whom would Braun want to sue? Laurenzi? CDT? What would that accomplish, other than giving longer legs to an unflattering story?

Any settlement or judgment would change the minds of few baseball fans, because the people who are going to believe Braun already do. And any remittance he would receive would surely pale in comparison to his on-field earnings.

Braun is a superb baseball player, one of the best in the game today. But his pride normally a favorable attribute ensnared him in a lamentable squabble with top baseball officials. Laurenzi gave his side of the story only after Braun put him on the defensive.

Not long ago, it was Ryan Braun who said, This is my livelihood, my integrity, my character everything Ive worked for in my life being called into question. Dino Laurenzi Jr. can empathize.



MLB expands playoffs to 10 teams

For the first time in nearly 20 years, Major League Baseball’s playoff system will expand—this time to 10 teams—with each league adding one extra Wild Card spot. 



Reds’ Latos bringing smiles to the clubhouse

GOODYEAR, Ariz. The first thing Cincinnati Reds manager Dusty Baker told newly acquired pitcher Mat Latos was, Just be yourself.

Baker smiled and said, I said that even though I know that Latos is, uh, a little bit different.

And it is more than the Body By Ink, tattoos from neck to toes, and the spiked hair that forces his hat size to be larger than his head.

Latos is a genuine character and thats said in the best of ways. He is a guy who finds the fun in life and keeps everybody around him loose and laughing.

An example?

Before Latos began an interview, he saw fellow starter Johnny Cueto making faces at him and he said to Cueto, Come on over here. Come on over. Cueto just laughed. Latos was told that Cueto acts as if he cant speak English, but it is known he does and he understands everything.

He speaks English, said Latos. Uh, huh. Thats fine, though. I dont speak any English, either.

Latos plays golf, more for laughs than pars and birdies. The other day he told a teammate, I play 13 holes, then I get to a water hazard and go fishing.

As an explanation, he later said, I know Im not a great golfer. I go out there to surprise myself, When Im shanking balls, whether it is going left or going right, Im making new homes for groundhogs when I hit off the deck.

By the time I get to the back nine, Im so aggravated by all the bad shots Ive had, I get to the water and say, You know what? The fishing pole is right next to me on the cart, so I might as well pull over and do something I know I can succeed at.

Latos appears to have fit in well in the clubhouse. He is one of those guys you always know is around, always kidding with his teammates.

For the most part Ive fit in, he said. Im still a little apprehensive. It was hard for me not knowing anybody on the team. I know the names and faces, but I do not really know them.

He laughed and said, I didnt know Joey Votto was so quiet. I thought he didnt like me.

The Reds certainly like him. They traded four players for him Edinson Volquez and three extremely high draft picks in Yonder Alonso, Yasmani Grandal and Brad Boxberger.

Latos even had a straight line for that one.

The one guy I didnt want to get traded for was Yonder Alonso, said Latos. I love him. Hes a great guy. They say people were unhappy that the Reds traded Yonder. So was I. He has a sweet swing, a nice line drive stroke.

But it was obvious the Reds wanted Latos in the rotation, almost desperately, or they wouldnt have included so much in the package.

You look at it and it is obvious to say that Cincinnati wanted me and it was worth it to them to trade those four guys, he said. And San Diego thought the complete opposite. They thought those four guys were more valuable to them than I was.

So, the Reds did themselves a favor and me a favor, if I wasnt that valuable or important to the Padres. And they got a great deal four good guys for me. And it is out of no disrespect to them by me saying they did me a favor or them a favor. They got me to a team that wanted me more, Latos added.

Latos, 24, was 14-10 with a 2.92 ERA in 2010 with the Padres, then dipped to 9-14 with a 3.47 last year.

There were mitigating circumstances. He suffered a freak mishap last spring, bursitis in the bursa capsule in his shoulder.

From what I was told, it was a freak thing and Ive heard nobody else had it, he said. I might have had a little inflammation and when I threw a pitch it caused that bursa to inflame. It wasnt anything threatening. It wasnt the labrum, it wasnt the rotator cuff.

I havent had any injuries, knock on wood that have been threatening to my shoulder or my arm or my elbow, or my pinkie finger or my nail, he said.

Because of the inflammation, Latos was cautious to a fault when the season began and was pitching under protective custody he threw pitches he knew wouldnt provoke a risk.

I lean more toward my second half of the year as a gauge, he said. The bursitis happened and it had me a little leery. I didnt want it to inflame, didnt want it to come back again.

So, at mid-season Latos had a chat with a coach because he was throwing mostly 91 to 93 miles an hour with a two-seam fastball. He was told to go back out and throw 95 miles an hour they way he did in 2010.

I said, All right, if thats what they want, thats what they want, said Latos. Im just going to let it go and see what happens. And I had a good second half, back where I was.

After losing his last five decisions of 2010, he lost his first five to start 2011 10 straight losses. After the 0-5 start last year, he finished 9-4. His earned run average the first half of the season was 4.04. The second half was 2.87.

Asked where Latos fit into the rotation, Baker said, Near the top. Johnny Cueto is No. 1 and Latos is right near the top. We havent figured it out yet, but we have an idea.

Baker said he also told Latos not to apply pressure to himself because he was traded for four guys.

That can happen, said Baker. I was involved in a four-for-two trade when I went to the Dodgers from Atlanta. I was hurt that first year and I got booed every time I stuck my head out of the dugout.

Baker and Ed Goodson were traded from Atlanta in 1975 to Los Angeles for Lee Lacy, Tom Paciorek, Jerry Royster and Jimmy Wynn.

Fans thought the Dodgers gave up too much to get me, but my second year I hit 30 home runs and batted .291 and it was all good from there, said Baker.

So to Latos, he says, Relax. Be yourself.



Jeter & A-Rod Respond to the Newest Idiot in Beantown

If you didn’t know, new Red Sox manager, Bobby Valentine, has already gotten into the habit of bashing the Yankees every two weeks for apparently no reason whatsoever. His most recent barrage came yesterday when he questioned whether the Yankees actually practiced the flip-play and also said Jeter was “out of position” on the play. He also said that Jason Varitek was a “man’s man” who was “able to beat up A-Rod”, obviously referring to the 2004 brawl when Varitek tackled A-Rod while wearing full catcher’s gear.

Here are the responses via Mark Feinsand:
Derek Jeter had a question for Bobby Valentine Wednesday after hearing what the Red Sox manager had to say about his legendary flip play.

“Why are we talking about this?” Jeter asked.

“I don’t know Bobby well enough to tell you what he’s trying to do,” Jeter said. “I could care less, I guess that’s the best way to put it. I just don’t know why it’s being brought up. I don’t k…



© Dennis Flint
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