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Seattle Mariners' Kevin Millwood 2-hits…

DENVER — Kevin Millwood tossed a two-hitter for his first shutout in nearly nine years and Mike Carp hit a solo homer, helping the Seattle Mariners sn a four-game skid with a 4-0 win over the Colorado Rockies on Friday night.

It was also the 22nd complete game of the 37-year-old righty’s career.

Millwood (2-4) comfortably cruised through this game and didn’t surrender his first hit until two outs in the sixth. He struck out seven and walked one. He didn’t allow a runner to reach third until the ninth inning, but got Carlos Gonzalez to line out to end the game.

The Mariners improved to 2-6 on their 10-game, four-city road swing.

Carp hit his third homer of the season in the second, a towering shot to the deepest part of the park. Kyle Seager had an RBI single and drove in another on a sacrifice fly. John Jaso added an insurance run the ninth by bringing in Seager on a sac fly.

Alex White (0-3) was the hard-luck loser, dropping his sixth straight start in a dubious string that dates back to Sept. 16. After struggling early, White settled into a groove. He gave up three runs — two earned — and seven hits in seven solid innings.

After bouncing around, Millwood may have finally found a home with the Mariners.

The journeyman pitcher shuffled around the minor leagues with the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox for much of last season. He joined the Rockies rotation last August in an emergency situation, when Juan Nicasio was lost for the year after taking a line drive to the right temple and suffering a fractured skull along with a neck injury.

Millwood wound up 4-3 wearing Colorado’s purple pinstripes.

He once again had to prove himself this season, signing a minor league contract with Seattle. He started winless in his first six games this season, before beating the Yankees last Sunday.

Among all active pitchers, Millwood ranks fourth innings pitched (2,609), strikeouts (2,011) and games started (423). He’s also eighth in wins (165).

He flirted with a no-hitter, giving up his only two hits in the sixth inning. The first was on Marco Scutaro’s chopper that Seager couldn’t snare in the hole between third and short. The official scorer took a good, long look at the play before ruling it a hit. Jordan Pacheco followed with a single up the middle, but Scutaro was thrown out by Michael Saunders as he tried to advance to third.

Bee-ware

The swarm of bees that suddenly made Coors Field its new hive on Thursday brought back painful memories for Michael Cuddyer. That’s why he stayed clear of the buzzing mass which attached itself to a post near the Rockies’ dugout.

When Cuddyer was 17 years old, he was picking up the mail when he was stung more than dozen times by a bunch of bees that were residing underneath the mailbox.

“I was in the car and I couldn’t get out. I finally fell out of my car. It was bad,” Cuddyer recounted. “So, yeah, I’m terrified of bees.”

Mariners 4, Rockies 0 Seattle ab r h bi Colo. ab r h bi

Ackley 2b 4 0 0 0 Scutaro 2b 4 0 1 0

MSndrs cf 4 1 1 0 Pachec 3b 4 0 1 0

ISuzuki rf 4 1 2 0 CGnzlz lf 4 0 0 0

Seager 3b 3 1 2 2 Tlwtzk ss 3 0 0 0

Smoak 1b 4 0 1 0 Helton 1b 3 0 0 0

Jaso c 3 0 1 1 Cuddyr rf 3 0 0 0

Carp lf 3 1 1 1 WRosr c 3 0 0 0

C.Wells lf 1 0 0 0 Fowler cf 2 0 0 0

Ryan ss 2 0 0 0 White p 2 0 0 0

Millwd p 3 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0

Roenck p 0 0 0 0

EYong ph 0 0 0 0

Totals 31 4 8 4 Totals 28 0 2 0

Seattle 110 001 001 — 4

Colorado 000 000 000 — 0

E — W.Rosario (2). DP — Colorado 1. LOB — Seattle 3, Colorado 3. 2B — Jaso (6). 3B — M.Saunders (1), Seager (1). HR — Carp (3). SB — I.Suzuki (6), Fowler (3). CS — Seager (1). SF — Seager, Jaso.

Seattle IP H R ER BB SO

Millwood W,2-4 9 2 0 0 1 7

Colorado IP H R ER BB SO

White L,0-3 7 7 3 2 0 7

Mat.Reynolds 12/3 1 1 1 0 2

Roenicke 1/3 0 0 0 0 1

HBP — by Millwood (E.Young), by White (Ryan). T — 2:32. A — 34,887 (50,398).

