At FanFest, the A's generously made time available for a select group of bloggers to hold 15-minute interview sessions with Bob Melvin, Brandon McCarthy and Cliff Pennington, Josh Reddick and Seth Smith. As it turned out, all 6 invited bloggers were members of AN, with two (myself and Optimst Prime) there representing AN directly, and four (dwishinsky, jeffro, doctorwojo, and vertig0) there also representing other sites. I believe I have correctly identified who asked each question, but my apologies in advance if I have "misquoted" any of the other five!
Part I (after the jump) features Brandon McCarthy, who was joined by Cliff Pennington for this session. Look for parts II-V to run in the next week or so, as I get each segment transcribed...

Nico: Brandon, I was wondering if you could walk us through the "stress reaction" injury that you have -- just what it feels like, what you learned last year. I just can't quite picture that whole injury.
McCarthy: You're not alone on that one, because most doctors can't picture it! It's not really a thing that exists, at least in the minds of most people. It's just right here (points to just under the shoulder blade almost around to the armpit/underside). It's a group of muscles that decelerate your arm. When you're throwing and your arm is trying to pull itself out of its socket, these are the muscles that say, "No you stay here." And they attach right through the scapula...and for some reason mine doesn't pull -- everyone else's does it fine, but mine would pull and pull and pull, so eventually the muscle keeps pulling on bone, the bone cracks a little bit and if you keep cracking it, then it turns into a full fracture. I usually shut down before it gets to a full fracture now, to where it's just an extreme "stress reaction". If there's a "feeling," it just feels like there's a knife in there --
Nico: And you'd pitch through that?
McCarthy: Yeah, I mean on game days is the one day I'm ok. The adrenaline kicks in, and you can take an injection where you feel ok. You treat it like a football player for one day: "I can get through this". It's the days in between where it becomes unbearable. It's just the 4 days in between where you can't play catch anymore, and then you lose feel. And then everything kind of becomes an uphill battle to get back. It becomes a "quality of life" thing. Eventually it's like, "OK now it hurts to pull the sheets over," everything starts to hurt, and then if I stop and do nothing, 5 days later, I can go.
You have to let it heal, but we did cut the recovery time in half last year...and then we found some stuff last year, found a bone doctor who had some theories, and when I came back there was absolutely nothing. And usually it goes to a certain point and then it just starts to break. It's just there's been a pattern, and then we passed that (hurdle) in the second half last year, and we MRI'd it a few times and everything was pristine. So it gives us a lot of hope going into this year that maybe we found (the solution)...and at least if it does happen we know how to work around it a little faster to where it's not just a whole season-interrupting deal.
dwishinsky: Last year you led the AL in FIP and a lot of that was your low BB-rate, and I know you struggled with control earlier in your career. What is it that changed, because you were never walking anybody this (past) year!
McCarthy: I think it's just confidence more than anything. If you look at my minor league rates they were all pretty well in tune with what they were last year. Something I always prided myself on was I could remember each walk: I hated them. And I remember it just slowly became a thing as I went along that walks were just "a thing that I did". To the point where there were bad walks in bad situations -- and it's not just walks that show up, it's being in a 2-1 count instead of a 1-2 count.
When I got to the big leagues with the stuff that I had, I found that the margin for error is a lot shorter and it was really the first time in years that I had failed. And I don't think I handled it all that well: Just mentally I think it becomes a struggle, you start to nibble a bit more, you lose your confidence, and once you lose your confidence it's a hard thing to get back. So it really wasn't until I made wholesale changes that I think I got that confidence back, where "Screw it, I can throw this in the zone -- hit it, do anything you want to do with it and beat it into the ground."
Nico: Was there any point in the season, or (after one particular) start, when you were like, "Wow, I'm actually really good"?
McCarthy: After the first month...My only goal when I started all this changeover was I just didn't want to suck anymore, I was just sick of it. And after the first month I realized that everything was in line in terms of normal metrics, advanced metrics -- everything said I was where I wanted to be and what I had aimed for. So I said, "OK I think now I have an idea, I'm competing at this level, I've had some bad starts and some good ones, I know what I'm doing, the recovery's there." I didn't feel as lost, and just felt like I knew what I was doing again.
dwishinsky: So Brandon, are you considering a professional career in tweeting (after you retire)?
McCarthy (tongue in cheek): No, just a professional career in being mean. Just being able to be sarcastic and mean to people is all I care about.
doctorwojo: There's a debate about whether or not pitchers can control the quality of contact on hitters. Last year, for instance, Guillermo Moscoso had a very low batting average on balls put in play.
