Rays to unveil Ybor City stadium renderings Tuesday

You likely heard the news already, on the 10th of July, the Tampa Bay Rays are slated to publicly reveal the artist renderings of a potential stadium in Ybor City.

All along the team’s lofty goal has been to build a facility that will double as a community destination beyond game days. Some ideas thrown out by Rays President Brian Auld include a fitness center/wellness program for USF, kitchens that offer culinary classes, and a part-time community park.

The renderings should answer a bevy of questions, like will the roof be retractable or translucent? Will there be an upper deck? How many fans will the stadium accommodate? And where will home plate be situated?

Yet According to Chris O’Donnell (Tampa Bay Times), one crucial aspect of the stadium likely will not be on the agenda, a discussion about how to fund the project.

…But no matter how innovative and appealing the design, Hagan and other local leaders still face an uphill task to figure out how to pay for a stadium, a cost estimated at around $800 million.

The Rays have yet to officially disclose how much they would be willing to pay. Both Hagan and Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn have said raising taxes is not an option, although money set aside for community improvement projects could be used for utility lines and road realignment to support a ballpark. Profits from surrounding development may also be part of the financing plan.

That makes it even more vital to get corporate support — a pitch that will be easier to make now that the ballpark is more than an abstract concept, Hagan said.

To put it another way, the public unveiling is more about getting fans excited about the design the team has been working on for a few years — a campaign to whet the public’s whistle for a stadium that, well, nobody frankly wants to pay for … the team included.

They’re working hard, Ken Hagan (Hillsborough County Commission) was quoted as saying. This will be another tool to allow them to galvanize that support.

The Rays have been hush-hush about the project, even with public officials who will ultimately decide on the fate of the project.

Hagan said no one outside the team has seen the renderings yet, writes O’Donnell.

“I know the team has put a lot of work into the design,” Hagan said, “and I’m excited to see it.”

That previously did not set well with members of the Tampa City Council.

The Rays got permission to search for a stadium site in Pinellas and Hillsborough counties — outside of their current location at in downtown St. Petersburg — in January of 2016. However, they have until December 31, 2018 to come to a conclusion on a stadium, including a funding apparatus, before the memorandum of understanding between the team and the city of St. Petersburg expires. If you’re counting down, that’s less than six months away.

Noah Pransky (Shadow of the Stadium, WTSP) offered a succinct preview of the upcoming presser in a rather wordy (you millennials would call it “epic”) Twitter debate with JP Peterson (WDAE) on Thursday.

  1. Rays have thought of everything and they think their renderings are awesome.
  2. Pics took politicians’ breath away – they love them.
  3. But a lot of work lies ahead – they need businesses and the community to step up with money if this is going to happen.

Show me the money

Hillsborough County officials have said that an Ybor City ball park will likely cost upwards of $650-million, while Rays principal owner Stu Sternberg has said the team will kick in around $150-million for the project. Sternberg later said the team would possibly contribute more if it gets lucrative naming rights deals or other benefits. But don’t expect a naming rights deal to benefit the taxpayers. As Pransky wrote in a piece for Shadow of the Stadium, “…Teams are quick to insist these are their revenues, contributing to their bottom line; not the public’s portion of stadium bills.”

It remains unclear where the funding would come from since Hillsborough County has little available revenue, and most county commissioners appear hesitant to prioritize a new stadium over other pressing public needs such as infrastructure, waste water management systems, public schools, etc.

A potential piece of the funding puzzle is back on the table after Mayor Bob Buckhorn’s administration persuaded federal officials to put an Ybor City census tract on the list for a new federal tax break, which was created through the President’s tax-cut legislation late last year.

The designation allows developers and investors within the zone to delay tax payments on profits from the sale of real estate and other investments if that money is rolled into Ybor City. Since there isn’t an appetite to fund the stadium project, Hillsborough County officials said that private investment will be crucial.

City officials argued that the tract of land has the potential to generate hundreds more jobs.

Private investment was a financial building block in the deal to develop Sun Trust Park for the Atlanta Braves, the newest major-league ballpark.

Battery Atlanta, an office, residential and entertainment complex, was built at a cost of about $400 million adjacent to the ballpark in suburban Cobb County, writes Charlie Frago (Tampa Bay Times). Revenue from the complex helps the team pay off construction bonds on the stadium.

