| America's favorite August sporting addiction is raging once again this 
month. And by that, we do not mean Steelers-Colts preseason action, live from 
Mexico City.
    No, we're referring, of course, to waiver-claim fever.
    If you haven't been claimed on waivers by somebody this month, it means 
you're either A) making $13.6 million a year and just had Tommy John surgery, 
or B) so anonymous, even the Major League Scouting Bureau never heard of you.
    But that obviously isn't many of you -- because a variety of baseball 
sources indicate that well over half the players placed on waivers this month 
have been claimed by somebody. And that is not leading to the kind of 
fascinating August stretch-drive deals we used to know and love, waiver 
period or no waiver period.
    Well, a number of GMs aren't real happy about this. And two of them have 
come up with innovative solutions lately. We could sum up those solutions 
this way:
1. Congratulations. You're the proud new owner of Jose Canseco and his entire 
contract.
And 2. put your wallet where your waiver claim is.
    We'll start with Canseco. When the Devil Rays awarded him to the Yankees 
last week, they did more than merely save themselves potentially $2 million 
in salary, incentives and a $500,000 buyout. They were sending a message.
    The message was to remind teams like the Yankees, who claimed close to 50 
players in the first week of August, to be careful what you wish for when 
you're claiming. You might get it.
    "We'd decided when we put Jose on waivers," said Tampa Bay GM Chuck 
Lamar, "that if someone claimed him, there was a tremendous chance we were 
going to let him go -- one, for baseball reasons, and two, for financial 
reasons."
    The fact that it turned out to be the Yankees that claimed Canseco -- 
creating all sorts of roster havoc and internal strife in the Bronx -- 
ultimately proved to be a rewarding source of entertainment in the Tampa Bay 
metropolitan area. But Lamar says the Rays never set out to penalize the 
Yankees in particular for their addiction to waiver-claim fever. It just 
worked out that way.
    Nevertheless, if more teams got stuck with players like Canseco -- whom 
they claimed but really didn't want -- it might at least slow down the 
claiming frenzy every August. But in reality, one disgruntled baseball man 
says, "the only thing that would slow that down is they were awarded four 
Jose Cansecos."
    "I think I speak for a lot of general managers," Lamar said. "I do not 
like the ability of teams to claim as many players as are being claimed 
during the month of August. I feel like it's a tremendous advantage for the 
large-market clubs, because if they do, quote-unquote, 'get stuck' with a 
particular player, they can afford that player. The teams that have to be 
more careful with their budgets are still the teams that have to be more 
careful about their waiver claims."
    So that brings us to the second proposal here. It comes from Phillies GM 
Ed Wade. His idea: Attach a $50,000 price tag to every claim.
    Those Jose Canseco-Randy Myers claim fiascos "just don't happen enough to 
be a significant deterrent," Wade said. "What would be significant, to me, is 
if I'm a general manager and I want to claim 10 players to keep them from 
going to, say, the Braves, then I've got to pay a significant amount of money 
to do that. Then I need to be able to make a convincing case to ownership 
that it's worth a half-million dollars to block these deals."
    At this point, the August claims alone are rumored to have passed the 300 
mark. If those claims were really costing $50,000 each, that would be $15 
million for the revenue-sharing fund. We could solve all kinds of problems 
with that kind of cash.
    "If somebody claims it makes good business sense to create that kind of 
havoc," Wade said, "then write the check."
    Wade has made this proposal at the GM meetings for several years, by the 
way. But "write the check" has never been this group's most popular rallying 
cry.
While Sammy Sosa's talk last weekend of signing a new deal with the Cubs 
was premature, indications do point toward that development occurring this 
winter. Both Sosa and the Cubs got a glimpse last month of what life might be 
like if he ever did leave. And neither liked the view much. So there appears 
to be a much greater feel on both sides for what this special player-team 
relationship is really all about.
"I've seldom seen, in my 30 years in the business, a player have such a love 
affair with his fans and his town," said Tom Reich, who represents Sosa along 
with Adam Katz. "And Sammy never wanted to see that relationship broken up. 
He doesn't. And he hasn't. That has never changed. There are other places and 
other teams he could play for. But for Sammy Sosa, there can never be another 
Chicago Cubs situation. So I'm cautiously optimistic something good will work 
out."
    But Reich also says neither side has interest in talking about that new 
deal until after the season. And when those talks begin, "it will be a 
private matter."
    Since Sosa announced he wouldn't approve any deals that sent him out of 
Chicago, incidentally, the Cubs were 20-10, through Friday. It was that 
development, incidentally, that turned both Sosa and the Cubs around -- not 
the All-Star Home Run Derby.
