«§ea‡‡£e®Mariner§» 07/26 - 07/31
August 21, 2002
CORRESPONDENT REPORT
Game Date Team Decision Record Win Loss Save
103 07/26 ANA L 0-8 62-41 Lackey Baldwin
104 07/27 ANA W 3-1 63-41 Pineiro Washburn Sasaki
105 07/28 ANA L 0-1 63-42 Appier Sasaki Percival
106 07/29 DET W 4-3 64-42 Rhodes Santana Sasaki
107 07/30 DET W 5-4 65-42 Hasegawa Farnsworth
108 07/31 DET W 5-2 66-42 Baldwin Powell Sasaki
LATEST TEAM INFO
• For the Latest Team Statistics, Go to the Seattle Mariner Team Roster Page and Click Through for your Favorite Player Updates. Game Log is the Link to Click for all the Seasonal Statistical Information, and News & Notes is the Place to Find Recent Injury, Trade, and LineUp Shuffling Inforation. All Starts, Games Played, and Relief Appearances are Found in the Game Log Section.
• Ryan Franklin Has been Placed in the Starting Rotation Replacing the Struggling James Baldwin. Franklin Compares Well With Baldwin, with the Main Difference being Franklin’s Superior FastBall which Can Reach 94 On Occasion with Franklin Residing in the 89-92 MPH Range the Majority of the Game. Franklin’s CurveBall Is a Cros Between a Pure 9 to 5 Off the Table Hammer and a New Wave 90’s Slider Curve {Slurve} Veriety. Franklin Has Been Much More Effective In the BullPen with a Career 3.91 ERA, Compared to a 5.91 ERA In the Starting Rotation with some of his Worst Outings Occuring July 15 at Baltimore and August 17 Against N.Y. at the Safe. Start Franklin With Caution with Regard his Past Success Against a Particular Opponent, with the Knowledge that His Home ERA is Nearly 3/4 of a Point Better at 3.72.
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• Freddy Garcia Has Accumulated a 3.69 ERA at SafeCo Field In His Major League Career – 3.67 ERA On The Road -- in 111 Career Major League Starts. July Has Historically Been Garcia’s Worst Month, and 2002 Was No Exception, As the Chief Went Winless In July -- 34 Days In Total -- Before Recording a 121 Pitch Victory Against Cleveland August 3rd at the Safe. Freddy Finished the Month of July With a 5.87 ERA Covering 5 Starts and 30.2 Innings Pitched. Garcia Has Given Up 4 Or More Runs 7 Times in 2002, With a Difficult 10 Run Outing June 24 Against Oakland Setting a Career High for Runs Allowed, As Garcia Was Sacrificed to Save an OverUsed BullPen. Do Not Lose Hope, However, As August and September are Historically Garcia’s Best Months with a 3.28 & 2.90 ERA Respectively to go with a Career Total of 19 Wins Equaling His April/May Best. Garcia Has Been Monitored Well to Date, With a 124 Pitch Effort May 19 at Boston as His Season High. Garcia Touched 121 Pitches In His Last Start August 3rd Against Cleveland at the Safe. That 121 Pitch Effort Ranks 2nd On Garcia’s Season Pitch Count, with Garcia Hitting 107 In 4 of his last 9 Starts { Looks Like Garcia’s Ideal Limit }.
• The Rankings Have Been Broken into three groups: hitters parks, pitchers parks and neutral parks Also, if you'd like to see how three superstars might fare in all 30 major league parks, check out "What they might have hit in . . ." by Fantasy Source Expert David Srinivasan. Also Check The Dave Darling Archive For Other Fantasy Information and an Insider Edge. David Srinivasan The Sporting News Archive Listing
PITCHERS PARKS
1. San Francisco, Pacific Bell Park
2. San Diego, Qualcomm Stadium
3. Los Angeles, Dodger Stadium
4. Seattle, Safeco Field
5. Oakland, Network Associates Coliseum
6. Detroit, Comerica Park
7. Florida, Pro Player Stadium
8. New York, Shea Stadium
9. Baltimore, Camden Yards
NEUTRAL PARKS
• Toronto, SkyDome (For Artificial Turf Divers AKA Sinker-Ballers)
• Atlanta, Turner Field (Start Your 1-3 Starters)
• Chicago Wrigley Field (When The Wind Is Blowing In)
FIREMEN
• Kazuhiro Sasaki Pitched the first 2 Months of the Season Without Surrendering an Earned Run, Allowing Only 2 Unearned Runs Through May 30th. In June, Sasaki Gave Up 5 Total Runs, 2 Earned, with Back to Back Games Allowing 2 Earned June 30th and July 2nd Against Colorado and Kansas City Respectively. Sasaki Was Almost UnhHittable For the First 2 Months of the Season, So Some Deterioration in Performance is to be Expected. Again, Keep in Mind Kazuhiro’s Best Months Will Be Behind Him As July Commences, With August Being His Worst Career Month with 11 Saves and a 5.59 ERA Compared to 21 Saves and a 2.22 ERA for the Month of July.