Whether or not the Atlanta project serves as a model for the Rays, the federal action means Ybor City benefits either way.

“I don’t know if it necessarily ties into a ballpark or not,” McDonaugh said, “but it is an area that we recognized could benefit from redevelopment.”

The federal tax break probably won’t help out whole a lot though, especially when you consider that large corporations — who the Rays and Hillsborough County are depending upon — likely wouldn’t move within the vicinity of the proposed stadium just because of baseball.

The stadium project meets opposition

The effort to gain the federal tax break poked the proverbial hornet’s nest. On Thursday, Americans for Prosperity (AFP), a Koch Brothers funded group, issued a news release criticizing Buckhorn’s advocacy to have an Ybor City census tract made eligible for the federal tax break.

The only ones who will benefit from this lopsided deal are crony politicians and the Rays’ ownership. The audacity of the team to insist that they will only pay for $150 million of a potentially $800 million project is emblematic of the entitled mentality that drives these corporate welfare schemes. Taxpayers deserve better,” the release stated.

AFP most recently defeated a transit initiative in Nashville.

The opposition to the stadium is much larger than previously thought, not just those that want to see the team stay in St. Petersburg, or those who think a publicly subsidized stadium isn’t the best use of taxpayer money.

I tend to leave my opinions out of these types of articles, although I will say that while I am not a fan of AFP or the Koch Brothers, I am a huge fan of irony. And in the end, AFP is criticizing the mayor of Tampa, as well as the corporate bought Ken Hagan, for utilizing the infrastructure set in place by the Koch Brothers endowed president and House of Representatives. I digress.

Noteworthiness

— Noah Pransky jumped spoke with “Wacky” Jack Harris (AM Tampa Bay) Monday morning about the stadium funding issue, and whether Jeff Vinik might play a role in building the Rays a stadium (Hint: Tampa doesn’t have the money, and Vinik has no interest in helping the Rays).

— Joe Henderson (Florida Politics) writes,

The Tampa Bay Rays know how to put on a show, and I’m positive there will be no shortage of “oohs” and “aahs” Tuesday when they roll out the design and, importantly, a cost projection for what they hope is a new stadium in Ybor City.

However, he summarizes things to a T with the following pull quote,

(Opponents) will stand in the courthouse door to keep one cent of public money from going to this project. Lots of people will agree with them, which is a big reason stadium advocates must be transparent about money every step of the way.

One hint of an end run designed to soak the public could sink this thing.

Yes, Tuesday is a big day in this quest – but the bigger day comes when the plan to pay for whatever the stadium will cost becomes public.

The New What Next: Rays vs Mets — an interleague series preview

Kevin Kiermaier hasn’t fared well since his return from the DL, slashing .163 BA/.250 OBP/.233 SLG/.483 OPS with 13 punch outs (28.9% K%). (Photo Credit: Tampa Bay Rays)

The scuffling New York Mets play host to the Tampa Bay Rays, as the pair open a three-game interleague series Friday night at Citi Field. The series marks the team’s first trek to Queens since the Rays called Citi Field home for three-games last season, in the wake of Hurricane Irma.

The Rays started their six-game road trip on a rather inauspicious note, dropping two of three games to the Miami Marlins. The Mets split a two-game set with Toronto.

(Stats Credit: ESPN)

Tampa Bay, again, has the opportunity to jump above the .500 mark with a series win. Furthermore, if playing competitive baseball is their raison d’être, then the Rays — who have gone 7-3 over over a 10-game stretch — need to use this series as a springboard to another one of their patented winning streaks leading up to the All-Star Break. New York has had the had the opposite success over its last 10 games, flailing to a 3-7 record.

(Stats Credit: FanGraphs)

Pitching Probables

Kevin Cash will lean on Ryne Stanek (1-2, 1.98 ERA) to open the first game of the series, Blake Snell (11-4, 2.24 ERA) and Nathan Eovaldi (2-3, 3.92 ERA). Mickey Callaway will counter with Steven Matz (4-5, 3.46 ERA), Jacob deGrom (5-4, 1.84 ERA), and a pitcher to be named before the series finale on Sunday.