A baseball source with close ties to the Dodgers says the team had a major 
team meeting this week in which Gary Sheffield apparently had some pointed 
remarks about the failure of some of his teammates to care enough about 
winning. The Dodgers remain a talented, but often dysfunctional, team.
Of those 300-plus players claimed on waivers this month, only about a dozen 
have actually changed teams: Canseco, Dave Martinez, Rob Ducey, Brian Hunter, 
Mickey Morandini, Chris Widger, Bruce Aven, David Newhan, Rico Brogna, Peter 
Munro, Desi Relaford and Wilson Delgado. The last real trade made during the 
waiver period: Denny Neagle from Pittsburgh to Atlanta, in 1996.
Tim Raines headed back to the Atlantic League this weekend to play another 
series of games in preparation for the Olympics. If the Olympic committee 
likes what it sees, Raines will be the only retired big-name player who winds 
up actually making the team.
The Tigers are believed to have pulled back Juan Gonzalez after he was 
claimed this month, meaning there now is no chance they'll be trading him 
before the end of the year. Part of that keep-Juan strategy was designed to 
convince Gonzalez to stay in Detroit. But Gonzalez again raised doubts about 
whether he wants to commit to Comerica Park by complaining this week that 
Comerica "is not for right-handed hitters. It's for left-handed hitters."
There are indications there is more to those reports that Buck Showalter is 
in trouble in Arizona than merely one local columnist (the Arizona Republic's 
highly respected Pedro Gomez) calling for Showalter's firing. Owner Jerry 
Colangelo appeared to give Showalter a vote of confidence this week -- but 
never did say Showalter was safe. What he did say: "Right now I'd rather just 
concentrate on playing good baseball, getting healthy and winning games."
Debates about "integrity of the schedule" have led baseball to stop short 
of implementing a rotating interleague schedule for next season. But there 
will be one special rotation: the Rangers and Astros finally will meet each 
other. To accomplish that, the Diamondbacks -- who had been the Rangers' 
designated "rival" -- will be matched up with two AL Central teams.
You have to be impressed with the resiliency of the Mariners. Their 19-3 
blowout in Chicago marked the fifth time this year they've lost a game by 
nine runs or more. They're 5-0 in the next game they play.
Hard to say what this means, but Randy Johnson's record since the Curt 
Schilling trade looks like this: three starts, 0-2, 26 hits in 17 2/3 innings, 
9.17 ERA.
This week's schedule abominations: The Red Sox played in Oakland and 
Seattle, went home for the weekend, then went right back to Anaheim. And the 
Tigers finished one trip in Anaheim, headed home for six games, then zipped 
right back to Oakland and Seattle. What a mess.
How ominous is this? The Cardinals are 1-8 this year against the Mets (0-6) 
and Braves (1-2).
Useless information dept. It's bizarre enough that David Cone went 15 straight starts without a win. 
What really makes that startling is that it stands in such marked contrast to 
Cone's long-time dependability. He once went three full seasons -- from 1994 
through '96 -- without going more than two straight starts without a win. And 
he went five seasons -- from 1994 through '98 -- without ever going more than 
four in a row without winning.
Ever seen a ground-ball double play in which both outs were at first base? 
The Braves turned one last Friday in St. Louis. First and third. No out. 
Fernando Tatis grounded to Andres Galarraga, who dropped the ball, then raced 
and tagged the first-base bag. But the runner on third, Jim Edmonds, headed 
home. So Galarraga threw to the plate -- late. Catcher Javy Lopez then gunned 
the ball to second. But the runner on first, Eric Davis, had stopped, then 
decided to try to get back to first. So Rafael Furcal threw back to Galarraga 
for a wild 3-2-6-3 double play (with a run scoring in the middle). Try that 
one on your Nintendo 64 sometime.
In the Giants' 1-0 game against the Brewers on Monday, pitcher Russ Ortiz 
drove in the only run -- marking the second time this year a pitcher had 
knocked in the only run in a 1-0 game. (Ismael Valdes also did it on June 17 
-- but managed to avoid getting the win.) Before this year, there had been 
just four 1-0 games in which the only RBI was by a pitcher in the last 15 
seasons. And the last time there were two games like that in one season, 
according to the Elias Sports Bureau's Rob Tracy, was 1984, when the RBI men 
were Fernando Valenzuela and Dan Schatzeder. Valenzuela actually performed 
that feat three times in is career.
Jose Lima may not break Bert Blyleven's gopherball record. But he's already 
tied one of Blyleven's historic gopherball feats. Lima has given up at least 
three homers in a game seven times this year. Most ever in one season, 
according to the Sultan of Swat Stats, SABR's David Vincent: seven, by 
Blyleven in 1986 and Jack Morris in 1987. Stay tuned.
