May 19, 2013

THT Essentials:
Fangraphs Player Search:


And here's the full roster.

Now available


You can now purchase the Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2013, with 300 pages of great content. It's also available on Amazon and Kindle. Read more about it here.

THT's latest e-book


Third Base: The Crossroads is THT's new e-book, available for $3.99 from the Kindle store. The good news is that anyone can read a Kindle book, even on a PC. So enjoy the best from THT in a new format.

Most Recent Comments





Get your very own THT merchandise from our CafePress store. We've got baseball caps, t-shirts, coffee mugs and even wall clocks with the classy THT logo prominently displayed. Also, check out the THT Bookstore. Please support your favorite baseball site by purchasing something today.



Or you can search by:


Creative Commons License
All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Roll mouse over date for entries
THT Live Calendar
May 2013
S M T W T F S



1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Rehab assignments for minor leaguers

Posted by Jeff Sackmann
I always find it entertaining that minor leaguers go on rehab assignments. For instance, before returning to Triple-A Buffalo this week, Mike Hessman played a single game with the GCL Mets. That's fairly common for players in the high minors.

These rehabs don't have exactly the same rationale as rehab assignments for major leaguers. For the latter, it's a way to make sure they're healthy before they have important at-bats in major league games—you know, the ones that matter. But for minor leaguers, they're getting rehab at-bats in games that don't matter before they return to get regular season at-bats ... which don't matter.

That isn't to say it's a foolish practice. Clubs have minor league affiliates in the Arizona and Gulf Coast League which serve as bases for all sorts of operations. These complexes are the home of training for players before the short-season campaign starts, and they often host a variety of club personnel—including medical staff. So if, say, Hessman needs that kind of help, it makes more sense for him to get it in Florida than in Buffalo. Then, before getting a clean bill of health, he takes a few at-bats with the home team before getting on a plane for the northeast.

Which is all a circuitous way of getting to my point. Brandon Snyder, typically of the Orioles Triple-A club, just started a rehab assignment with the New York-Penn League Aberdeen Ironbirds. I suppose such a thing has happened before, but I've never noticed it: a player from a high-minors rehabbing in the NYP League.

In this case, it makes some sense—Aberdeen is just a short drive away from Baltimore, so I suppose Snyder may have been recovering with the help of big-league staff. And Baltimore/Aberdeen is more convenient to Triple-A Norfolk than is the Gulf Coast League. It's logical enough, but that doesn't make it any less unusual.



Jeff Sackmann is the creator of MinorLeagueSplits.com. With Kent Bonham, he founded CollegeSplits.com. Jeff and Kent blog about college baseball and the draft, and you can follow them on Twitter for bite-sized snacks of minor league and college stats. Jeff also has an email address.


Comments

Matt in Toledo said...

Robbie Weinhardt, the Tigers’ recently called-up reliever, just did the same in Connecticut for the Tigers. I just wrote it off to some logistical issue or something at the time.

Posted 07/21  at  02:42 PM
Brad Johnson said...

I think a major component of the rehab assignment is to get the player reps against inferior players. That lets the player quickly regain confidence in a semi-relaxed setting.

Posted 07/22  at  10:39 AM
Der-K said...

It’s not the norm, but happens multiple times a season, usually (I think) for reasons like the one you noted w/ Snyder.

Posted 07/24  at  02:01 PM
Page 1 of 1

Leave a comment:

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.