(Stats Credit: FanGraphs)

Ryne Stanek saw his 12-appearance scoreless streak come to an end on Monday, in a relief loss to Miami. Still, the right-hander has a 0.85 WHIP and 22 strikeouts over 17-2/3 innings. Andrew Kittredge looks like the top candidate to cover the bulk of the innings behind Stanek, due to the heavy workloads that many of the Rays’ other long-relief options have assumed lately.

Steven Matz threw 5-1/3 innings on Sunday, allowing one unearned run on three hits and two walks while fanning six. The only run that scored was off an error by Matz. The southpaw lowered his season ERA to 3.46 alongside a respectable 3.62 K/BB. Even so, he has allowed six runs over his last 12 innings of work. This season Matz has relied primarily on his 94 mph sinker, while also mixing in a firm 84 mph changeup with slight armside fade and some natural sink, a 79 mph curveball with slight glove-side movement, and an 89 mph worm-killer slider. Key Matchups: Matt Duffy (1-3), Adeiny Hechavarria (2-6, 2 RBI), Wilson Ramos (2-6, RBI)

Blake Snell allowed one run on four hits and a walk while striking out 10 over 7-1/3 innings on Sunday. Snell’s lone earned run came on a seventh inning solo shot off the bat of Evan Gattis giving Houston a one-run lead, but Tampa Bay struck back for two in the bottom half of the frame, setting Snell up for the win. In 18 starts this season, Snell sits with an outstanding 2.24 ERA and 1.01 WHIP with a 3/1 K/BB over 108-2/3 innings. His last start, in front of AJ Hinch, may have solidified Snell’s first All-Star nomination.

Jacob DeGrom allowed three runs on six hits and a walk over six innings on Sunday. He struck out eight. The right-hander cruised through five scoreless innings before allowing a two-run homer. A misplayed grounder gave deGrom his third, and final, earned run on the night. Despite delivering nine consecutive quality starts, deGrom somehow has a 2-4 record over that stretch. He is 0-0 with a 2.84 ERA in one career start against Tampa Bay. This season deGrom has relied primarily on his 96 mph four-seam fastball and a 91 mph slider, while also mixing in an 89 mph changeup, a 96 mph sinker and an 83 mph curveball. Key Matchups: CJ Cron (1-2, BB), Carlos Gomez (4-10, RBI), Kevin Kiermaier (1-2)

Nathan Eovaldi threw six innings of two-run ball on Monday against the Marlins. Eovaldi allowed eight hits and walked one, while punching out five along the way. Eovaldi endured his share of baserunners in this outing, although he allowed just two extra-base hits and induced 11 groundball outs to limit the damage. The righty allowed a run on three hits in the second inning and another on a solo home run in the fifth. Things are looking up for Eovaldo, who’s thrown two consecutive quality starts, posting a 4.67 K/BB while allowing just two earned runs across 12 total innings of work.

Noteworthiness

— Following the series finale with the Marlins, the Rays optioned RHP Ryan Weber back to Triple-A Durham. A countermove will be announced before the series opener with the Mets.

Tampa Bay Rays 7/4/18 pregame notes, roster moves

Daniel Robertson tied a club record by reaching base six times last night. (Photo Credit: Tampa Bay Rays)

After a wild, 16-inning marathon — resulting in a 9-6 victory — the Tampa Bay Rays look to win the first leg of the 2018 Citrus Series this afternoon in Miami.

There’s too much to unpack from last night’s contest, so in lieu of half-assing a game recap, check out these three:

Rays: 9, Marlins: 6 – OMG (DRaysBay)

Game 85: Rays 9 Marlins 6 (16 innings) -Postgame News and Notes (Rays Radio)

The secret to Rays 16-inning success vs. Marlins (Tampa Bay Times

The New What Next

The Rays are planning to rely on a “heavy, heavy” bullpen day against the Marlins, having used nine pitchers in the 16-inning win over Miami.

Matt Andriese (1-3, 3.86 ERA), who pitched Monday, will start for Tampa Bay, pitching opposite of Jose Urena (2-9, 4.40 ERA).

Andriese has allowed runs in four of his six appearances since the start of June, pitching to a 5.52 ERA.

