Sportsgist.com recently spent five days with Tampa Bay Ray pitcher Chris Mason down in Durham, North Carolina. Chris is in Durham pitching for the Durham Bulls who are the AAA affiliate of the Rays. This is day 5 in his pitching cycle. One in which he mentally prepares for his upcoming start, but most importantly he gets to relax a little bit from his daily baseball activities.
BOYS WILL BE BOYS:
In this video, Chris is on his last day before his next start. This is a day to recover and get ready to take the mound tomorrow. His work routine…the conditioning, workouts, and bullpen…have allowed him to keep his body in shape and adjust some of the flaws he had with his delivery.
Now we get to talk with Chris’ roommate, Nick DeBarr, and find out some inside information about Chris. Nick talks about Chris sleeping all day long and eating lots of hot pockets each day. As with many minor league baseball players, Chris loves to play video games. He is the man with the new Nintendo Wii. Nick offers Chris some words of advice, telling him to keep working hard and “maybe” get some more sleep. As all baseball players now, the journey is very long and difficult at times. There are many highs and lows throughout the season, but ultimately the ones who succeed are the ones who keep their emotions on a straight line. Never let your highs get to high or your lows get to low. As Nicks says, “Stay the course.”
Sportsgist.com gets to talk with Tampa Bay Ray pitcher Chris Mason and his pitching coach down in Durham, North Carolina during and after his Bullpen. Just in case you forgot, Chris is in Durham pitching for the Durham Bulls, the AAA affiliate of the Rays. Our objective was to hang out with Chris and learn exactly what a pitcher does both on the days he pitches and on the days that he does not pitch. Working in the pen is where a pitcher fine tunes his mechanics before stepping out onto the mound for his next start.
BULLPEN SESSION:
In this video, Chris is going through the one of the most important, yet underrated, aspects of pitcher: the Bullpen. Pitching greats such as Greg Maddox and Roger Clemons worked out the kinks in their bullpen sessions. Chris works on keeping his mechanics in order. As his coach states, Chris has an unorthodox delivery which makes his timing all the more important. If he loses his release point or his shoulder flies open, Chris will have a hard time getting out of trouble. With that being said, Chris has decent stuff. His fastball is consistently at 87-88 mph and tops out at 91 mph. He has a good breaking ball and a decent change up. His deceptive delivery makes it difficult for hitters to pick up the ball…one of the reason why Chris has been successful throughout his career.
Sportsgist.com gets to talk with Tampa Bay Ray pitcher Chris Mason down in Durham, North Carolina the day after his start. Just in case you forgot, Chris is in Durham pitching for the Durham Bulls, the AAA affiliate of the Rays. Our objective was to hang out with Chris and learn exactly what a pitcher does both on the days he pitches and on the days that he does not pitch.
PITCHER’S FIELDING PRACTICE:
In this video, Chris is going through the monotonous routine of pitcher’s fielding practice.All pitcher’s hate PFP (the baseball term for pitcher’s fielding practice), but they understand that repetition will only help them when they need to make a play.Making the play could be the difference in winning the game or losing the game.After PFPs, Chris gets to run around the outfield and shag some BP.All pitchers’ think they’re Andrew Jones, but running down fly balls actually helps them in their recovery.After BP, Chris runs a bit to get the blood circulating through the body and then it’s off to the showers.He watches the game from the stands where he charts every pitch for his time and one inning from the opposing team.He charts what pitch was thrown, the location, and speed of the pitches.The life of a pitcher…gotta love it!!!
Sportsgist.com recently spent five days with Tampa Bay Ray pitcher Chris Mason down in Durham, North Carolina. Chris is in Durham pitching for the Durham Bulls who are the AAA affiliate of the Rays. Our objective was to hang out with Chris and learn exactly what a pitcher does both on the days he pitches and on the days that he does not pitch. These videos are valuable to any pitchers out there that want to know what it takes to have success out on the mound. Chris takes us through each day of his routine and explains what it is that he is doing and why he is doing it. We also get to hear from Chris’ pitching coach as well as his strength and conditioning coach and his roommate.
STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING:
In this video, Chris is going through his off day workout routine. He will do his leg work out on the field with the strength coach and then will go inside to do his upper body lifts. His leg workout is a continuous circuit which will help Chris to develop strength in his legs and at the same time to work on his endurance, both key elements for a pitcher to be effective throughout a long season. Unfortunately we were not able to go inside with Chris, but you do hear his strength coach talk about the importance for a pitcher to focus more on his back and pulling exercise then his chest and pushing exercises.
Chris Mason is one of the top pitching prospects in the Tampa Bay Rays farm system.It has been quite some journey for him as he gets closer to reaching his ultimate dream: making it to the big leagues!He has coasted through the minors…dominating at every level he pitched at.Chris began his first full season of minor league baseball in Visalia, CA.He finished the season with a 12-10 record, which was very good considering it was his first full season of professional baseball.The next year was Chris’ coming out party.He pitched at the Double A level in Montgomery, AL and was voted the Southern League pitcher of the year and Co-MVP of the league.He was 15-4 with a 2.57 ERA and 136 strikeouts.
Chris is currently pitching in Triple A for the Durham Bulls.Chris takes us through his gameday routine…from start to finish.He tells us about when he wakes up, why he shaves his arms, and what happened during the game.The video gives you a good idea about who Chris Mason is and how he prepares for his starts.The video also shows what a great minor league baseball town Durham is.
If A-Rod comes up one home run shy this season of a record or milestone, blame the MLB for not having instant replay by now. In yesterday’s game against the Baltimore Orioles, Alex Rodriguez drilled a pitch from Lance Cormier below the bleachers and off a set of stairs behind the wall. The ball bounced back onto the the field and Oriole’s right fielder, Nick Markakis quickly threw the ball back in. The umpires ruled it as a double and not a the home run it really was. The MLB has begun to bring instant replay into baseball starting in the Arizona Fall League, but is it right or wrong?
With this being the second hit not correctly called a home run in the past week at Yankee Stadium, the instant replay topic in baseball heats up. On Sunday, Carlos Delgado’s home run was called foul by the umpires on the field, but after second look through instant replay it was clear that it hit the foul poll and was a home run. After seeing the replay of Carlos Delgado’s disputed foul ball, home plate umpire, Bob Davidson admitted that it really was a home run.
I ****ed it up. I’m the one who thought it was a **** foul ball. I saw it on the replay. I’m the one who ****ed it up so you can put that in your paper, bolts and nuts, I ****ed up. You’ve just got to move on. No one feels worse about it than I do.
Bob Davidson
With umpires admitting they were wrong after seeing instant replay, MLB officials have gotten the ball rolling on instant replay. They said they will begin using instant replay in the Arizona Fall League. If successful and deemed useful, instant replay will then be used in the World Baseball Classic. If all goes well we could be seeing instant replay used on homerun calls and foul balls as soon as the 2009 season.
This move by the MLB to start using instant replay brings a lot of debate between whether it will be good or bad for the game. The positives of instant replay in the MLB are numerous. There have been so many mistakes by umpires in MLB history that easily could have been corrected if instant replay was there. Look at the 1996 divisional series between the Baltimore Orioles and New York Yankees. A young boy, Jeffrey Maier, reached over and brought Derek Jeter’s flair over the wall for a home run. One simple look at a video tape would show that the call should be fan interference, not a home run.
People who say that instant replay would ruin the game, and slow it down are simply wrong. Football, Hockey, and Basketball all have forms of instant replay and neither sport has been ruined due to instant replay. If anything it has made each sport better and more accurate. Why wouldn’t you want instant replay in baseball? I don’t understand why one wouldn’t. It makes no sense. Some people say instant replay would slow down baseball. Listen, it’s slow enough, another five minutes isn’t going to hurt. Plus, if you’re going to sit and watch a game for three hours, wouldn’t you be fine with watching a correctly called game for three hours and five minutes. I know I would.
Listen, we have the technology now to make sure that every call is correct on the field. Why not use it? Every other sport is using it and it has proven to make each sport better. For a majority of these calls you can see the right call after one look at an instant replay. Please Major League Baseball, bring instant replay to the game I love.