What are your opinions.

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Monster ball a hit as Lester, Red Sox beat…

BOSTON – The young Seattle Mariners played another patience-bending game Monday, the kind where hitters didn’t hit and the team didn’t score enough runs to win.

Jason Vargas couldn’t keep the Red Sox off that famed Green Monster in left field and Bellarmine Prep grad Jon Lester threw a complete-game in Boston’s 6-1 victory.

“You come to the plate, you can’t help seeing that left-field wall, it looks right there,” Dustin Ackley said. “I think their players adt to it. Right-handers pull the ball, lefties stay on it and go the other way.

“You can’t do that as a visiting player, you can’t change your swing for two games. I’ve only played here maybe six games, but that team has never failed to hit that wall in those games.”

In the end, Boston had nine hits Monday, the Mariners eight.

“Vargas wasn’t quite as sharp as he’s been, he left a couple of pitches up,” manager Eric Wedge said. “We had hits, we hit some balls hard, had some great at-bats – we just didn’t do any damage.

“Their offense was just the opposite.”

One out into the first inning, Dustin Pedroia walked and David Ortiz popped a fly ball off the Green Monster for an RBI double. In Safeco Field, it wouldn’t have reached the warning track.

Adrian Gonzalez hit an opposite-field ground double to left and it was 2-0.

“The doubles were what they were,” Vargas said. “You’ve got to play the dimensions of the park you’re in.”

Boston used the ballpark’s unique layout again in the fourth inning, with home runs to left field by Daniel Nava and Kelly Shoppach giving the Red Sox a 5-0 lead.

Green Monster specials?

“The home runs were not che,” Vargas said. “I should have done a better job of keeping us in the game. I didn’t.”

Against Lester, a left-hander whose earned-run average coming in was 4.29, the Seattle offense had trouble getting started. Lester retired the side in order the first three innings, then gave up a two-out infield single in the fourth to Ichiro Suzuki.

That was the Mariners’ first baserunner.

“The first two or three innings, he got into a zone and I think it carried over for him all night,” said Ackley, whose sixth-inning single extended his hitting streak to 10 games. “He had a great cutter, a great curveball.

“The only time he got in trouble was when he fell behind in the count and had to throw a fastball. He didn’t pitch to that ERA.”

No, and by night’s end, Lester had a 2-3 record with a 3.71 ERA. He threw 14 or fewer pitches in each of the first three innings. Lester finished with 119 pitches.

“When you get the batters making early contact and fly balls guy after guy, it helps,” Lester said.

Seattle banged out three hits in the seventh inning and not only didn’t score, they couldn’t keep all those men on base.

Jesus Montero and Justin Smoak singled to open the inning, but Kyle Seager lined out to second base, and Montero was caught way off the bag for a double play.

Alex Liddi singled, but Michael Saunders popped out.

After Lester got the Mariners in order in the eighth inning, it looked like he’d become the fifth pitcher this season to shut out Seattle.

Ichiro singled and took third base on Smoak’s one-out double. Seager, the team RBI leader, drove home his 21st run with a ground ball to second base.

And that was the Mariners’ scoring for the night.

“He had great stuff and pitched his best when he was in trouble,” Ackley said.

Wedge tried to explain his team. Again.

“To a man, everyone in our lineup is working on something at the plate,” Wedge said. “You watch Smoak, Saunders, Seager, they all had better at-bats tonight.

“The fundamentals are mostly there. It’s the mindset that a hitter has to have up there – that’s got a ways to go.”

Smoak had two hits and inched his average to .214. Saunders had one and is at .223.

That’s better but not nearly enough, and couple those averages with those of Casper Wells (.216) and Brendan Ryan (.140) and the Mariners have holes in their lineup they can’t hide.

Ackley’s 10-game hitting streak has pushed his season average to … .248.

Put another way, Seager is the only Mariners player with as many as 20 RBI. The Red Sox had four in their lineup – including leadoff hitter Mike Aviles (25).

The Mariners’ team average is .235, so it’s small wonder that in the 19 games Seattle has scored three runs or fewer this season, their record is 3-16.