McCarthy: I go kind of back and forth with it. There are days when I feel like I can, and there are days where I can't which, the way my mind works, makes me believe that you can't. I think command (interrupts himself) -- I really don't know how to answer the question because if you watch Roy (Halladay), you watch the best, you watch Cliff (Lee), they get a lot of bad contact, so I think there's something to it: The kind of stuff that you have combined with command, it's just much much much harder for hitters to hit it, so maybe they just don't hit it as well.
But I don't know why that doesn't show up anywhere else and why you can't quantify that, so I don't know -- I just know I've had games where I feel like I can absolutely control it and days where I still feel sharp (but) they're gonna hit the s*** out of everything hard and if (the fielders) aren't there then I'm gonna give up 100 runs, so I really don't know.
dwishinsky: When we asked Bob (Melvin) about leadership, he specifically named both you guys (McCarthy and Pennington).
McCarthy: (laughing) We're the "young old guys" now...It's just weird, team-wise: You can (be a leader) here, and then you can get traded to the Yankees tomorrow and then we still have to sit in the corner of the clubhouse and shut up. It's just all situational. But personalities will always rise up and especially on a young team like this, you'll find sometimes a guy that has the personality for it that everybody can kind of revolve around and somehow that works and nobody questions it, and then some teams you have to have a veteran guy. But a guy like Cliff is a natural for it -- he just has that personality, you can see that he works hard, and that's what usually translates in the clubhouse. Can people follow your example? Are you a hypocrite? And if you are (a leader by example) then people just sort of naturally gravitate to that.
Nico: Do young guys sometimes think they're "that guy" and they're not?
McCarthy: Ya. And it's really, really awkward. (room erupts with laughter) Those are the people that are really kinda delusional, and usually those are the people that you guys can see too, from the outside: Nothing seems quite right, and it never comes off (well) in a clubhouse and it's...really awkward.
Hey, sounds like me! Next stops: Pennington Station, Reddick Line... Plus, Seth Smith discusses hitting lefties and braving the transition from hitting at Coors to hitting at the Coliseum. Oh, and look out because you're also going to get a Melvin.
6 recs | 35 comments
It's awesome to hear him talk about things with answers longer than 140 characters.
He comes off as a smart guy and someone that I wouldn’t mind sticking around for a long time. Some guys just aren’t very good at speaking to the public, but he has a good handle on it and I could see him moving into TV or radio when his playing days are done.
LoneStranger - January 30, 2012
Thanks for doing these for us
I live in Fort Worth, TX, so I obviously can’t make it to Fanfest. It’s nice to still have some connection to the players though.
A'sFanDFW - January 30, 2012
This Is Great
Thanks for getting five interviews with A’s players; that’s fantastic.
One thing he mentions is quite interesting: that him and Pennington seem to be the “old” guys and the leaders of the clubhouse; it really stresses just how young this Oakland team is. We really don’t have a big veteran who’s seen it all (unless that man is Johnny Gomes).
Sean Fortuna - January 30, 2012
or at least, they are the among the "young old" guys who are returning from last year
older guys like Gomes and Colón are new, so it’s not clear what roles they will play in the clubhouse. Of course, Coco is returning and he’s older than Pennington and McCarthy.
OaklandSi - January 30, 2012
Yeah
Actually, i find it funny that Melvin didn’t mention Crisp as one of the clubhouse leaders. He is, isn’t he?
Sean Fortuna - January 30, 2012
the only player who mentioned him was Jemile
OaklandSi - January 30, 2012
Well, considering the rest of the OF that he used to lead is gone, it's probably going to take some time to build that leadership role again.
The CF is traditionally the leader of the OF and Crisp definitely has played that role on the field.
Also, maybe his DUI played a role in taking him down a peg on the leadership scale (it doesn’t in my mind but perhaps it did in Melvin’s mind).
Billy Frijoles - January 30, 2012
I doubt that
the DUI took place during spring training, and there were no re-occurences.
OaklandSi - January 30, 2012
It Was Also
The first time that’s happened to him, I believe.
Everyone makes mistakes, and Coco was a load of fun in the clubhouse and played well and led the team, so that should make up for the DUI incident.
Sean Fortuna - January 31, 2012
I absolutely love when pitchers talk about their thought and work processes
those interviews have been among my favorites.
OaklandSi - January 30, 2012
Good Stuff
Look forward to more when you have the chance.
Trainman - January 30, 2012
I think you mixed up me and Jason at some point.
Twitter and leadership questions were not mine. The first one credited to me was mine as was the Guillermo Moscoso one. :D
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
The leadership and twitter question were mine
just saying. Thanks for typing this out Nico
OptimistPrime - January 30, 2012
Oops
Sorry! Hey, it was good meeting you btw!
