Tuesday, June 30, 2009

ACHIE GILBERT'S FIRST HALF STATS

AVG. .292
G 69
R 52
H 79
2B 8
3B 4
HR 1
RBI 31
TB 98
BB 33
SO 28
SB 17
CS 9
OBP .387
SLG .362
OPS .749

Sunday, June 28, 2009

CARTER TO PLAY IN THE FUTURES GAME


OAKLAND -- Less than a year after appearing in the showcase game for baseball's top prospects last summer at Yankee Stadium, right-hander Trevor Cahill and lefty Brett Anderson are very much a part of the present for the 2009 A's.
Both 21 years old, they claimed spots in the starting rotation in their first trip to big league Spring Training.


Also at camp with the big boys for the first time this spring were second baseman Jemile Weeks and first baseman Chris Carter, who were announced Thursday as Oakland's representatives in this year's showcase.

The 11th annual XM All-Star Futures Game, pitting the best Minor League prospects from the United States against the best from the rest of the World, will be held at Busch Stadium in St. Louis on All-Star Sunday, July 12, at 11 a.m. PT. MLB.com will provide complete coverage before, during and after the game, which can be seen live on ESPN2 and ESPN2 HD and followed live on Gameday.

Weeks, 22, was selected by the A's in the first round (12th overall) of last June's First-Year Player Draft out of the University of Miami. He batted .297 with a .422 on-base percentage in 19 games with Low-A Kane County last season before suffering a season-ending hip injury the forced him to stay behind for extra work at extended Spring Training this year.

Assigned to High-A Stockton once cleared to play, Weeks was batting .395 with six homers, 19 RBIs and a .489 OBP in 19 games for the Ports through Wednesday.

Also 22, Carter was a 15th-round pick of the White Sox in 2005, traded to the D-backs on Dec. 3, 2007, then flipped to the A's 11 days later as part of the deal that sent Dan Haren to Arizona.
A 6-foot-4 slugger, Carter was named Oakland's 2008 Organizational Player of the Year after batting .259 with 39 home runs and 104 RBIs in 137 games for Stockton. Only one player in the Minors hit more homers than Carter, who led all Minor Leaguers with 75 extra-base hits and 288 total bases.

Assigned to Double-A Midland to start the season, Carter was batting .295 with 10 homers, 23 doubles, 49 RBIs, a .400 OBP and a Texas League-high 57 runs in 70 games through Tuesday for the RockHounds.

Weeks and Carter will suit up for the U.S. Team in St. Louis; Weeks is from Florida and Carter is from Nevada.


Mychael Urban is a national writer for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

ARCHIE AT THE PLATE

Today, Archie went 2 for 3 with 3 runs scored and 1 RBI

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Dee-termination: Brown perseveres during pro baseball career

By Laura Rasmussen / Albuquerque Isotopes

Over his 14-year career the team names scripted across Dee Brown's chest have changed 12 times.

Midway through a tumultuous part of that career, Brown grasped that it wasn't what was sewn on the front of his jersey that mattered, but rather the letters across the back - his last name.

"You may believe you are playing for the team on the front, but really you are playing for the name on the back, your last name," Brown said. "You are playing for yourself."
The shift signaled Brown's way of putting his situation in a perspective all his own.

A first round draft pick by the Kansas City Royals in 1996, Brown was a minor-league sensation. Long before becoming an Albuquerque Isotope, he was synonymous with the word "prospect."

He was drafted 14th overall at the age of 18, making his Major League debut by the time he was 20. Baseball America named him the Royals Minor League Player of the Year in 1999, the same year he started the first-ever Futures All-Star game at Fenway Park. By 2001, he found himself on Kansas City's Opening Day roster for the first time, playing in 106 games, his most in a single season at the big league level.

After spending 10 years in the Royals system, Brown, who signed as a free agent by the Dodgers in January, has spent the past three years with seven different franchises.
A list of injuries and some tough luck led Brown down an unforeseen path, but the Bronx, N.Y., native, stayed true to his talent, his ability, and himself.

"When you are young, you kind of expect to be in the Major Leagues. You expect to be great. You expect to make a lot of money. Then when it doesn't happen, it is a tough reality," he said.

"You realize it is a business and that was the hardest thing to swallow - the game within the game. It took me a long time, until I was about 27 or 28 to realize the business side. You have to form a shield and believe in yourself. It becomes a challenge, but it is what I have chosen."

While Brown has played in more minor league games (1,152) than Major League games (271), the Isotope says he has come to appreciate the things the game offers at each level, like traveling and meeting new people, in addition to the opportunity to simply still be playing.

"Deep down inside you have to know what you can and can't do, like anything in life. You learn to keep things in perspective."

The perspective Brown has adopted is that as long as there is a jersey with his last name on it, he will keep playing, despite the level.

"I am here for a reason. I could easily not be playing. I have friends making it in professional ball and those who lasted two or three years, so I see both aspects of that. Regardless of me switching from team to team, in the end I have to make the best of it.

I have battled injuries. That is why I am where I am. I have struggled a lot with my health in the big leagues, which always hurt my production. I am still here even though a lot of people didn't think I would still be here playing, but it has been fun, and I continue to have fun playing."
For Albuquerque, Brown has primarily played left field with occasional roles as the 'Topes designated hitter. His performance, like his personality, has become instantly entertaining.
The left-handed hitter has put on some remarkable shows at Isotopes Park, a place he admits he is fond of calling his home park.