Wedge and his front office are holding firm to the patience-is-a-virtue philosophy, but waiting on a lineup of pups is more difficult without a few productive veterans.

Ichiro, who had his worst season in 2011, is batting .291 this season but has only 13 RBI while batting third.

Patience goes only so far. Shortstop Ryan’s job dangles by a tenuous thread and the daily lineup remains in flux. And, perhs more important to the franchise and its fans, the Mariners are 16-21.

That’s exactly their record after 37 games in 2011.

The contributed to this report.

larry.larue@thenewstribune.com
blog.thenewstribune.com/mariners
@LarryLaRue

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Monster ball a hit for Red Sox

BOSTON – The young Seattle Mariners played another patience-bending game Monday, the kind where hitters didn’t hit and the team didn’t score enough runs to win.

Jason Vargas couldn’t keep the Red Sox off that famed Green Monster in left field and Bellarmine Prep grad Jon Lester threw a complete-game in Boston’s 6-1 victory.

“You come to the plate, you can’t help seeing that left-field wall, it looks right there,” Dustin Ackley said. “I think their players adt to it. Right-handers pull the ball, lefties stay on it and go the other way.

“You can’t do that as a visiting player, you can’t change your swing for two games. I’ve only played here maybe six games, but that team has never failed to hit that wall in those games.”

In the end, Boston had nine hits Monday, the Mariners eight.

“Vargas wasn’t quite as sharp as he’s been, he left a couple of pitches up,” manager Eric Wedge said. “We had hits, we hit some balls hard, had some great at-bats – we just didn’t do any damage.

“Their offense was just the opposite.”

One out into the first inning, Dustin Pedroia walked and David Ortiz popped a fly ball off the Green Monster for an RBI double. In Safeco Field, it wouldn’t have reached the warning track.

Adrian Gonzalez hit an opposite-field ground double to left and it was 2-0.

“The doubles were what they were,” Vargas said. “You’ve got to play the dimensions of the park you’re in.”

Boston used the ballpark’s unique layout again in the fourth inning, with home runs to left field by Daniel Nava and Kelly Shoppach giving the Red Sox a 5-0 lead.

Green Monster specials?

“The home runs were not che,” Vargas said. “I should have done a better job of keeping us in the game. I didn’t.”

Against Lester, a left-hander whose earned-run average coming in was 4.29, the Seattle offense had trouble getting started. Lester retired the side in order the first three innings, then gave up a two-out infield single in the fourth to Ichiro Suzuki.

That was the Mariners’ first baserunner.

“The first two or three innings, he got into a zone and I think it carried over for him all night,” said Ackley, whose sixth-inning single extended his hitting streak to 10 games. “He had a great cutter, a great curveball.

“The only time he got in trouble was when he fell behind in the count and had to throw a fastball. He didn’t pitch to that ERA.”

No, and by night’s end, Lester had a 2-3 record with a 3.71 ERA. He threw 14 or fewer pitches in each of the first three innings. Lester finished with 119 pitches.

“When you get the batters making early contact and fly balls guy after guy, it helps,” Lester said.

Seattle banged out three hits in the seventh and not only didn’t score, they couldn’t keep all those men on base. Jesus Montero and Justin Smoak singled to open the inning, but Kyle Seager lined out to second base, and Montero was caught way off the bag for a double play.

Alex Liddi singled, but Michael Saunders popped out.

After Lester got the Mariners in order in the eighth inning, it looked like he’d become the fifth pitcher this season to shut out Seattle.

Ichiro singled and took third base on Smoak’s one-out double. Seager, the team RBI leader, drove home his 21st run with a ground ball to second base.

And that was the Mariners’ scoring for the night.

“He had great stuff and pitched his best when he was in trouble,” Ackley said.

The contributed to this report.

larry.larue@thenewstribune.com
blog.thenewstribune.com/mariners
@LarryLaRue

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Seattle Mariners can't solve Jon Lester in 6-1…

BOSTON — Seattle’s Dustin Ackley had never faced Jon Lester before Monday night and afterward said that the Boston Red Sox left-hander’s cutter looked identical to his fastball.

Ackley wasn’t the only Mariner who couldn’t figure out Lester.

Lester scattered eight hits without walking a batter in his second complete game of the season to lead the Red Sox to their fourth straight win, 6-1 over Seattle.

