Mariners Notebook: Morrow stays in bullpen
07:31 AM PST on Thursday, February 14, 2008
Associated Press
PEORIA, Ariz. - Brandon Morrow pitched in Venezuela this past winter with the hope of landing a spot in Seattle Mariners' starting rotation.
Instead, the young right-hander will be in the Mariners' bullpen for a second straight year.
Manager John McLaren called the 23-year-old Morrow to inform him of the decision before pitchers and catchers reported to the team's spring training facility on Wednesday.
"I didn't want him having any gray area about what his role was," McLaren said. "(We sent him) to Venezuela with the thoughts of him being a candidate for the starting rotation. We had to build his arm strength up, we had to build his pitch count up. With that said, we made a couple moves in the offseason and the way Brandon throws the ball, he's a big part of our staff."
The Mariners acquired two starting pitchers in the offseason, signing Carlos Silva in December, then last week trading for Baltimore ace Erik Bedard. With Felix Hernandez, Jarrod Washburn and Miguel Batista already in the rotation, there was no room left for the hard-throwing Morrow.
The Mariners drafted Morrow with the sixth pick in the 2006 draft believing Morrow would be a starter in the majors. That may eventually happen but for now he'll continue to work out of Seattle's bullpen as a potential set-up man for closer J.J. Putz.
Morrow went 3-4 with a 4.12 ERA in 60 relief appearances for Seattle last season, striking out 66 in 63 1-3 innings.
"Brandon was happy to know exactly what his role was coming into camp," said McLaren, who praised Morrow's work in Venezuela. "The thing he really did was he worked on his secondary pitches. Last year he kind of just relied strictly on his fastball because the game was on the line. This year we feel he can use all three pitches and be a better pitcher because of it."
ENJOYING THE VIEW FROM ON TOP: McLaren didn't get much of a chance to appreciate his status as a major league manager in 2007 after being handed the job in July when Mike Hargrove abruptly quit. This season, McLaren is taking it all in.
Leaning back in a chair in his office Wednesday, McLaren smiled and casually joked with reporters while talking about the Mariners' upcoming season. That was in stark contrast to the short-tempered Hargrove, who was often sullen and said he could no longer match his players' energy at the time he quit.
That's not the case with McLaren, who finally landed a manager's job after 21 years as a coach.
"I'm real excited," McLaren said. "Last year at this time we were talking about we wanted to win. We were good enough to win, why shouldn't we be winning? I think our thoughts (now) are how do we win more games? We know we can win, now we want to win more games. We want to make the playoffs, we want to win the (AL) West."
Seattle won 88 games last year but is primed to make a strong run at the Los Angeles Angels in the AL West after a busy offseason revamping the roster. To help, McLaren assembled a strong coaching staff.
Pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre, bench coach Jim Riggleman, first base coach Eddie Rodriguez, third base coach Sam Perlozzo and bullpen coach Norm Charlton are all newcomers, joining hitting coach Jeff Pentland -- the lone holdover from Hargrove's staff. In addition, Seattle hired Lee Elia as a special assistant to McLaren and brought in former major leaguer Tony Phillips to help tutor the Mariners' infielders.
"I've got history with these guys," McLaren said. "I think it's one of the better staffs in baseball. It's not a reflection on our staff from last year, because they did a nice job, there's no question about that. These are more or less my guys."
SHORT HOPS: The Mariners signed veteran switch-hitting first baseman Greg Norton to a minor league contract Wednesday and invited him to spring training. Norton, 35, has been among the top pinch hitters in baseball since 2001 but played in only 75 games last season for Tampa Bay after undergoing surgery on his right knee. He hit .243, with four home runs and 23 RBIs. ... Pitchers and catchers will hold their first workout on Thursday with the rest of the squad due in Arizona next week.
07:31 AM PST on Thursday, February 14, 2008
Associated Press
PEORIA, Ariz. - Brandon Morrow pitched in Venezuela this past winter with the hope of landing a spot in Seattle Mariners' starting rotation.
Instead, the young right-hander will be in the Mariners' bullpen for a second straight year.
Manager John McLaren called the 23-year-old Morrow to inform him of the decision before pitchers and catchers reported to the team's spring training facility on Wednesday.
"I didn't want him having any gray area about what his role was," McLaren said. "(We sent him) to Venezuela with the thoughts of him being a candidate for the starting rotation. We had to build his arm strength up, we had to build his pitch count up. With that said, we made a couple moves in the offseason and the way Brandon throws the ball, he's a big part of our staff."
The Mariners acquired two starting pitchers in the offseason, signing Carlos Silva in December, then last week trading for Baltimore ace Erik Bedard. With Felix Hernandez, Jarrod Washburn and Miguel Batista already in the rotation, there was no room left for the hard-throwing Morrow.
The Mariners drafted Morrow with the sixth pick in the 2006 draft believing Morrow would be a starter in the majors. That may eventually happen but for now he'll continue to work out of Seattle's bullpen as a potential set-up man for closer J.J. Putz.
Morrow went 3-4 with a 4.12 ERA in 60 relief appearances for Seattle last season, striking out 66 in 63 1-3 innings.
"Brandon was happy to know exactly what his role was coming into camp," said McLaren, who praised Morrow's work in Venezuela. "The thing he really did was he worked on his secondary pitches. Last year he kind of just relied strictly on his fastball because the game was on the line. This year we feel he can use all three pitches and be a better pitcher because of it."
ENJOYING THE VIEW FROM ON TOP: McLaren didn't get much of a chance to appreciate his status as a major league manager in 2007 after being handed the job in July when Mike Hargrove abruptly quit. This season, McLaren is taking it all in.
Leaning back in a chair in his office Wednesday, McLaren smiled and casually joked with reporters while talking about the Mariners' upcoming season. That was in stark contrast to the short-tempered Hargrove, who was often sullen and said he could no longer match his players' energy at the time he quit.
That's not the case with McLaren, who finally landed a manager's job after 21 years as a coach.
"I'm real excited," McLaren said. "Last year at this time we were talking about we wanted to win. We were good enough to win, why shouldn't we be winning? I think our thoughts (now) are how do we win more games? We know we can win, now we want to win more games. We want to make the playoffs, we want to win the (AL) West."
Seattle won 88 games last year but is primed to make a strong run at the Los Angeles Angels in the AL West after a busy offseason revamping the roster. To help, McLaren assembled a strong coaching staff.
Pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre, bench coach Jim Riggleman, first base coach Eddie Rodriguez, third base coach Sam Perlozzo and bullpen coach Norm Charlton are all newcomers, joining hitting coach Jeff Pentland -- the lone holdover from Hargrove's staff. In addition, Seattle hired Lee Elia as a special assistant to McLaren and brought in former major leaguer Tony Phillips to help tutor the Mariners' infielders.
"I've got history with these guys," McLaren said. "I think it's one of the better staffs in baseball. It's not a reflection on our staff from last year, because they did a nice job, there's no question about that. These are more or less my guys."
SHORT HOPS: The Mariners signed veteran switch-hitting first baseman Greg Norton to a minor league contract Wednesday and invited him to spring training. Norton, 35, has been among the top pinch hitters in baseball since 2001 but played in only 75 games last season for Tampa Bay after undergoing surgery on his right knee. He hit .243, with four home runs and 23 RBIs. ... Pitchers and catchers will hold their first workout on Thursday with the rest of the squad due in Arizona next week.