"Since day one, since the first game, I felt really comfortable here," Brown noted of playing in Albuquerque. "I thought to myself I could really enjoy playing here all year. That is what I am trying to do, come out here and entertain the fans."

Since a 4-for-5 outing on May 8 against New Orleans, Brown has not batted below .280, collecting 10 of his 12 home runs since that game, three of which came in a single contest on May 22 when the Isotopes hosted the Salt Lake Bees, Brown's 2008 team.

The slugger has struck out just 11 times over 104 plate appearances since May 8 as well and finished the month with a .351 batting clip. His 41 RBI and .314 batting average through June 10 are third best on the team

The numbers are prospect-esque and reminiscent of Brown's early years.
And regardless of where they take him, Brown will keep them in an importantly discovered perspective.

The perspective of the name of the back of his uniform. His own.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

ARCHIE AT THE PLATE

In Friday's game against the San Antonio Missions, Archie "A.G." Gilbert went 2 for 4 with 2 RBI's and 1 Stolen Base.

AG IN SPRING TRAINING BP!!!!

Here we find Archie Gilbert, Star Outfield Prospect of the Oakland A's getting his swings in. Spring Training 2009.


-Beno

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Rockhounds are back on track!!


The Rockhounds won 7-6 against the Frisco RoughRiders, scoring 1 run in the bottom of the 12th inning!
Archie went 1 for 6 with a run scored and one RBI.

Pittsburgh is the Place!!! Exhibit that celebrates Negro League

By The Tribune-Review Saturday, June 24, 2006

The Pirates on Monday will unveil a unique, permanent exhibit at PNC Park which pays tribute to the Homestead Grays and Pittsburgh Crawfords.

The display, located behind the left-field gate entrance, will include a theater, statues and interactive features. It will highlight some of the greatest players -- such as Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige and Buck Leonard -- from the era of segregated baseball.

"It's about tapping into baseball history and Negro Leagues history, and how it really parallels the history of Pittsburgh," Pirates spokesman Brian Warecki said.

"It's a sort of celebration, but it's also an educational exhibit -- more than just a statue or some signage. It's truly going to be hall of fame-like."

The exhibit has been in the planning stages for more than a year. It was pieced together with the help of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo.

"We're very excited Pittsburgh continues to be one of the leaders among major-league teams in celebrating the heritage of black baseball," said Bob Kendrick, the museum's director of marketing. "The Pirates have been at the forefront of this for a long time."

In September 1988, on the 40th anniversary of the Grays winning the final Negro League World Series, the Pirates held a pregame ceremony to honor the Negro Leagues. That event, the first by a major-league team, helped spark a nationwide resurgence of interest in the Negro Leagues.
"The Pirates, for all their ineptitude on the field, ought to be given a lot of credit for staying with this topic," said Rob Ruck, a Pitt professor and Negro League historian.
There are small exhibits for the Negro Leagues in Kansas City and Milwaukee, but nothing on the scale of what the Pirates are doing. Kendrick hopes this starts another trend at big-league ballparks.

"Our dream would be to have these types of satellite exhibits in every city that had a Negro League team," Kendrick said. "There are so many stories that still need to be told."

Monday, June 15, 2009

Hounds lose Five Games in a Row.


The Rockhounds (33-28) have lost five straight games. The are now tied for first place with San Antonio.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

ARCHIE GOES 4 for 4. Has 12 game Hitting Streak!


Archie Gilbert is having a great baseball season thus far for the Midland Rockhounds (AA Affiliate of the Oakland A's) Since moving to the lead-off spot Archie has been sensational, making several terrific plays in the outfield and continuing his torrid pace at the plate. Archie went 4-for-4, all singles, scoring after his first inning single and driving in a run with each of his next three. Gilbert extended his hit streak to 11 games and has now reached base in 23 straight. Currently hitting .335 with 26 RBI's and 14 Stolen Bases, we can't wait till he gets to the SHOW!!!.

ARCHIE GILBERT Named MVP!!!!

Archie Gilbert went 3-for-5 with an RBI and two runs scored en route to postseason MVP honors. After hitting for the cycle earlier this season, he drove in six runs in the series opener, then delivered a bases-loaded single in the seventh leading up to Carter's grand slam.

"Archie, since day one of the playoffs, has really been very disciplined and intense at the plate," said Stockton manager Darren Bush. "It carried all the way through for him. He did a great job."
Gilbert was 0-for-11 with the bases loaded during the season but was batting .600 in the postseason before coming through with the go-ahead hit. He finished with eight RBIs in the four-game series.

It's the first championship for Stockton since the club signed on with the Oakland organization four years ago. The Ports' last title came as an affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds.
Earlier Sunday, the Athletics' Triple-A affiliate in Sacramento won its second straight Pacific Coast League championship.


Danny Wild is a contributor to MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.






The Launch of Archie Gilbert!!!


This blog is about following Archie Gilbert's baseball career. From his playing days at James Logan High School, through his stellar College Career at California State University, Hayward a.k.a. California State University, East Bay, to his debut to Major League Baseball.
Follow along, and you too will become a fan of this exciting and great baseball player.
-Beno

Saturday, June 6, 2009

10 GAME HIT STREAK!!!


Archie Gilbert extended his hit streak to 10 games with a leadoff double in the third inning, and Josh Horton drove him in with an RBI single. Horton later came home on Josh Donaldson's ground out, scoring what would be the winning run.