“He’s got some great pitches. His curveball’s a great pitch, too,” said Ackley, who went 1 for 4 with a single. “He gets ahead with that on guys early, and when he’s able to use the cutter, it’s a great pitch for him. When you have a pitch like that, you’re going to miss barrels a lot.”

Swing and miss the Mariners did.

Seattle didn’t manage a hit off Lester (2-3) until Ichiro Suzuki singled with two outs in the fourth inning, and they mustered merely six hits — all singles — through eight innings. Lester struck out six, including Alex Liddi to c his first nine-inning complete game since June 27, 2010. He also tossed an eight-inning complete game earlier this season in a loss at Toronto.

Lester required 119 pitches to finish off his eighth career complete game, surrendering the lone run in the ninth when Suzuki singled, moved to third on a double by Justin Smoak and scored on Kyle Seager’s groundout.

“I’ve seen him pretty good, unfortunately. But he was good tonight, too,” Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. “He’s a smart kid. As he works his way through the lineup the second and third times, he does a nice job mixing-and-matching and he did a lot of that tonight.”

Daniel Nava and Kelly Shoppach homered for Boston.

David Ortiz and Adrian Gonzalez added consecutive RBI doubles for the Red Sox, who won their fourth straight at home. Boston is on its longest home winning streak since cturing nine straight last July.

The Red Sox opened just 4-11 at Fenway Park.

The Mariners, on the second stop of a four-city, 11-game trip, have dropped four of six. Seattle entered the day with the AL’s second-worst batting average at .235.

Suzuki and Smoak each had two hits for the Mariners.

Jason Vargas (4-3) had his worst start of the season, allowing five runs and seven hits in six innings. He had allowed two runs or fewer in six of his eight starts this year.

Lester retired the first 11 batters before Suzuki reached on an infield hit when the ball caromed off the pitcher’s glove. Third baseman Will Middlebrooks had little time to make a throw when he finally recovered the ball.

Leading 2-0, the Red Sox increased their lead to 5-0 on the homers by Nava and Shoppach. Nava hit his second career home run into the first row of seats above the Green Monster after Cody Ross singled leading off the fourth. One out later, Shoppach belted one over the Monster seats, completely out of Fenway, for his first of the season.

Nava’s only other homer was a grand slam on the first pitch he saw in the big leagues, making him just the second player in major league history to accomplish the feat. Kevin Kouzmanoff was the other, doing it with Cleveland in 2006.

Marlon’s Byrd’s sacrifice fly made it 6-0 in the eighth.

Boston had grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first on doubles on consecutive pitches to Ortiz and Gonzalez.

Boston’s Dustin Pedroia went 0 for 4, snping his 14-game hitting streak.

NOTES: Nava, who spent all of 2011 at Triple-A Pawtucket, had gone 171 at-bats between homers. … Vargas hadn’t given up more than four runs in a start this season. … Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine said 3B Kevin Youkilis, on the 15-day DL since ril 29 with a strained lower back, took groundballs Monday and isn’t far away from returning. … Wedge feels his struggling lineup needs a lot more help from Suzuki. “I’m hoping we can get a little more production out of the 3-spot, out of Ichiro, driving in runs,” he said. “He’s the one veteran we’ve got in the lineup and he has to produce for us.” … Wedge also said he sees improvement from 1B Smoak, who entered the game hitting .205. “He’s been better. He’s been more consistent to the point of contact.” … The Red Sox honored the 2012 NCAA Hockey champion Boston College Eagles before the game.

That’s all the news for today.

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Lester pitches complete game in Red Sox victory

