It’s not been a good off-season for the University of Oklahoma Sooners football team.
First, there was this popular entry in the Wizard of Odds’ digital billboard contest.
Then, that was followed by the NCAA leveling additional sanctions on the OU program, including making the Sooners vacate their 8 wins during the 2005 season and extending the program’s probation through 2010.
But the above is nothing compared to legendary Sooners head coach Barry Switzer flashing the “Hook’em Horns” sign (hat tip Jay Christensen) with Texas head coach, Mack Brown.
Or maybe Coach Switzer had something else in mind than “Hook’em Horns?”
Author Archives: Tom
The Wigginton deal
So, the Stros trade Dan Wheeler, the club’s best relief pitcher over the past two seasons who is having a bad season this year, for Tampa Bay utilityman Ty Wigginton, who is the right-hand equivalent of the Stros’ Mike Lamb. The Stros then prepare to release 3B Morgan Ensberg, who has been mired in a slump for over year, but who has far better career hitting statistics (55 RCAA/.367 OBA/.475 SLG/.843 OPS) than either Wigginton (-11/.326/.448/.774) or Lamb (-15/.339/.428/.768) and is a far better third baseman defensively than either of them. By the way, even during his prolonged slump, Ensberg’s hitting (-8 RCAA) has been substantially more productive for the Stros than the hitting of other Stros’ starters Craig Biggio (-31 RCAA), Adam Everett (-32 RCAA) and Brad Ausmus (-53 RCAA) over the same period of time.
Thus, absent a further trade of either Lamb or Mark Loretta for a potentially productive prospect or two, this deal is akin to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Why is a team whose main problem is bad pitching trading one of its better pitchers for a below-average National League hitter? Wheeler, Wigginton, Lamb and Ensberg’s career statistics are below the hyperlinked break. The abbreviations for the hitting stats are defined here and the same for the pitching stats are here.
Update: Baseball Prospectus’ Joe Sheehan agrees with my analysis ($) on the Wheeler for Wigginton deal and the give-up on Ensberg:
You got me. Rumors persist that Ensberg will be traded before his DFA period ends, but even if he is, the return wonít be much. So for Wheeler and Ensberg, the Astros get a 29-year-old infielder who runs a below-average OBP with good power and so-so defense. Mildly impressive at second base, Wigginton is just a guy at third base, and this is the first season since 2004 in which heís outhitting Ensberg. At that, the difference this year is just 17 points of EqA. This looks more like a tantrum by the Astros than a baseball decision, their frustration with Ensbergís injury woes and power outage getting the better of them.
Give it up, Arnie
Want a glimpse into the regulatory mindset of government?
This earlier post passed along Don Boudreaux’s response to the Wall Street Journal letter-to-th editor of Arnie Celnicker, a former attorney for the FTC and the Antitrust Division of the Justice Department, in which Celnicker defends the FTC’s opposition to the proposed Whole Foods-Wild Oats merger (previous posts here). In an attempt to have the last word, Celnicker has written another letter-to-the editor in which he contends, in part, as follows:
We agree that consumers want more organic products, and that there has been increased investment to meet that demand. The financial markets, however, have deprived Wild Oats of the capital to compete head-on with Whole Foods. Mr. Boudreaux’s assertion that this indicates Wild Oats’ assets are now poorly managed, and that they would be better managed by Whole Foods, is a non sequitur.
Avoiding head-on competition with Whole Foods indicates that Whole Foods already has such market power that the risks of head-on competition are great, for Wild Oats or any other firm. It does not mean Wild Oats is poorly managed; it does show the capital market’s respect for a firm, Whole Foods, with a dominant market position. Even if Wild Oats were poorly managed, it does not follow that an acquisition by Whole Foods would enhance consumer well-being. These two firms are the only two national premium natural and organic supermarkets. Surely there are others, besides Whole Foods, who can efficiently manage Wild Oats’ assets, without reducing competition.
Celnicker suggests that capital markets “have deprived” Wild Oats as if the company has some entitlement to capital, and that such deprivation justifies government intervention. But if there are others who can efficiently manage Wild Oats’ assets, then why did they not outbid Whole Foods for those assets?
The Wild Oats board has determined that the best value for the company’s shareholders can be derived by selling to Whole Foods. Celnicker contends that the government’s judgment regarding “consumer well-being” should trump the Wild Oats board’s judgment on behalf of Wild Oats’ shareholders. But will the government provide a safety net for the loss in value to Wild Oats’ shareholders if the Wild Oats board’s judgment is correct and those assets decline in value without the merger? If the government is not willing to step up and arrange alternative capital, then the value of that “consumer well-being” that Celnicker seeks to have the government protect is largely ephemeral in nature.
Tilman’s bad dream
It wasn’t a good end of the week for Landry’s Restaurants, Inc CEO Tilman Fertitta (previous posts here).
First, there was Landry’s public disclosures that the company was delinquent in its regulatory filings with the SEC and that it was in need of refinancing over $400 million in debt in a rapidly deteriorating debt market.