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• Bret Boone Batted .287 In the Month of May Helped by 15 walks. Boone Followed that with a .191 Average in the Month of June with Only 6 Walks In 99 Official At Bats { With 16 Walks a Month the Target for a 100 Walk Season }, and a .294 Average and 17 RBI In the Month of July. Bret Boone’s Best Month Has Been July, with 38 Home Runs, 130 RBI, a .483 Slugging Percentage, and a .284 Average. Boone’s August and September Numbers are Considerably Below That Level of Production, and Even Given Boone’s Huge Second Half Last Season, I would Expect his Career Splits to Come Closer to His 2002 Finish. But If His Post All-Star Numbers are any Indication, Boone May Make up for His Disappointing Start With a Strong Finish In August and September. Boone Finished the First Half of the Season Batting .229, However, Since the Break Boone Has Hit .333 with 8 Home Runs and 27 RBI Increasing His Average to .256. It Would Not Be Surprising If Boone Finished the Season In the .290 Range as Boone Has Been Hitting the Ball to Right Field with Authority, a Good Indication that His 2001 Swing Has Resurfaced.
• Mike Cameron Batted .217 in May, a .191 Average In June, and Finished July with a .255 Average In 86 Official At Bats. Cameron Increased His Stolen Base Production With 10 Swipes in July. However, Cameron Has Not Been Able to Raise his Average or Decrease His StrikeOut Frequency Leading to a Recent Temporary Benching by Lou Piniella. "We're gonna let Cammy sit for a while and see if we can get him straightened out,'' Lou Piniella Said In a Recent Media Session. Cameron is hitting .218 and leads the AL with 134 strikeouts
• Jeff Cirillo Has Very Good Career August Numbers. The First 2 Months of the 2002 Campaign Were Not Quite What J.C. Or the Mariner Front Office Had in Mind When they Made him their Number One OffSeason Priority. Jeff Cirillo Had his Best Month of the Season Toward the End of the 1st Half Batting .297 in June Following a .260 Average In May. Cirillo Managed Only a .175 Average in 74 July At Bats With an Atrocious 3 Walks { A Projected 6 Month Total of 18}.
• Carlos Guillén Batted .276 in the Month of May, Followed with a .265 Average in an Injury Shortened June, and an UnInspiring .241 Average In 62 July At Bats. I would Expect Guillén to Continue to Struggle Until His Ailing Finger Heals Completely and He's Finally Allowed to Revert to His Free-Swinging Ways. Guillén Hits Much Better From the Left Hand Side, So Think About Sitting Him Against Tough South Paws. Switch Hitting May Not Be In Guillén's Future, and A Platoon Role Could Emerge If Offensive Production does Not Increase At Some Point In 2003.
• Édgar Martínez has One of the More Consistent Swings in the Game. Martínez Hits Left Handers, Right Handers, At Home, On the Road, OutSide, In Domes, On Turf. On Grass, During Day Games, and During Night Games. Martínez Only Accumulated 22 At Bats in June After Missing All Of May with an Injured Tendon Behind the Knee. Martínez Batted .272 for the Month of June, Followed By a .318 Average In July. Martínez Should Increase His Overall Production as He Regains Health & Conditioning and Refines a Swing that that Has Led the Full Time Designated Hitter to a Possible Hall Of Fame Career. Mr. Mariner Leads The Team In Career Hits {1944}, Games { 1731 }, Doubles { 459 }, and Average { .319 }.