BOSTON — Boston Red Sox left-hander Jon Lester recorded a complete-game victory, losing his shutout in the ninth inning as Boston beat the Seattle Mariners 6-1 on Monday. Lester did not allow a hit until there were two outs in the fourth inning, when Ichiro Suzuki broke up Lester’s bid for his second career no-hitter with a comebacker that bounced off Lester’s glove for a single. “I think that’s everybody’s goal when they go out there, to throw a no-hitter, perfect game,” Lester said. “Just ended up giving up a base hit a little later than normal. I just was able to keep the ball down. It’s obviously in the back of your mind, but I don’t think it really becomes significant until the sixth, seventh inning. That’s when you’re cutting those outs down and you might have a chance.” Lester ended up allowing one run on eight hits with no walks and six strikeouts. He improved his record to 2-3 with a 3.60 ERA. “He went out and he looked like he had a mission to accomplish and he accomplished it,” said Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine. “He was throwing all of his pitches early in the game, throwing them all for strikes, had a very confident look about himself and just for you younger reporters out there, that’s called a complete game — when a starter starts and then he finishes it.” Complete games have become quite rare in this era of pitch counts. “His cutter was really good,” said the Mariners Dustin Ackley. “That thing looked like his fastball and it just breaks off at the last minute. When you have a pitch like that, you’re going to miss barrels a lot.” Sox batters got to Mariners lefty Jason Vargas early, scoring two runs in the first inning. Dustin Pedroia walked with one out, and he scored on David Ortiz’s double. Ortiz then scored on Adrian Gonzalez’s double. In the fourth inning, Daniel Nava’s first-pitch, two-run homer over the left field wall scored Cody Ross, who had singled. It was the first home run of the season for Nava, who was called up from Triple-A Pawtucket on Thursday. It was also the first home run in 171 major league at-bats. Nava hit a grand slam on the first pitch he saw in the major leagues, on June 12, 2010. He then shuttled between Boston and Pawtucket in 2010, and spent all of 2011 and the start of 2012 in Pawtucket. “I didn’t think it was gone,” Nava said. “Knowing how big the wall is and seeing some other balls guys have hit, I didn’t think it compared to Will Middlebrooks’ bomb or Kelly Shoppach. I was surprised. It barely squeaked over. But I’ll take it.” Shoppach’s first home run of the season, a solo shot over the left field wall, gave the Sox a five-run lead. Jason Vargas took the loss, falling to 4-3, with a 3.28 ERA. He went six innings, giving up five runs on seven hits and three walks with three strikeouts. “It looked like he left a changeup up and another pitch out over they put a pretty good swing on,” said Mariners manager Eric Wedge. “He didn’t quite have the command you see from him, but still pitched a pretty good ballgame. It’s just the hits they got were damage-oriented, whether it be a ball getting up on the wall or over the wall.” The Sox added another run in the eighth against Mariners reliever Sean Kelly when Marlon Byrd hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to score Middlebrooks. The Mariners scored their lone run when Kyle Seager’s groundout scored Suzuki, who singled and took third on Justin Smoak’s double. NOTES: With a home run and two RBI Sunday against the Indians, Red Sox third baseman Middlebrooks became the third player to accumulate at least four home runs and 13 RBI over his first 10 games in the majors…Dustin Ackley got a partial day off, serving as the designated hitter, with Kyle Seager playing second base…Mariners right-hander Blake Beavan is scheduled to start Tuesday, his first pearance since leaving his last game after three innings on May 7 against the Tigers after being hit on the right elbow by a shot off the bat of Miguel Cabrera that turned into an inning-ending double play. Beavan is 1-3 with a 4.32 ERA…Kevin Millwood induced three double-play grounders for the Mariners in their win over the Yankees on Sunday. It was the most double plays for Millwood since June 27, 2006, a span of 154 starts…Pedroia’s 14-game hitting streak was snped as he went 0-for-3 with a walk. It had been the longest active streak in the majors….The Sox have a four-game win streak in which they are outscoring opponents 29-8…The Mariners are 2-9 against the American League East this season… Suzuki’s two hits give him 2,471, tying him with Joe Medwick for 98th on the all-time hit list…Ackley has a 10-game hit streak in which he is batting .297, 11-for-37.

That’s all for today.

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Carver’s John Gonsalves moonlights as Seattle…

If you’re a high school or collegiate baseball player with the skills and determination to go pro, John Gonsalves might want to talk with you.

Gonsalves is a part-time amateur scout with the Seattle Mariners and you might like what he has to say.

Of course, he has to like what he has to see.

“You have to pass the eye test,” said Gonsalves, a Carver resident in his fourth year working for the Mariners. “If you see someone who looks like an athlete, you just watch him play. You look for the five-tool type of player, of whom there are very few. (A five-tool player can hit, hit with power, has speed, can field and can throw – all at a high level).