Those missteps led to Fertitta’s public announcement on Friday that the refinancing “was no big deal,” which led to the inevitable comparisons in some media circles of Landry’s and Enron, and Fertitta and Donald Trump (actually, that comparison has been made before). Not surprisingly, the company’s stock closed at a 52 week low on Friday ($25.43), falling almost 20% in the past week alone.
Fertitta is an easy target, but the situation is probably not as grim as it might seem at first glance. Landry’s has always been a highly-leveraged company. Heck, the latest news resulted in Moody’s downgrading the corporate family rating from B2 from B1, and S&P lowered its ratings on Landry’s corporate credit rating to CCC from B-plus. So, it’s not as if Landry’s stock was blue chip even before the latest developments.
Where things appear to have gone awry is that the company decided that building stores from within wouldn’t allow it to grow fast enough. Back a few years ago when Landry’s was a popular growth stock, the company’s casual dining seafood eateries were popular and growing quickly in generally first-rate locations. But in an attempt to accelerate that solid growth, Landry’s overpaid for the high-volume Rainforest Cafe chain a few years ago and then went on to make a relatively big investment in buying and revitalizing the Golden Nugget casino in downtown Las Vegas. It looked as if Landry’s had decided to pull back on its debt-loaded buying binge when it sold off its its Joe’s Crab Shack chain late last year in a $192 million deal, but the company came right back a short time later to make an unsolicited offer to buy the high-end steakhouse Smith & Wollensky before being topped by a rival bidder.
As the price of Landry’s stock slumped over the past several months, the company sensed value and initiated a program to buy back $87 million in stock. Nevertheless, the market did not respond all that positively to the buyback program, so the stock is still trading at a relatively small 14 times this year’s profit estimates, Thus, a case can be made that Landry’s is a good buy if it can extract itself from its current debt refinancing problems, but the downgrades reflect that the market is a bit skeptical regarding Fertitta’s assurance that arranging such refinancing “is no big deal.”
Nonetheless, this just might be the kick in the rear that Landry’s needs. Building well-located and good-looking restaurants while providing solid service is how Landry’s grew quickly. Paying substantially more for financing the debt necessary to buy overpriced stores may be just the way to persuade Landry’s board and management that building from within wasn’t such a bad strategy after all.
Rumblin’ and stumblin’
Back in the late 1970’s, it was 260 pound Texas A&M Wishbone fullback George Woodard.
Then, several years ago, it was 270 pound Aggie tailback JaMaar Toombs.
Now, it’s 282 pound Aggie tailback Jorvorskie Lane.
What is it about over-sized running backs that fascinates the Aggies?
Steyn on the Conrad Black trial
Mark Steyn continues his excellent analysis of the criminal case against Conrad Black (prior posts here) with this lengthy piece on the trial, in which he agrees with me regarding the defense team’s decision not to have Lord Black testify:
When Black declined to testify in his own defence, the result was that he was defined only by the glimpses of him permitted by the government: he was the guy who, in Alana’s phrase, got the money, and sent boorish emails, and installed heated towel rails in his Park Avenue apartment. Had he been put on the stand, he would certainly have been tripped up by government lawyers in some areas, but he would have opened up others that allowed the jury to see Conrad Black as a man in full, warts and all, rather than only the warts, the unsightly carbuncles of non-compete fees and company-jet perks and a security video of a British peer taking boxes down the back stairs of a Toronto office building.
Steyn also has some choice words for the Black defense team, which he viewed as largely dysfunctional. Reading Steyn’s piece along with this lengthy Adrian and Olga Stein essay (pdf) on the background of the case against Lord Black leaves one with a depressing image of how the U.S. criminal justice system is being manipulated to regulate the unpopular businessperson of the moment.
Is Landry’s in trouble?
Cerberus Capital Management’s decision earlier in the week to terminate its attempted sale of $12 billion in Chrysler debt underscored the quickly tightening U.S. credit markets (except on oil patch deals!), and the ripple effects are already being felt in Houston. Check out this Houston Business Journal article about Houston-based restaurant company Landry’s:
Landry’s Restaurants Inc. is looking for new financing to replace its current credit agreement and outstanding 7.5 percent senior unsecured notes.
The Houston-based casual dining chain operator said Wednesday that it would not be able to file its annual report for the year ended Dec. 31 because an internal review of stock option granting practices is not complete.
As a result, Landry’s (NYSE: LNY) said it has been notified by U.S. Bank National Association — the trustee of its $400 million unsecured notes — that the unpaid principal and any interest is now due.
Landry’s expects to be able to refinance the loan, but due to “the recent tightening of the credit markets,” it could be under less-favorable financing terms.
The company also said it is not in compliance with a $450 million credit agreement with Wachovia Bank, National Association and other lenders. Landry’s expects it can get a waiver of the covenant and does not expect Wachovia to accelerate the indebtedness of the agreement. The amount outstanding is about $97 million.
Late yesterday, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services lowered its credit ratings of Landry’s and continued to place the company’s ratings on negative watch because of Landry’s failure to file its 10K regulatory filing with the SEC for fiscal 2006 and its 10Q for the first-quarter 2007.