Urena will make his first appearance since being placed on the 10-day DL on June 21 with right shoulder impingement. He had his best outing of the season two turn ago, throwing eight scoreless innings and holding the Orioles to three hits. Urena, however, wasn’t as fortunate five days later, allowing five runs on eight hits over 5-2/3 innings to the Giants. The right-hander is 0-0 with a 1.59 ERA against Tampa Bay in 5-2/3 innings in six relief appearances. This season he has relied primarily on his 96 mph four-seam fastball with heavy sinking action and obvious tail, and a hard 87 mph 12-6 slider, while also mixing in a 91 mph changeup with backspin and slight armside fade. Key Matchups: Wilson Ramos (1-3), Daniel Robertson (1-1)

You can read about the series in our preview.

Rays 7/4/18 Starting Lineup

Kiermaier CF
Robertson 2B
Bauers LF
Cron 1B
Wendle 3B
Gomez RF
Adames SS
Sucre C
Andriese RHP

Noteworthiness

— Send reinforcements!

Vidal Nuno was placed on the 10-day disabled list with a right hamstring strain, while Austin Pruitt was optioned back to Triple-A Durham.

Andrew Kittredge was recalled from Durham, and right-hander Ryan Weber was selected from Durham.

To make room for Weber on the 40-man roster, Wilmer Font was transferred to the 60-day DL.

— Chris Archer was sharp on Tuesday in his first, and potentially only, rehab start as he works his way back from an abdominal strain. Archer threw four no-hit innings for the Class-A Charlotte Stone Crabs, striking out seven and walking one, while throwing 37 of his 54 pitches for strikes (68% strike rate). Archer’s fastball velocity was good, clocking in at 93-96 mph. If all goes well, and Archer feels good over the next few days, the Rays could bring him back as soon as Monday against Detroit at Tropicana Field, giving him two starts before the All-Star Break.

Rays 7/3/18 pregame notes, injury updates, international signings

A ninth inning run wasn’t enough for the Rays to come out ahead of the Marlins in extra innings. (Photo Credit: Tampa Bay Rays)

The Tampa Bay Rays look to bounce back against the Miami Marlins, after dropping an extra inning loss Monday night, 3-2. A win would get the Rays back over the .500 mark. Tampa Bay starts the day 2-8 in games against the National League this season.

The Rays had been planning to use RHP Ryne Stanek as Tuesday night’s opener, getting the first three to six outs. However, after he pitched the 10th inning Monday night, Ryan Yarbrough will function as the traditional starter instead.

The New What Next

Ryan Yarbrough (7-4, 3.76 ERA) will toe the rubber opposite of Trevor Richards (2-5, 5.06 ERA).

Ryan Yarbrough allowed one just earned run on seven hits and a walk over 6-1/3 innings of hard luck loss to Houston on Thursday. He struck out four. Yarbrough entered the game with two outs in the second inning and worked into and out of trouble for a considerable amount of his appearance. However, the southpaw managed to coax 10 groundballs and allowed only one extra-base hit — a home run to Jake Marisnick — which limited the damage. He also threw 62 of 95 pitches for strikes. It was a nice bounce back performance for Yarbrough, who allowed 15 earned runs over four of his last six outings.

Trevor Richards gave up three runs on six hits and two walks while fanning three batters over 4.0 innings against the Diamondbacks. Arizona got to Richards early, scratching all of their runs across over the first two frames. Even though Richards was BABIP’d, his command was shaky from the start, as 28 of his 75 pitches went for balls (37% ball rate). Overall, Richards was hot and cold in the month June, following up strong quality starts with subpar work. He has pitched against AL East teams (Boston and Baltimore) twice this season and has allowed 11 runs across 7-2/3 innings. This season he has relied primarily on his 92 mph four-seam fastball and a whiffy 84 mph changeup swith ome natural sink to it, while also mixing in a hard 81 mph 12-6 curveball.

You can read about the series in our preview.

The New What Next: Rays vs Marlins — an interleague series preview

Rays 7/3/18 Starting Lineup

Kiermaier CF
Duffy 3B
Bauers 1B
Ramos C
Wendle LF
Robertson 2B
Hechavarria SS
Smith RF
Yarbrough LHP

Noteworthiness

— Chris Archer, who threw a 46-pitch simulated game on Thursday, and a 65-pitch bullpen on Saturday, is slated to make a rehab start Tuesday with Class-A Advanced Charlotte, with a decision pending whether he could return after that (July 8 in New York, or July 9 at home) or make a second rehab appearance. Archer will throw four innings or 60 pitches, whichever comes first.