“So you look at all their attributes and you grade them. You might see a kid who can hit mammoth home runs but strikes out half the time. But that power potential is something that pro teams are always looking for.

“For example, a kid might be an average runner, an average fielder with an average arm, but he has what they call plus power. That’s what (teams) are attracted to. If somebody has one great skill, like in pitching, if you have a 17-year-old kid who’s throwing 90, 92 miles an hour but has trouble finding the strike zone, he has a plus arm. So he’s someone you keep your eye on.

“You’re always looking for that one, or more, great skill. If you find one with all five, well, everybody else has found him, too.”

Then it’s up to which team gets the opportunity to select him when the amateur draft rolls around in June.

“With pitchers,” Gonsalves said, “you have to break down their delivery, find flaws in their delivery, watch their shoulder position, try to project whether they’ll be starters or relievers. That comes after watching kids throw quite a bit. The skill guys (veteran scouts) can do that.”

An Easton native who has lived in Carver for the last 11 years, Gonsalves, 54, is an amateur scout  who tracks high school kids, college players and other free agents who haven’t been signed yet.           

“A pro scout,” he said, “will go to minor league games and scout prospects within their own organization to see how they’re progressing and/or scout prospects in other organizations for possible trades.”

Pro scouts also scout other major league teams for various reasons. The scout’s parent team could be coming up soon on another MLB team’s schedule and a pre-series scouting report is due. Those “possible trades” might also figure in the scouting equation, as does another aspect of a scout’s learning process.

A face at Fenway

“The only pro scouting I do is at Fenway Park during September,” Gonsalves said. “Part of my training to be a scout is go to a bunch of pro games and actually scout the Red Sox. So I’m sitting there a couple of years ago, thinking, ‘What am I doing here? Here I am, a guy who lives in Carver, and I’m scouting Dustin Pedroia.’ The reason I was given is you can’t really scout a pro player unless you know what a pro player is.

“So I go to the Red Sox games early, watch batting practice, and watch how they proach the game. Then when I see college kids or high school kids, you try to see some of the same things. The Ce Cod League season (which Gonsalves also covers) is done by then, the draft was in June, college is certainly over, so it’s kind of a training ground to keep us on our toes.

“I do it every year. The fun part about it for me is you get to meet some of the older guys who have been around baseball for a long time and get to talk to them. You learn quite a bit.”

Gonsalves’ scouting area is the northeast, which embraces all six New England states and New York. Recently he was in warm, sunny Fort Myers, Fla., where he scouted some high school players as part of a working vacation.

“While I’m there, I give the scouting department a different look,” Gonsalves said in a phone interview. “Other scouts and I are there and everyone turns in a report on everybody they see.”

Gonsalves was not in Florida during spring training. He spent time watching New England college teams getting ready for the season.

“We try to cover every college,” he said. “We talk to the coach, find out who he believes his prospects are or draft-eligible players. College players are not draft-eligible until after their junior year (or if they’re 21 at least 45 days before the draft). So for three years we watch them, especially as a junior because they could be part of that year’s draft.

“Most college freshman we’ve seen as high school players and we just watch them progress. I keep files on them, file reports and go from there.”

Gonsalves said it is customary for big league organizations to pay for a draftee’s final collegiate year should he return to complete his degree.

Junior college players are draft-eligible at any time.

Gonsalves emphasized that scouts “just recommend the players. We don’t select them (in the draft).” That’s up to a team’s general manager and its scouting supervisor after all the players have been checked and cross-checked and final reports have been filed.

The highest draft pick of Seattle based partly on the recommendation of Gonsalves is power-hitting first baseman Mickey Wiswall of Stoneham and Boston College. He was drafted in the seventh round after his junior year in 2010 and is now with the High Desert Mavericks of the Class A Advanced California League.

Gonsalves grew up in Easton and attended Oliver Ames High School (Class of 1976). He was an infielder at OA and at UMass-Dartmouth (an ’81 grad), later played some semi-pro baseball, then started a family. He now has six kids and seven grandchildren.

His full-time job is that of a purchasing agent for a Middleboro firm that manufactures equipment for the packaging industry, but he finds time to serve as assistant boys varsity basketball coach at Oliver Ames in the winter and coach a Central Mass. AAU baseball team during the summer.

