The Oakland A's have undertaken a massive makeover.They have told their fans to be patient.But the real message is the A's are vulnerable to misjudgments, just like every other team in baseball.A's general manager Billy Beane is one of the more innovative and personable executives in baseball, but for all his planning and foresight, even Beane makes errors in judgment.That's why the A's are facing the reality of struggling the next couple of years, why Beane had to ship off the likes of Nick Swisher and Dan Haren and why the A's can let manager Bob Geren stumble along without anyone feeling as if he's keeping the franchise from contending.In praising the A's for the way they have rebuilt their farm system with the offseason deals for Haren -- four of the top 10 prospects in the Oakland system came from Arizona in that deal -- and Swisher -- two other top-10 prospects came from the White Sox in that deal -- what's not mentioned is the A's not only had gotten old and unable to contend at the big-league level, but their farm system was feeble, too.Beane understood that, and as a result, the A's had recently modified their approach to the draft. A team that gained fame in the book "Moneyball'' because of its refusal to consider high school prospects, according to an author who was big on infatuation but light on facts, the A's actually selected high school players with six of the nine selections they had in the first seven rounds in 2005 and with four of their first seven selections in 2006.That, however, still left a void of prospects at the upper levels. That's why Swisher and Haren had to be dealt to restock the farm system, instead of young players being ready to step in at the big-league level, so the A's could remain a contender instead of having to rebuild.The "Moneyball'' draft of 2002 was raised recently when catcher Jeremy Brown, the controversial player selected 35th overall by the A's, retired for personal reasons. Brown was the major overdraft that the book had proclaimed was testimony to the A's brilliance. The book feted the A's because they paid well below slot money in signing Brown for $350,000 but ignored the fact that, even by the A's admission, had Brown been allowed to slip in the draft to where he belonged, he most likely would have received about $5,000.What never gets much discussion is that the six other players the A's took before the start of the second round that season all received bonuses in line with where they were drafted. Also, they were all projected to be selected in the first four rounds of the draft, so none of them was a surprise pick.In fact, two of the five largest signing bonuses in Oakland history were given to Swisher, the 16th player selected overall ($1.78 million), and right-handed pitcher Joe Blanton, the 24th player drafted overall ($1.4 million).OVERHEARD-- Detroit, searching for bullpen help, is hoping to use outfielder Marcus Thames to make a deal.-- Right-handed pitcher Bartolo Colon is creating a feeling in Boston he will be able to make the season-opening rotation, which would prompt the Red Sox to send Clay Buchholz to Class AAA Pawtucket to open the season.-- Left-hander Scott Schoeneweis, guaranteed $7.2 million for the next two seasons, is being actively shopped by the Mets.TWO CENTS' WORTHHere's a bit of advice for the likes of Prince Fielder, Cole Hamels, Jonathan Papelbon and Ryan Zimmerman: zip it.Nobody wants to listen to these young players whining about being shortchanged in salary by their clubs.The fact of life is, teams have control over salaries for the first three big-league seasons of a player's career. Then an arbitrator decides. Then free agency becomes a player's trump card.Teams have learned the hard way that going the extra step in the first three years of salary negotiations isn't repaid by a player giving the team some kind of a discount once they get the leverage of arbitration and free agency.Anybody who needed a reminder should have paid attention to Ryan Howard and Philadelphia this past offseason. After paying Howard $900,000 last year -- more than $500,000 above minimum -- the Phillies offered him $7 million this year.But Howard wanted $10 million, so he went to arbitration. And won.NUMBERS GAME-- 67: Starts the past six seasons for Yankees pitchers 25 or younger. They could have more than that this year alone with Ian Kennedy, Phil Hughes and Joba Chamberlain in line for spots in the rotation. The previous time the Yankees got 70 starts from pitchers 25 or younger was 1970, when Stan Bahnsen led the group with 35, Steve Kline made 15, Mike Kekich 14, John Cumberland eight, Bill Burbach four, Ron Klimkowski three and Rob Gardner one.SPLIT CAMPS?With Philadelphia general manager Pat Gillick having announced he will retire after the season and his assistants, Mike Arbuckle and Ruben Amaro Jr., candidates to replace him, the Phillies face the challenge of avoiding the staff splitting into Arbuckle or Amaro camps.HE SAID IT"It was like a Springsteen concert."-- Stan Kasten, Washington Nationals president, on selling out opening day in their new ballpark in six minutes.(Tracy Ringolsby writes for the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, Colo. E-mail ringolsbyt(at)RockyMountainNews.com.)
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Tracy Ringolsby's weekly baseball notes
Submitted by SHNS on Fri, 03/07/2008 - 13:46
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




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