• Rubén Sierra Recorded 27 Hits in 106 At Bats During the Month of May for a .254 Average. Sierra Walked Only 8 times During the Month of May and Saw his Average Drop to a Season Low .308. In the Month of May, Sierra Recorded 106 Official At Bats, Walking Only 8 Times, Pushing his Monthly Average Under .300 -- .254 – Maring What was an OtherWise Productive Month with 22 RBI. Sierra Rebounded to Hit .311 In June, But Again Drew Only 4 Walks, However He Managed to Remain Productive With 17 RBI. Sierra Batted .183 In the Month of July with 4 RBI and Is In Danger of Losing Playing Time To Desi Relaford, Mark Mclemore, and Any Other Possible Offensive Additions.
• Ichiro Suzuki Batted .404 In the Month of August with 11 RBI and 11 Stolen Bases { Suzuki Has Seen His Stolen Base Total Fade From a Month High of 11 in May to 6 in June, 4 in July, & 1 in August }. Ichiro Started the Season SomeWhat Conservative on the BasePaths, and After an Injury to His Lower Leg Required Stitches, Suzuki Remained Rather Consevative With the Hope That His Invaluable Talent Would Be Available the Majority of Édgar Martínez Absence. And Now With the Mariner Team Struggling to Produce with Men In Scoring Position, Suzuki and the Mariner Team Have Become SomeWhat Reluctant to Waste BaseRunners With Runs Often In Scarce Supply. Suzuki Batted .353 in June with 6 RBI and 21 Runs. Suzuki Struggled to a .321 Average in July with 7 RBI and 13 Runs. To Date Ichiro is Batting .292 in August with his Worst Slugging Percent of the Season at .319 { 130 Points Off His Season Average }. Suzuki Should Become the Second Player In Major League History to Accumulate 200 Hits In his 1st 2 Seasons. The Other Player to Accomplish the Feat Was Harvey Kuenn for the 1953 Detroit Tigers. Kuenn Was Traded Following the 53 Season for Rocky Colavito and Completed the Feat Amidst Boos and Fan Animosity in Cleveland. In June Of 1982 Kuenn Took Over the Fifth-Place Brewers and Led Heavy Hitting “Harvey's Wallbangers” to the World Series Where the Team Eventually Lost in 7 Games to St. Louis. Kuenn Won Manager of the Year Honors and Another Entry In The BaseBall History Book.
• Dan Wilson Batted .229 in May, .350 In June, and Finished the Month of July With a .230 Average With Only 2 walks and 15 Hits In 65 July At Bats. Wilson did Manage to Drive In 11 Runs While Sharing Time With Ben Davis. Wilson Has Not Played More than 123 Games Since 1997, And Now at age 33 Should See at Least 2 Days Off Every Week Through October. So Look For Ben Davis to receive Additional Playing Time In August and September.
QUICK VIEW
VISA BIRTHDAY UPDATE
Player BirthDay Old Date Result
Shin-Soo Choo 7-13-82 7-30-82 Aged 17 Days
Freddy Garcia 6-10-76 10-6-76 Aged 3 Months 26 Days
Antonio Perez 1-26-80 7-26-81 Aged 1 Year and 6 Months
Aquilino Lopez 7-30-80 4-21-75 Aged 5 Years 3 Months 9 Days
Gustavo Martinez 11-9-80 11-9-75 Aged 5 Years
Eduardo Figueroa 6-4-82 1-3-78 Aged 4 Years 5 Months 1 Day
Doctoring the Numbers: The Five-Man Rotation by Rany Jazayerli
• What this chart tells us is that the average "ace" starter made 37.3 starts in 1973, but only 33.2 starts in 1999 - a dropoff of 4.1 starts. Number two starters lost almost as many starts (3.4), and #3 starters lost 1.3 starts apiece. Those 8.8 starts have been redistributed to far less qualified pitchers. A miniscule number went to #4 starters, but the vast majority have gone to pitchers ranked 5th or worse on a team's depth chart.
