FSN Kansas City Straining to Help Tony Pena, Jr.
By CHRIS RASMUSSEN

Big Tony shows little Tony how not to hit.
On Saturday, FSN Kansas City ran a graphic comparing his batting statistics to Frank White’s, neglecting to mention that it was a different era and that White was four years younger than Peña is today. On Sunday, FSN Kansas City's Joel Goldberg asked Ozzie Smith on the pre-game show if he struggled at the plate like Peña when he was younger (the short answer, which Ozzie was too polite to provide: at Peña’s age, no, Ozzie Smith was much better).
Almost every game, FSN Kansas City excuses or ignores Peña’s deficiencies at the plate and exaggerates his defensive skills. At this point of the season, one has to ask:
a) Does Tony Peña Jr. have pictures of the FSN Kansas City producers?
or
b) if Ryan Lefebvre used the same strained optimism to describe the Hindenburg accident, would he describe it a “spectacular pyrotechnic display”? Would he praise my first sexual experience as having an “economy of motion”?
Don't think that Lefebvre provides the same optimism regarding other Royals. During yesterday's radio broadcast, Lefebvre implied that pitchers have learned how to pitch to Peña’s weaknesses. Note to Ryan: AL pitchers learned how to pitch to Peña on opening day and haven’t stopped.
To recap: Tony Peña is a horrific batter – historically bad. His statistics this year: .155 average, .176 on base percentage, .204 slugging percentage. Pitchers in the National League thus far this year have compiled a .140 average, .181 on base percentage and a .175 slugging percentage. The worst stat of the bunch: Pitchers in the National League get on base more than Peña.
He is not comparable to Frank White – the players most comparable to Peña’s current production include the Great Clyde Klutzz. If you’re not familiar with Mr. Kluttz’s career, rest assured that Cooperstown does include players by the names Clyde Kluttzz, John Clumsy or Luke Disorienting Ear Disorder.
Defensively, Peña makes a spectacular play every week. Unfortunately, there is no evidence that he is an above average fielder. In 2008, he ranks near the bottom among starting shortstops in both range and fielding percentage.
FSN KC: Royals fans are apathetic, not stupid. We know he’s chickenshit – stop pretending he will morph into chicken salad.




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