We’ll monitor the weather, Rays manager Cash said. If it means we’ve got to delay (the start) for 35 minutes or somebody else needs to start the game to make sure Arch gets his 65-70 pitches in we’ll do that.

— Yonny Chirinos, who was recently placed on the Triple-A disabled list, threw a 35-pitch bullpen on Sunday and is reportedly feeling better and on the upswing.

— The International Signing Period began on Monday, and the Rays signed five of the top 50 prospects (per Baseball America) in this year’s class.

The Rays reportedly inked deals with 16 year-old SS Alejandro Pie; 16 year-old twin shortstops Ryson and Rainer Polonius; 16 year-old OF Estanli Castillo; SS Daury del Rosario; right-handed pitchers Justino Dominguez, Jose Gonzalez and Anthony Molina; and left-handers Brayan Dum and Daniel Gonzalez.

Today is an exciting day for the organization and I’m really proud of the job our scouting group did to put us in position to add this much talent into the system, international scouting director Carlos Rodriguez said. Our organization is built on our ability to add high end talent and develop it. We feel we’ve added a strong collection of tools and skills that have a chance to impact the organization in the years to come and we will continue to add the best possible players going forward as today signals the beginning of the 2018-2019 signing period.

The Rays reportedly agreed to a $1.4-million with Pie the big, athletic, highly touted and talented shortstop, although the team has not confirmed the deal.

At the plate, Pie exhibits above-average bat speed and projects to have above-average power in the future. And while Baseball America pegs him as “an athletic shortstop with plus speed and a plus arm,” it is thought he projects more as an outfielder, where his speed — he is clocked in the 6.65 second range in the 60-yard run — translates into the ability to cover a lot of ground.

The Polonius twins are southpaw-hitting shortstops who both are 6 feet and 140 pounds. Ryson (ranked 30th) and Rainer (ranked 31st) are quick, fast and athletic, although both need to gain weight and strength.

Estanli Castillo is regarded for his raw power and batting practice power shows in the Dominican Republic.

Jesse Sanchez (MLB.com) wrote about the rules surrounding the International Signing Period:

According to the rules established by the Collective Bargaining Agreement, clubs — like the Rays — that received a Competitive Balance Pick in Round B of the MLB Draft received a pool of $6,025,400, while clubs that received a Competitive Balance Pick in Round A of the Draft received $5,504,500. All other clubs received $4,983,500.

Teams are allowed to trade as much of their international pool money as they would like, but can only acquire 75 percent of a team’s initial pool amount. Additionally, signing bonuses of $10,000 or less do not count toward a club’s bonus pool, and foreign professional players who are at least 25 and have played in a foreign league for at least six seasons are also exempt.

The New What Next: Rays vs Marlins — an interleague series preview

Mallex Smith’s first homer of the season solidified the Rays come-from-behind win against Astros on Sunday. (Photo Credit: Tampa Bay Rays)

The Tampa Bay Rays head south to Miami for the first three games of the annual Citrus Series matchup against the Marlins. The return visit at Tropicana Field is set right after the All-Star Break. The Rays are coming off an 8-1 home stand, having beat three playoff contending teams in the Yankees, Nationals, and Astros. The Marlins took two of three from the Mets this past weekend.

(Stats Credit: ESPN)

Both teams are having drastically different seasons, although they enter this series in a similar spot in their respective divisions. Tampa Bay enters the series 13-games out of first place in the AL East, and 11 out of the second Wildcard spot, while the Marlins are 15-½ games out in the NL East. Despite that, the Rays are entering one of the easiest stretches of play, with the next 16 games against the sub .500 Marlins, Mets, Tigers and Twins.

An easy stretch of play? Yes … albeit a crucial one for Tampa Bay, which has an opportunity to accumulate some tallies on the left side of the ledger. Baseball Prospectus gives the Rays a 5.6% chance of a playoff berth, odds that increase with each win. Granted they’ll need a lot of help along the way, and a postseason berth is far from an inevitability. But, they have an opportunity to play a role in their idealized outcome, and that is predicated on victories. Besides winning is fun, and so is watching the youth movement go to work.