Slot 1973 1999 Diff 1973 1999 Diff
1 37.3 33.2 -4.1 37.3 33.2 -4.1
2 34.1 30.7 -3.4 71.4 63.9 -7.5
3 29.6 28.3 -1.3 101.0 92.2 -8.8
4 23.2 23.6 +0.4 124.2 115.8 -8.4
5 14.9 17.9 +3.0 139.1 133.7 -5.4
6 22.8 28.2 +5.4 161.9 161.9 0
• Over the years, the concept of spreading starts out to as many pitchers as possible has been taken more and more literally. Once upon a time, the term "five-man rotation" meant that your best starters would throw every fifth day, and starters in the back of the rotation would be bumped when necessary to keep better pitchers on rotation. Today, teams are loathe to skip even their fifth starter, preferring to give their starters five or even six days of rest on occasion. The typical season runs around 180 days, meaning that an Opening Day starter working every fifth day, as opposed to every fifth game, should make at least 36 starts over a full season. A look at the number of pitchers making 36 or more starts in a season since 1973:
Year »» # of Pitchers >= 36 GS Year »» # of SP >= 36 GS
1973 31 1985 14
1974 33 1986 10
1975 22 1987 11
1976 20 1988 4
1977 17 1989 7
1978 16 1990 2
1979 14 1991 4
1980 14 1992 2
1983 9 1996 2
1984 5 1998 1
• For a Quick Look at the Seattle Roster and All Related Statistics, Yahoo Sports and Big Leaguers Are Definitely the Place to Get an Edge on the Competition.
• The Oakland A’s Finish the Season with an Opponent Winning Percentage Of .545. Anaheim Closing the Regular Season with a .513 Opponent Win Percentage, with the Seattle Mariners Finishing the Season with an Opponent Win Percentage Around .500. The American League Regular Season Record Looks to Be the Yankees to Lose. The Yankees Only Remaining Opponent with a Winning Percentage Above .500 is Boston, with the Remaining Teams On New York’s Schedule a Combined Average of 18 Games Under .500. New York Should Eclipse Minnesota for Home Field In the American League, and with a Healthy Rotation of Post-Season Veterans { Wells, Clemens, Mussina } Should Be Ready To Challenge for Another American League Title. The Sporting News Reports That N.Y. Has Seen a Dramatic Improvement In Offensive Production to SomeWhat OffSet a Weakened Starting Rotation. However, with a Healthy Wells { Career 3.35 ERA In October }, Clemens, and Orlando Hernandez, the Yankees have Three Quality Post-Sason Performers. The Yankee BullPen Should Also Be Much Improved with with Stanton, Karsay { A Closer Making Closer $ }, and Former Starters Weaver, Mendoza, & Hernandez Available for 3 Inning Stints. The Yankees Appear to be Worthy of Favorite Status Going into September and October. New York & Anaheim have Been the Hottest Teams in the American League Winning 6 Straight, With Arizona the Only Team with a Longer Current Winning Streak at 7. Minnesota has the best Home Field Advantage with a 42-22 Record at the MetroDome, while only Managing a .Near 500 Record On the Road at 30-29. New York has a Very Good Balance of Home and Road Dominance, with Minnesota right Behind the Yankees at 22 Home Losses, Followed by Anaheim at 23 Home Losses. Seattle and New York Would Appear to Be the Most Balanced Teams in the American Legue, with Both Teams Able to Win at Home, on the Road, with Starting Pitching, With Relief, With Speed, and With Old Fashion National League Style Small Ball. The Power Edge would Go to the Yankees, and Any Percieved Weakness Could UnDoubtedly Be Remedied By Uncle George and His Pot of Gold.
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• 08/18/2002: Ismael Valdés Cleared Waivers and Was Claimed From Texas In Return for 2 Minor League Prospects { Jermaine Clark and Left-Hander Derrick Van Dusen } Both Of Whom Could Contribute at the Major League Level At Some Point in time.