H’mm.
Update: Tilman’s bad dream.
Fit Nation Map
The map on the left purports to track the increase in the percentage of obese persons in the U.S. over the past 20 years. I don’t know about the methodology of the statistical analysis, but the map is pretty darn cool.
Stros 2007 Season Review, Part Five
At the quarter pole of this season, I observed the following:
Stros management, for all their declarations of trying to field a playoff contender, is really biding its time this season as Biggio trudges toward his 3,000th hit. There is simply no way that this club will be much better than a .500 ballclub with its current starting pitching staff and Biggio, Everett, Ausmus and the pitcher burdening the hitting lineup on most nights. The Stros should be honest and concede that the club is attempting to compete as well as possible while supporting Biggio’s climb toward 3,000 hits and dispense with the ruse that this club, as presently configured, has any meaningful shot at the playoffs.
Well, as the Stros (44-57) have now completed 62.5% of the season (prior periodic reviews are here), Stros management has apparently embraced my suggestion. Rather than promoting the club’s competitiveness, Stros management has decided to make the remainder of the season the Craig Biggio Good-Bye Tour, beginning with Bidg’s well-orchestrated retirement announcement and game-winning, grand slam homer earlier in the week. Ah, the memories!
Unfortunately, when Biggio is retired and gone after this season, Stros management will have to figure out what to do next. As I have been pointing out for several years now, the ballclub has been in decline since 2001, although extraordinary pitching staff performances in 2004 and 2005 masked the decline during those two playoff seasons. But this season, the decline of the club has hit the club’s traditional strength — that is, pitching — and the result is that the Stros may finish this season with the worst record in the National League.
Interestingly, this club’s 44-57 record through 62.5% of the season is about the same as the club’s record last season during the middle 60% of the season (42-55). Only good performances during the first and final 20% segments of the 2006 season allowed that club to finish two games over .500 (82-80). Now, in the first five eighth segments of this season, the Stros’ record has been been consistently mediocre or worse — 9-12, 11-9, 6-14, 8-12, and 10-10 in the most recent 20 game segment. So, the accelerating downward trend that started during the middle of last season has continued this season.
Although some folks continue to be confused about what ails the Stros, a dramatic and pervasive downturn in pitching remains the big problem. The Stros’ staff — which has been among the best in the National League over the past three seasons — has given up 55 more runs than an average National League pitching staff would have allowed in the same number of innings (RSAA, explained here). That places the Stros staff 15th among the 16 National League teams with only the Cardinals’ staff being worse, and only three Stros pitchers — Roy Oswalt (5 RSAA/3.80 ERA), Chad Qualls (1 RSAA/3.83 ERA) and Brad Lidge (10 RSAA/1.94 ERA) — have saved more runs this season than an average National League pitcher would have saved in the same number of innings.
Meanwhile, the Stros’ hitters continue to be about National League-average (5 runs created against average, explained here), which is right in the middle (8th) of the 16 National League teams. Although National League-average in hitting is far better than the past two Stros squads achieved, it is not close to being good enough to make up for the Stros’ abysmal pitching. As a result, the Stros’ combined RCAA/RSAA score of -50 so far this season reflects that they continue to be a far below-average National League team.
The season statistics for the Stros to date are below, courtesy of Lee Sinins‘ sabermetric Complete Baseball Encyclopedia. The abbreviations for the hitting stats are defined here and the same for the pitching stats are here. The Stros active roster is here with links to each individual player’s statistics:
Don’t mess with Mickelson
I’ve never had the opportunity to meet Phil Mickelson, but my sense from this episode and others that I’ve heard and read about lead me to believe that he’s a good and fun-loving guy. In addition, Philly Mick is apparently quite a practical joker.
Veteran Sports Illustrated golf correspondent Chris Lewis has just come out with an entertaining book about life on the PGA Tour entitled The Scoreboard Always Lies: A Year Behind the Scenes on the PGA Tour (Free Press 2007) and, in this interview about the book, Lewis passes along the following anecdote about Mickelson:
We were in Akron last year, and Phil was playing with Aaron Baddeley. Their group comes off on Friday (I think it was Friday), and all the sudden, these Akron cops come over, grab Aaronís caddie, Pete Bender, and drag him into a police car.
Pete, of course, has been around forever, and has seen it all ñ he used to caddie for Greg Norman, put in a bunch of years with Rocco Mediate, and so forth.
But now, after this round in Akron, the cops take him away, and he has no idea whatís going on. Turns out that years before, during a practice round in Maui (probably the last time Phil played the Mercedes), Pete had set a couple of snails down on the seat of Philís golf cart (they use carts during practice rounds there), and Phil of course sat on them. So years go by, and Phil never forgets.
Finally, last year in Akron, Pete winds up in the back of that squad car, and the cops tell him, ìMr. Bender, youíre here because of an outstanding warrant on a violation of a Hawaiian ordinance against cruelty to mollusks.î
Phil had set the whole thing up. Heís just standing there about fifty feet away, laughing his head off, while Peteís in the police car scared out of his wits.