His high school connections helped Gonsalves land his scouting position. He was an assistant to Coyle-Cassidy baseball coach Brian Nichols, who eventually left that job for one in scouting. Now the east coast area scouting supervisor for the Mariners, Nichols asked Gonsalves to come aboard.

“Baseball is a good old boy network. It’s who you know,” Gonsalves said. “I’m sure there are a lot more qualified baseball people than I, but I just hpened to know the right guy.”

It’s not about the money

Money is not what anchors Gonsalves to scouting.

“It’s not a very lucrative job,” he said. “You don’t get paid a lot of money. I do it not so much for the money but for the love of the game. You get to see a lot of good players play and meet a lot of good coaches. That’s where I get most of my joy from. That’s very rewarding.”

Also rewarding is helping kids get into college, even if it means that a high school player he’s scouting, and recommends for drafting by the Mariners, will delay his signing a contract.

“Being a part-time scout,” Gonsalves said, “I talk to a lot of kids. It means as much to me if I can use my references that help a kid get a scholarship somewhere as it does getting a kid drafted in the 30th or 40th round and he might never make the big leagues. But a reference to a kid getting into a good school, that’s very rewarding. As I tell the kids, school really comes first. Get your education.

“If you’re looking at a kid in high school and you’re thinking about drafting him, chances are a lot of the top prospects have college offers at a Division 1 school. He’s pretty much set unless you draft him very high and unless you obviously give him a large signing bonus.”

Signing bonuses range widely, descending significantly from Round 1 of the Major League Baseball draft through the 50th    and final round. The average first-round pick in 2010 got $2,220,966, 10th-rounders were paid an average of $137,143, and those between rounds 41 and 50 received an average of $14,304.

Seattle’s first-round draft choice (second overall) in 2011, left-handed pitcher Danny Hultzen from the University of Virginia, signed a five-year contract worth $8.5 million. The deal for the 6-3, 200-pound Maryland native included a $6.35 million signing bonus and escalators that could push the total value to $10.6 million.

Hultzen, 22, is currently pitching for the Double-A Jackson (Tenn.) Generals of the Southern League.

“I spend a lot of time with high school and college kids. My biggest advice to kids – aside from the educational aspects – even if they’re not pro prospects but still good ballplayers, is that somebody’s always watching, somebody’s always observing how you play, how you act – sportsmanship. You never know who’s watching, so always hustle, never show a bad attitude because that is all part of the process.”       

Attitude is a big part of the process.

“One of the key questions is ‘What type of kid is he?’ Is he coachable? What’s his attitude? What’s he do when he fails? Baseball’s a tough game and you fail a lot of the time, so what does he do when he fails?

“If I see a kid who’s been great, and I call in someone else to watch him and that person sees him once and at his worst (attitude-wise), that’s it. They don’t want to see him anymore. That can be as damaging as it could be. Like anybody else you’d recommend in any job, that’s a bad recommendation for you. And that’s really what you want to avoid, obviously.”

Making a house call

Another way to judge a prospective draftee is to make a home visit, dig right in and poke around up close and personal. It’s akin to college basketball coaches on a recruiting trip.

Said Gonsalves, “That’s a great way to find out more about the kid, find out about his family, find out where he’s going to go to school, find out if he’s interested in the draft. Basically, try to find out his draftability.

“You might have a kid who’s going to Brown University, his father’s a surgeon, and he might be a great pitcher and you ask him. ‘Are you interested in playing pro baseball?’ And he says, ‘Well, maybe after I graduate from Brown. I want to be a surgeon like my dad.’ That’s part of those discussions.

“The other part of it could be the kid doesn’t really want to go to college and wants to start (pro ball) right away. Those kids will say, ‘Please sign me. I’ll play for anything. Just give me a chance.’ ”

Projectability and comparisons are two key words in a scout’s vocabulary.

“You try to project what 16- and 17-year-old kids you’re looking at will be like at 21 or 22,” Gonsalves said. “That’s the skill part of it, to take a kid and break him down and say ‘in five years this kid is going to do this, or he’ll be doing that.’ That comes from experience.

“When it comes to comparisons, when you file a report, you might say, ‘This kid hits like Pedroia’ or ‘this guy pitches like Jon Lester.’ ”

Talent like that would make any scout one hpy fella.

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