• Ismael Valdés Turns 29 on Wednesday, and Could Not Be Happier to Be Playing Meaningful Games In August and September. Valdés Was a Top Of the Rotation Starter at One Point in His Dodger Career, and Much Like Chan Ho Park, Regressed and Left L.A. as the ScapeGoat For all Dodger Dissatisfaction. Valdés was 6-9 with a 3.93 ERA in 23 starts for the Rangers, And Although He Surrendered 3 or More Runs 11 times In His 23 Starts, Pitched Quite Well Against Oakland and Anaheim, The Mariners Main Opposition For The American League West Divisional Title. Valdés is 2-1 with a 2.55 ERA in five starts this season against The Mighty California Teams But Has Not Fared as Well Against Minnesota - Another Possible Post-Season Opponent - Allowing 8 Runs In 11 1/3 Innings of Work. Manager Lou Piniella said, "He knows how to pitch and compete well. He'll give us some depth and some experience and hopefully will come here and throw the ball well. According to reports that we have, he's been throwing the ball well over there in Texas. He should help us.'' Valdés can become a free agent after this season and would consider returning to the Rangers. "I'd love to Go Back. You never know. This is close to home But I hear that they're going Young Next season So I don't know. There's always a chance,'' he said. Valdes will go right into the Mariners' rotation as their No. 4 starter, pitching Wednesday night at Detroit in place of John Halama Who Has Been Sent to AAA Tacoma for the Immediate Future. Ryan Franklin Will Start In the 5 Hole and James Baldwin Will Work In Long Relief Until Further Notice. One Possible Problem: Valdés Has Given Up 11 Home Runs Since July 1st which ties him for Second most with Multiple other Starters. Tanyon Sturtze is Out in the Lead with 15 Home Runs Allowed In 69 1/3 Innings Pitched Since July 1st. Valdés is Now Pitching in One of the Premier Parks in BaseBall and Could Limit His Long Ball Damage and Provide Lou Piniella with a Quality Upgrade over James Baldwin, Who Has Yet to Pitch Well Enough to Stay in any Quality Starting Rotation. The Mariners Improved Defensive Ability Should Also Allow Valdés to Work More Confidently In and Around the StrikeZone. Cory Lidle Has Mentioned His New Found Confidence In the Oakland Defense and Credits that Confidence and Improved Defensive Play with His Willingness to Again Challenge Hitters and Allow His Team-Mates to Finish the Inning.
• Jermaine Marcel Clark Attended William C Wood High School In California and Was the Mariners' Fifth-Round Selection From the University of San Francisco where he Was an All-American three times During His Collegiate Career. Clark Led the WCC In Hitting During the 1996 Season and Ended His USF Career with 86 Steals -- Which Stands as a School Record -- and Stormed Out of College with a Career .366 Average. Clark was a Rule V Selection By the Tigers In 2001 Before Being Returned to the Mariners for Cash as Prescribed in the Rule V Protocol. Clark Had a .266 Average, 4 Triples, Six Home Runs, and 29 Stolen Bases for the Mariner AAA Affilite in Tacoma. Clark Has Tremendous Speed and Hammers Right-Handed Pitching, but has Serious Trouble Making Contact against Left-Handers Making Him a Potential Candidate for Major League Bench Platoon Work Much Like Desi Relaford & Mark Mclemore. Clark, a Career Second Baseman, Has Recently Started Getting Game Action at SS. Clark Knows Speed, Defense, and Versatility Could Be his Ticket to the Next Level. "It's something I need to do to help my chances of getting to the next level," Clark said. "People always say they can play AnyWhere, but you never really know until you do it. I think I've Done Fairly Well." When Asked About The Seattle Middle-Infield Situation, Clark Ponders his Eventual Major League Debut, and Replies, "I can't worry about that. I've just got to play. As long as I keep playing well, Something Will Happen, Either with Seattle or Some Other Team."
• Derrick Van Dusen, Seattle's fifth-round pick in the 2000 June draft, was a Local Fontana city, California Resident More Than Happy to Be Playing his Minor League BaseBall Close to Home. Van Dusen Was Pitching Well With the San Bernardino Stampede Accumulating a 7-6 Record with a 3.10 ERA - Fourth-Best in the California League - in 20 starts at Class the Mariner Class A Affiliate. Van Dusen Was Promoted to AA San Antonio Where He Struggled Compiling a 1-2 Record with a 7.20 ERA and 17 strikeouts in 25 innings. Van Dusen's Stay lasted a month at AA as he Logged 5 Appearances, 4 in the Missions Starting Rotation. When Informed of the News of His Change of Organization, Van Dusen Pondered the Entire Impact of Not Only Changing Teams, Losing Friends, TeamMates, and Moving to a New Far Away Destination. "I felt like I have made a lot of friends and established myself in this organization and now I have to prove myself all over again. I have mixed feelings Right Now." Van Dusen Grew Up 20 Minutes From His Home Stadium - ArrowHead Park - and Undoubtedly Enjoyed the Support He Recieved From Friends and Family with the Stampede. "When I have time to really think about it, I will probably look More Positive." BaseBall America Listed Van Dusen as Seattle's 14th Best Prospect. Van Dusen will Again Try his Talents at the AA Level When He Joins the Rangers' AA Team in Tulsa of the Texas League. "I really don't know what to say. I'm still sort of stunned,'' Van Dusen Offered Prior to the Sunday Game with Modesto. "It will probably be an opportunity to get to the big leagues Sooner, But the Whole Starting Over Thing is a Little Scary.''