The Orioles have given up at least four runs in 57 different innings this 
year. ESPN research maven Jim T. Jenks reports that in 1968, when the Orioles 
had a league-leading 2.66 team ERA, they gave up four or more runs in 53 
games all season.
There's nothing more crushing than losing a game you lead in the ninth 
inning (or later). Here are the teams that have done that the most this year: 
Houston (eight times), Philadelphia (seven), Anaheim (seven), Texas (six) and 
Oakland (six). If those teams had won all those games, the Rangers would be 
five games over .500, the Angels 18 over, the A's 20 over, the Phillies two 
under and the Astros 12 under.
When the White Sox got swept in a doubleheader Tuesday by Seattle, it 
marked the first time in 10 years that a team in sole possession of first 
place was swept at home in a doubleheader in August or later. Rob Tracy 
reports that the only other teams to do that in the last 15 years were the 
1990 Reds (swept by Pittsburgh on Aug. 17), the '86 Red Sox (swept by the 
Yankees on Oct. 4) and the '85 Mets (swept by San Diego on Aug. 23).
It's the year of the game-ending back-to-backers. We had Bernie Williams 
and David Justice on Monday, Troy Glaus and Scott Spiezio for Anaheim on May 
14, and Jim Thome and Manny Ramirez for Cleveland on April 16. The only other 
seasons in history with three back-to-back walkoffs, according to David 
Vincent: 1996 (Eric Anthony and Eric Davis for Cincinnati, Ramirez and Eddie 
Murray for Cleveland, Jeff Conine and Devon White for Florida) and 1964 (Sam 
Bowens and John Orsino for Baltimore, Pete Ward and Bill Skowron for the 
White Sox, Ed Charles and Billy Bryan for the A's).
More from Vincent: The all-time list of pitchers who have had multihomer 
games against the Cubs: Frank Foreman on July 4, 1895, Walt Terrell on Aug. 
6, 1983, Jim Tobin's famed three-homer game on May 13, 1942 and now Darren 
Dreifort on Tuesday.
Curt Schilling hasn't given up a run at any point after the sixth inning in 
any start since May 29. That's 24 1/3 straight shutout innings when pitching 
in the seventh or later.
If Rafael Furcal really is 19, he broke Ty Cobb's record for steals by a 
19-year-old this week (with his 24th). If he's really 22, never mind. But 
whatever age he is, Furcal actually bunted for a double this week.
· The Cardinals have been shut out three times this year. The three pitchers 
who started those games: Darren Dreifort, Armando Reynoso, Jesus Sanchez.
Who's the hottest starting pitcher in the AL since the All-Star break -- 
non-Pedro division? Would you believe Albie Lopez? His ERA since the break: 
2.31. Pedro is at 1.50. Of course, they're also 1-2 for the season. No Devil 
Rays pitcher has ever been this high among the league ERA leaders after the 
first week in the season.
What happens to players when they arrive in St. Louis? Will Clark 
immediately homered in his first three games -- his third streak this year of 
three or more home runs. Only three other players have that many streaks this 
year, according to ESPN research whiz Jeff Bennett, and they all have a lot 
more home runs than Clark (who has hit 12): Mark McGwire, Gary Sheffield, 
Barry Bonds.
When Roger Clemens (256 career wins) opposed Barry Zito (one career win) 
this week, it was only the fifth time since 1993 that a starting pitcher had 
faced another pitcher with at least 250 fewer wins. Zito left with the lead, 
only to have Jason Isringhausen blow it in the ninth. But if he'd won, Clemens 
would have been the first pitcher to lose to a starter with at least 250 
fewer wins than him since Nolan Ryan (329) lost to Dave Fleming (28) in 1993.
The Valley Tribune's Ed Price reports that there are 28 active pitchers 
with 25 or more complete games, and Arizona has five of them: Randy Johnson 
(74), Curt Schilling (62), Mike Morgan (46), Greg Swindell (40) and Todd 
Stottlemyre (25).
Minor-league pitcher of the week: Norwich right-hander Christian Parker, who 
finally had his scoreless-inning streak stopped at 40 this week. Howe 
Sportsdata reports that's the longest scoreless streak in professional 
baseball since 1994, when Scott Gentile rolled 43 zeroes in a row for West 
Palm Beach.
Minor-league hitter of the week: Even the best prospects in baseball 
sometimes forget how to get a hit. White Sox hit machine Brent Brede just 
went 2 for 43 at Nashville over a span of 18 games.
Jayson Stark is a senior writer at ESPN.com. Rumblings and Grumblings will appear each Saturday.
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 ALSO SEE
 Jayson Stark archive
 Stark: Week in Review
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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