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If by "becoming bad radio" you mean that he's absolutely sucked from the moment he debuted at the Score, you're correct. And as far as his status as one of the leading baseball thinkers goes, I can only pose this question: How's that transition to centerfield, the easiest outfield position to play according to Sone, working out for Alfonso Soriano?
of the outfield positions, and depending on the park you play in, center field is the easiest of the three. it still requires an athletic player to be out there (i'm not arguing that you could throw jim thome or todd helton or whatever mis-shapen potato you'd like to name out there), but it's easiest for the following reasons:
- the ball rarely slices or hooks out to center as it does to lf/rf
- the sightline to the batter is the clearest from centerfield. that's why teams put their in-house video (the ones used for team analysis, not for broadcasts) in center field, though obviously the center fielder isn't always aligned to it.
- the average throw from a center fielder to a relay man near second base on the infield is generally shorter than it is from the corner outfield positions
for those reasons, center field is the easiest outfield position to play. that said, there are special cases -- left field @ fenway or minute maid could have been designed with manny ramirez and carlos lee in mind. but this is chicago, and more specifically, wrigley field, which has a relatively standard center field layout and distance, while the corners are "pocketed" which causes problems with the wind and fielding hits down the line.
there is no need for the "gazelle" type center fielder in either chicago park. if anything, letting jacque jones (a poor defender with a rag arm) play wrigley's right field for the entirety of 2006 should be viewed as one of the more fireable offenses perpetrated by dusty baker, but it hasn't really been discussed until recently.