HOLD
• Freddy Garcia Has Has Some Trouble with Texas, Boston, and Kansas city Throughout his Career, But the Remaining Teams on the Mariner Schedule Should Provide The Seattle Ace with an Opportunity to Close the Season With 20+ Victories. Many Major League Aces Have Displayed an Inconsistent Streak of Late -- Ishii, Garcia, Oswalt, Morris, Milton, Burnett, Buehrle, Mussina, Clemens, Johnson, Vázquez, Lawrence -- Have All Struggled to Dominate on a Consistent Basis. Any Of the Aforementioned Are Worth The Wait, as a Nice 5 Game Winning Streak With a Sub 2.00 ERA Always Help Those September Blues. Garcia Is Still Young, and With the Help of Mariner Coaches, Should Correct Any Errors in Approach. In Keeper Leagues, Garcia Is a Top Twenty Pitcher, and Should Be In the LineUp Almost Every Week. It's Difficult to Reamain Confident When a Pitcher Loses an Edge, Especially When Performance Expectations Do Not Live Up to Real Life Numbers. Keep the Faith, Occasionally Sit A Young Ace Against Teams They Have Historically Had Difficulty Against, and Remember That Fantasy is not an Exact Science. At Some Point During a 162 Game Season, Any given Move(s) Will Not Only Not Work, The Moves Will Cost Points and H2H Series. Stay Calm, Confident, and Continue to Trust the Law of Averages, and Faith will Be Restored.
TRADE
• Mike Cameron Batted .217 in May, .191 In June, and a Finished July with a .255 Average. Cameron Increased His Stolen Base Production With 10 Swipes in July. Deal Him Now and Avoid any Possible Loss to Playing Time That Could Occur Due to Injury Or September Rest. "We're gonna let Cammy sit for a while and see if we can get him straightened out,'' Lou Piniella Said In a Recent Media Session. Cameron is hitting .218 and leads the AL with 134 strikeouts.
• Kazuhiro Sasaki Appears to Be in The Best Shape of His Mariner Career, However, The Team Does have Some Additional Weakness with the Struggle of Boone, Cirillo, and Cameron So a Trade May Be the Best Course of Action. The Mariner Organization May Not Be Able to Overcome Their Struggle to Fill the Void In the Rotation and In the EveryDay LineUp As A Number of Minor League Prospects are Ailing and PayRoll Is Near Maximum of Allowable Expenditure. Most Medium Size Market Teams Seem to Be Unwilling to Add PayRoll In an Uncertain Season When a Labor Strike May Not Only Waste Moneys, But also Burn Prospects that Could Help those Organizations that Need them the Most.
MINOR £EAGUE PLA¥ER PROSECTU§
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
DIVISION STANDINGS NORTH DIVISION
Team W L PCT GB
EDMONTON (MINNESOTA) 65 48 .575 -
CALGARY (FLORIDA) 55 56 .495 9.0
PORTLAND (SAN DIEGO) 56 59 .487 10.0
TACOMA (SEATTLE) 55 58 .487 10.0
Stolen Base Leaders
Player Team SB
Chone Figgins Salt Lake 35
Chad Meyers Memphis 32
Jermaine Clark Tacoma 29
Scott Podsednik Tacoma 29
DI§AB£ED £I§‡
• Roy Acuff, San Antonio Missions Radio Voice for 15 Seasons Was Recently Put Out of Comision After a Hotel Lobby Fall that Caused a Fractured Right-Hip. Stu Paul will Assist Brian Anderson until Acuff Recovers Sufficiently to Resume his Duties. Acuff has Called 2100 Games in His San Antonio BroadCast Career. To Lisen to Santanio Missions Games in Spanish Follow the Appropriate Links. To Listen to San Antonio Missions Games in Streaming Audio, Check Local BroadCast Times.
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