(Stats Credit: FanGraphs)

Pitching Probables

Over the next three days Kevin Cash is projected to lean on Nathan Eovaldi (2-3, 4.08 ERA), Ryan Yarbrough (7-4, 3.76 ERA), and the Rays ‘pen (19-19, 3.45 ERA). Don Mattingly will counter with Wei-Yin Chen (2-5, 6.14 ERA), Trevor Richards (2-5, 5.06 ERA), and a pitcher to be named before the series finale.

(Stats Credit: FanGraphs)

Nathan Eovaldi was incredible in his debut on May 30, dazzling with six no-hit innings. Yet the right-hander got knocked around prior to his last start, allowing eight homers over a four-game stretch. Nevertheless Eovaldi returned to form and earned the win against Washington on Tuesday after he allowed just one hit and two walks over six scoreless innings, while recording nine strikeouts. The right-hander lowered his ERA to 4.08 (from 4.91) and has performed to a  0.82 WHIP with a 6/1 K/BB over 35-1/3 innings.

I definitely feel good about the way I’ve been pitching, Eovaldi told Marc Topkin (Tampa Bay Times). I’ve kind of surprised myself with how I’ve been filling up the strike zone with all my pitches. I’m going to try to repeat that and incorporate the curveball more.

Eovaldi  spent parts of three seasons with the Marlins, going 13-27 with a 4.10 ERA in 63 starts.

It’s just another team, he said. Back when I made my first start against them, it had a little more meaning.

Wei Yin Chen was a tough-luck loser Wednesday after he allowed just one run on five hits and a walk over six innings against Arizona. He struck out five. Chen threw 60 of his 88 pitches for strikes (68% strike rate) and allowed just one extra-base hit as he stifled the Diamondbacks for much of the evening. The Marlins’ bats couldn’t pick him up though — getting blanked into the bottom of the ninth. The southpaw has thrown a pair of quality starts in his last three outings, however, the results for the bulk of the year have been significantly worse. Over 55-2/3 innings, Chen has a 6.14 ERA, 1.62 WHIP and 1.64 K/BB. He is 5-6 with a 3.72 ERA in 21 career starts against the Rays. Key Matchups: CJ Cron (2-3), Carlos Gomez (1-3, HR, 3 RBI), Kevin Kiermaier (4-13, 3B, HR, 2 RBI)

Ryan Yarbrough allowed one just earned run on seven hits and a walk over 6-1/3 innings of hard luck loss to Houston on Thursday. He struck out four. Yarbrough entered the game with two outs in the second inning and worked into and out of trouble for a considerable amount of his appearance. However, the southpaw managed to coax 10 groundballs and allowed only one extra-base hit — a home run to Jake Marisnick — which limited the damage. He also threw 62 of 95 pitches for strikes. It was a nice bounce back performance for Yarbrough, who allowed 15 earned runs over four of his last six outings.

Trevor Richards gave up three runs on six hits and two walks while fanning three batters over 4.0 innings against the Diamondbacks. Arizona got to Richards early, scratching all of their runs across over the first two frames. Even though Richards was BABIP’d, his command was shaky from the start, as 28 of his 75 pitches went for balls (37% ball rate). Overall, Richards was hot and cold in the month June, following up strong quality starts with subpar work. This season he has relied primarily on his 92 mph four-seam fastball and a whiffy 84 mph changeup swith ome natural sink to it, while also mixing in a hard 81 mph 12-6 curveball.

Neither the Rays nor the Marlins have named a starter for the series finale, on Wednesday. I will update things when a hurler is announced.

Noteworthiness

— Is Carlos Gomez finally turning things around? Gomez got two of the team’s eight hits on Sunday, his fourth multihit game in his past 13 games. He’s hitting .310 over that stretch.

— Part of the Rays recent spate of success comes courtesy of the pitching staff, which has allowed two runs or fewer in six straight games, a club record. Their ERA during their nine-game homestand was 1.39.

— Sunday was the 36th one-run game for Tampa Bay this season, out of 83 (43.3% of their games). They, however, improved to 16-20 in one-run games.