Yankees leading candidate in trade for pitcher Sonny Gray
July 30, 2017 by admin
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How would Sonny Gray look in pinstripes? Taller? Thinner? Is either even possible?
Monday’s trade deadline is getting closer, and so are the A’s and Yankees in talks on a Gray-to-the-Bronx deal that would move the 5-foot-10 pitcher from last place to the pennant race.
Gray took out the lineup card to umpires before Saturday night’s 5-4 victory over the Twins at the Coliseum — manager Bob Melvin’s 1,000th career victory — and stopped preparing to pitch in Sunday’s series finale because the A’s announced Jharel Cotton would start instead.
This would assure that any team acquiring Gray would get him for an extra start. Monday’s deadline is 1 p.m., and the A’s penciled in Gray to start Monday night’s interleague opener against the Giants, just in case he’s still around.
It seems unlikely. The A’s are heading for a third straight last-place finish, and Gray would bring prospects who could help long term. The A’s need a center fielder and, as always, pitching.
Sources confirmed Saturday night the Yankees were the leading candidate for Gray, though several other contenders remain on the prowl for starting pitchers, including the Dodgers, Astros, Cubs and Brewers.
Billy Beane, the A’s executive vice president of baseball operations, is a long-time buddy of Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, which can’t hurt. That Cashman is hesitant to part with outfielder Clint Frazier and infielder Gleyber Torres isn’t considered a deal breaker because the Yankees’ list of top-drawer prospects runs deep.
The A’s traded relievers Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson to Washington on July 16 and could move more pieces before the deadline, including first baseman Yonder Alonso and second baseman Jed Lowrie.
“He’s doing fine with it,” manager Bob Melvin said of Gray’s mind-set amid the trade buzz. “It’s all about performance, and he’s been performing pretty well. Off the field, each guy handles it a little differently, but it has not affected his performance on the field, and that’s the most important thing.”
Many starting pitchers are said to be available via trades, but Gray’s price should be steeper than most because he’s young (27), relatively cheap ($3.575 million) and in a groove (1.37 ERA in his past six starts).
Plus, Gray’s healthy, which hasn’t always been the case in 2016 and 2017. Beane and general manager David Forst are negotiating from a position of strength, especially because Gray won’t be a free agent until after the 2019 season.
If the A’s can’t succeed in the regular season, they want to succeed in the trading season, and Gray is their biggest chip. So it was no surprise when the A’s announced Cotton will start Sunday in Gray’s place.
Melvin played down trade talk as the chief reason, saying, “I guess there is the potential for that if you’re looking at it all around, but for us, we felt like regardless, it’s the prudent thing to do.”
Melvin mentioned Gray has been pitching a lot lately — between 98 and 108 pitches in each of 10 starts in June and July — and Cotton would be pitching on normal rest after a Tuesday rehab start with Triple-A Nashville.
Cotton (thumb blister) will be activated from the disabled list Sunday. After hearing of Oakland’s pitching change, Twins manager Paul Molitor said, “Obviously, something’s in the mix there,” implying a trade seems imminent.
John Shea is The San Francisco Chronicle’s national baseball writer. Email: jshea@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @JohnSheaHey
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We’re heading into peak state fair season. How safe is your ride?
July 30, 2017 by admin
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What you should know about the Ohio State Fair accident that left one person dead and several others injured.
Dana Branham/The Enquirer
CINCINNATI — Carnival-ride deaths may be rare, but states such as Ohio — where the Fire Ball broke apart on the Ohio State Fair’s opening night Wednesday in Columbus — have too few inspectors and not enough safety regulations, experts say.
The 18-year-old Marine recruit who died, Tyler Jarrell of Columbus, and seven others ages 14 to 42 who were injured shine a spotlight on the patchwork system of regulation throughout the United States, they say.
“It’s scary, isn’t it? … And it’s messy,” said Mark Hanlon, a Los Angeles-based engineer who works extensively with the amusement-ride industry. “Every state has their own regulation, … and a lot of them don’t have much.”
Between now and mid-September is peak state fair season: In addition to the California, Delaware, Maine, Montana, North Dakota and Ohio state fairs going on now, half of the other states also will have their statewide fairs in the next month and a half.
► Friday: Family of Ohio State Fair victim pursues wrongful death lawsuit
► Thursday: How a day at the Ohio State Fair turned tragic
► Thursday: How often do accidents happen at amusement, water parks?
Ohio has eight inspectors to check amusement rides annually and do spot checks — on-site inspections of how rides are set up and how operators are working the rides —around the state. Those inspectors issued more than 3,700 annual permits in 2015, the most recent year for which numbers are available.