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
You too Cust
I mean D’wish!
OptimistPrime - January 30, 2012
HA!
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
The "Weak Contact" question was a good one
Fascinating to see his opinion on the point. He has obviously thought about FIP and BABIP before. While unfortunately there was no new profound insight, it’s neat to see that he’s explored this question and hasn’t come to a conclusion on why he can’t consistently induce weaker contact.
Billy Frijoles - January 30, 2012
My thoughts exactly
That’s exactly what struck me. He’s was aware of these things and he actually thought about.
OnlybuyBeaneJerseys - January 30, 2012
(spoiler alert?) but...
I asked the question to both McCarthy AND Pennington. Because I really wanted to see, hey here is a guy in the infield who fields these balls. Does he notice it? And Pennington’s answer was really interesting.
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
Spoiler alert?
Or that thing cable networks do to make sure you’re watching after the commercial.
OnlybuyBeaneJerseys - January 30, 2012
That sounds better so...
“that thing cable networks do to make sure you’re watching after the commercial alert!”
dwishinsky - January 31, 2012
Sorry about the mix-ups, guys!
I tried to pick up whose voice was whose, but honestly all the voices sound pretty similar on the tape. My cassette tape, I might add. On my 1970s-style tape recorder.
Nico - January 30, 2012
Aka your answering machine
Yeah, I actually didn’t end up asking McCarthy anything directly. I involved him in my Pennington question a little.
doctawojo - January 30, 2012
Brandon McCarthy's great...
…and I thought this was the start of a terrific series of interviews.
However, I feel like I have to hold back a bit of fan enthusiasm because it’s likely that Brandon will wind up being traded in July for a C+ AAA reliever and a 19 year old outfielder with 10 HR power.
richwol1 - January 30, 2012
I think if McCarthy were to be traded
And replicated last year through the first half. He gets back something between what Bailey and Cahill brought back.
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
Nope
He’s a free agent at the end of the season, so it would be a two-month rental.
richwol1 - January 30, 2012
I'm aware of that.
Doesn’t change the aforementioned opinion.
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
do you really think it's possible that someone would give up more than Josh Reddick, Alcantara, and Head for a 2 month rental of McCarthy?
I don’t see it, but I’m interested to hear your take.
Billy Frijoles - January 30, 2012
Me, too...
Since a couple of years back, Matt Holiday could only get the A’s Shane Peterson, Clay Mortensen and Brett Wallace and Holiday was a lot more valuable than Brandon McCarthy.
richwol1 - January 30, 2012
Holliday
richwol1 - January 30, 2012
I do.
Because #1, you can negotiate an extension out in advance of a trade. And #2 there are plenty of deadline deals with pitchers who have yielded quite a bit despite just two months left. I am not going to sit here and say C.C. Sabathia and Cliff Lee are comps to McCarthy talentwise, they aren’t. Heck in the interview on the FP McCarthy even used Lee as an example of a pitcher with a unique skill, but both of those players landed mega prospect deals for two-three months of service. Now, if McCarthy is again an FIP leader, pitching very well, is much more affordable, potentially someone the new club can extend to say they get more than Reddick (a guy whose upside is solid starting RF), Alcantara (a guy with potentially very high upside but who is very far from the majors) and Head (someone who is really is a throw-in variety type prospect not a future cornerstone by any means) I don’t think is a stretch of the imagination.
Shoot, one could argue Wilson Ramos of Minnesota is a better option than these guys combined (or close to it) and all that it took to separate him from the Twins was Matt Capps. Erik Bedard got the M’s Trayvon Robinson. Edwin Jackson and his myriad of issues, landed Arizona Daniel Hudson. There are plenty more examples of recent vintage.
dwishinsky - January 30, 2012
Yeah Brandon seems like he's a guy who would be willing to
sign somewhere long term which I think could have an impact. If he pitches as well as he did last year, image a contender seeing him as getting them over the hump.
Tyler Bleszinski - January 30, 2012
You should have had Mrs. McCarthy in on the interview too
Her tweets are just about on par with Brandon’s for entertainment value.
Washoe Zephyr - January 31, 2012
We would not have objected.
Nico - January 31, 2012
The Dave Stewart Deceleration
His description of his injury was interesting to me because I remember interviews with Dave Stewart where he credited workouts that focused on the muscle groups for decelerating his arm as the key to his durability. I haven’t seen a pitcher talk about that aspect of biomechanics since Stew.
DavidS - January 31, 2012
You must Login with your SB Nation account and be a member of Athletics Nation to post a comment.