“When it comes to Ohio, do the math and look at how many hours do they get to do real inspections,” Hanlon said.
No charges in Texas carnival-ride death investigation
► September: 8 taken to hospitals after fair ride malfunctions in Tennessee
► August 2016: Funnel cakes and murder at the Iowa State Fair
Officials with that organization did not return messages seeking comment.
Rides are safe, and state regulators do a good job at keeping operators on their toes, industry officials say, even while acknowledging the inconsistent standards across the USA.
“What happened in Columbus was tragic, yes, but it is a very rare event for us,” said Bob Johnson, president of the Outdoor Amusement Business Association. The Florida-based trade group represents operators of rides that move from place to place.
► August 2016: Child falls from Pennsylvania roller coaster
► August 2016: Girls injured in Ferris wheel accident improving, mom says
“We work very hard with other organizations, manufacturers and our owner/operator members to raise the safety bar,” Johnson said. “The owners are the ones with the most at stake, after all. These are family-owned businesses for the most part, and the last thing they want to do is hurt someone.”
The sparse number of inspectors and low fine levels are par for the course for much of the country, experts say.
In some places, oversight is even less than in Ohio. California, Florida and New Jersey are cited as having very tough safety standards.
In California, the ride inspection agency is completely self-sustaining through inspection fees and fines.
In Texas, the regulation is very lax — even less than in Ohio.
“This is really tragic because I know some of these guys, but it still shows how inconsistent it can be,” said Ken Martin, an amusement ride safety analyst and inspector from Richmond, Va. “What happened in Ohio this week shows the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this stuff.”
The industry and state regulators often have a cozy relationship, Martin said. Some former officials move into private inspecting businesses or even jobs with bigger ride operators.
► August 2016: Water slide death casts shadow on summer tradition
► July 2016: Hemp Dawgs break food barrier at Kentucky State Fair
“There’s a lot of sleeping together that goes on in this industry,” Martin said.
Johnson, who is chairman of Florida’s amusement ride advisory council, denied that even as he acknowledged that industry officials work closely with state legislators and regulators.
“We are always working to encourage higher safety levels,” he said.
► July 2016: Celebrating Iowa State Fair’s legendary butter cow
► June 2016: Famous state fair foods at American restaurants
The current state-level system began in the 1980s when Congress turned over regulation of amusement parks and mobile-ride operators to states. That left state officials scrambling to create standards.
A few recommended inspection standards have been created since, but many states don’t follow those closely or only use parts of those recommendations.
Ohio rules haven’t changed much since the 1990s even after these serious accidents:
• May 29, 2011. Dr. Amgad William Abdou, who lived in the Cleveland area at the time, was paralyzed after falling on a ride at an indoor inflatable park called Pump It Up in Cleveland. State inspectors did not fully check whether park employees knew how to instruct patrons on safety.
• June 12, 2010. Douglas Johnson, 54, of Greensburg, Pa., died nine days after an inflatable slide collapsed at a Kids Fun Day before a Cleveland Indians game.
• Aug. 13, 2003. Greyson Yoe, 8, of Madison Township, Ohio, was electrocuted in an improperly wired bumper car at the Lake County Fair and died less than a month later. Courts eventually found Ohio Agriculture Department inspectors liable.
At least 22 fatalities have been associated with amusement attractions nationwide since 2010, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, which is investigating Wednesday’s accident. It estimated 30,900 injuries associated with amusement attractions required an emergency room visit in 2016.
Earlier this year, Kansas voted to toughen its rules following the death of the son of a state legislator there. But lawmakers also voted to delay implementation of the new law until next year.
Overall, the current system relies too much on owners’ self-policing, Hanlon said.
In 2009, an Ohio Agriculture Department official said ride owners have the responsibility to set up rides correctly, the (Hamilton, Ohio) Journal-News reported after Tyler Maloney, then 11, of Middletown, Ohio, escaped serious injury June 27, 2009, when a large inflatable slide on which he was sitting was picked up in a gust of wind, flipping several times.
► September 2015: Fair stage collapse damages before Indiana court
► September 2015: Man dies working on Tulsa state fair ride
At the Ohio State Fair, all rides were shuttered Thursday on orders of the governor, but 28 low-impact amusements were reinspected and allowed to resume Friday. More than half remained closed.
Ohio’s fair is one of the biggest state fairs in the country, drawing 900,000 people last year.
“Maybe this will lead to a closer examination of what goes on there in Ohio,” Martin said.
Contributing: The Associated Press. Follow James Pilcher on Twitter: @jamespilcher
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