Timmy Lincecum likes weed.....
From Yahoo:
SEATTLE (AP)—San Francisco Giants star pitcher Tim Lincecum(notes) is facing misdemeanor marijuana charges following a traffic stop in his home state.
Washington State Patrol spokesman Steve Schatzel said Thursday that the 2008 Cy Young Award winner and former star at the University of Washington was pulled over for speeding on Interstate 5 in the town of Hazel Dell, about four miles north of the Oregon border, on Oct. 30.
An officer approached Lincecum’s 2006 Mercedes and smelled marijuana as the pitcher rolled down his window. Schatzel said Lincecum immediately complied with a request to hand over the drug and a marijuana pipe from the car’s center console.
The amount measured was 3.3 grams. Schatzel said police consider that a small amount for personal use, well below the maximum of 40 grams before possession is classified differently and carries a more severe penalty.
The arrest was first reported by The Columbian in Vancouver, Wash.
“It was about the size of a thumb, the whole thumb,” Schatzel said of the volume of marijuana Lincecum handed over.
Lincecum was fined a total of $622 for driving at 74 mph in a 60 mph zone, and for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Both are misdemeanors.
The 25-year-old All-Star starter entered a plea of not guilty through his attorney on Monday, according to records in Clark County District Court. A hearing that had been scheduled for Friday morning was canceled, pending a pretrial conference between Lincecum’s attorney and a county prosecutor on Nov. 23.
Lincecum is currently scheduled to appear before a judge on Dec. 22.
The native of the Seattle suburb of Bellevue went 15-7 with a 2.48 ERA in 32 starts and 225 1-3 innings in 2009, his third season in the major leagues. He is 40-17 with a 2.90 ERA in his career, and could be getting a huge, multimillion raise from salary arbitration this offseason.
Teammates consider the smallish right-hander a quirky perfectionist. They also consider him the “Franchise,” the nickname they gave him when he broke into the big leagues only a year out of college. Others see his boyish face, shaggy dark hair, his diminutive frame—and his dominance—and call him “The Freak.”
San Francisco chose him 10th overall in the 2006 draft out of Washington, and he instantly became the organization’s top pitching prospect since Hall of Famer Juan Marichal signed with the New York Giants as an amateur free agent in 1957.
What does everyone think about this? Does Timmy have more in common with Jeremy Jeffress then Johan Santana? ;)
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Comments
Oddly enough, this makes me more of a fan
by Outshined_One on Nov 5, 2009 8:18 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Why Is That Cheech?
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 5, 2009 9:05 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Second This
Let the man party !!!
it was fricken halloween
those cops couldn’t carry Tims jockstrap at 72 MPH….
Deolis Guerra = Daniel Cabrera ?
I tend to think so
by SteveHoffmanSlowey on Nov 5, 2009 11:33 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
What The What?
I’m having a hard time parsing the meaning of your last sentence fragment there. Or were you stoned when you typed that?
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 8, 2009 4:16 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Ha
A friend of a friend used to date a certain player who was back and forth between SF and the PCL, and she told me Timmy’s a bigtime stoner awhile back. Funny.
by slamcactus on Nov 5, 2009 9:07 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Awesome.
Pitchers make awesome potheads.
by SenorGato on Nov 5, 2009 9:58 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Dazed and Confused
Doesn’t Lincecum look like Pickford from the movie Dazed and Confused??
I think I’d be shocked if he didn’t smoke pot.
by TRrrr on Nov 5, 2009 11:26 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Yeah, this is a non-issue.
I wasn’t aware that the Brewers could spare Jeffress the headache by adding him to the 40-man…they really ought to.
by WrenFGun on Nov 6, 2009 12:07 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
You become subject to the MLB testing program on the 40 man
and the minor league program doesn’t apply any longer. So Jeffress wouldn’t be tested again for pot unless they had a reason too. The Rays did this for James Houser who was suspended 50 games for PED’s. They added him to the 40 man and he no longer had to serve the suspension.
Tools Whore
by Tyler on Nov 6, 2009 8:14 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Don't the already have a reason to, since he's been caught once?
He might already be in an offender’s program.
Either way… if Im GM of a team and one of my prospects gets caught using a recreational drug, the last thing in the frigging world I should be doing is promoting him to the 40 man early, costing my team service time issues and opportunities, in order to send the immature kid the message that its ok, that its not his fault and that as a pro athlete he can get away with acting immaturely.
by alskor on Nov 6, 2009 2:06 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Whatever, it's pot
Is drinking an issue?
by Fanon on Nov 7, 2009 12:06 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Yes, drinking is an issue
Anything is an issue in a case like this. Pot doesnt bother me in general… what bothers me is what his actions mean in terms of his maturity and dedication to being a professional.
You have a young man who has been caught twice using a recreational drug where he has millions of dollars at stake and now is one violation away from a lifetime ban. If the kid can’t stay away from pot with MILLIONS OF DOLLARS at stake and HIS CAREER on the line, then he’s a friggin dope and I have serious questions about his maturity and motivation. Forget whether the rule is right or wrong or any morality issues. The rule is there and he knew it and he’s still put himself at major risk of losing his career over smoking weed. That’s just friggin stupid. He’s an idiot. Time to grow up.
by alskor on Nov 7, 2009 2:18 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Yes
Ask Nick Adenhart’s family if drinking an issue.
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 8, 2009 4:18 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
That's a loaded statement
Drinking and driving is different from drinking. Drinking has a deep, often ugly, history in the game, but an awful lot of guys have had great careers and not killed anyone while drinking huge amounts.
by aap212 on Nov 8, 2009 6:05 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Well
You can say the same thing about amphetamines or more recently PEDs. Plus, there are a few examples of players excelling dispite their alcoholism, but just think of how much better they would have been if they were sober and/or not hung over. Hello Mickey Mantle.
Plus, how do you really know they didn’t maim or kill anyone while drinking and driving back in the “good ol’ days”? Reporters back then would kill all sorts of stories that would have a negative impact on the star players, especially before the Black Sox scandal.
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 9, 2009 10:12 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
You realize the amount of time for drinking and driving to occur prior to 1919 was pretty minimal, right?
And jumping from personal alcohol use to drunk driving is pretty huge. I get trashed very, very frequently, but I’ve never driven after more than two or three beers. They’re entirely different matters.
by Fanon on Nov 9, 2009 10:29 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Wait, what?
What do PEDs and amphetamines have to do with the alcohol comment? Does anyone think alcohol is a performance enhancer? Also, “how do you really know they didn’t maim or kill anyone while drinking and driving back in the ‘good ol’ days’?” I don’t. But I’m guessing we’d know if scores of ballplayers had been killing people for decades, and more importantly, presuming that huge swaths of people committed vehicular manslaughter without evidence is about as responsible as drinking and driving.
by aap212 on Nov 9, 2009 12:41 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Just increasing the fanbase
74… psh, he throws a changeup faster than that.
Also, Henry Schulman says the fine was only $122…
"Well, um, actually a pretty nice little Saturday, we're going to go to Home Depot. Yeah, buy some wallpaper, maybe get some flooring, stuff like that. Maybe Bed, Bath, & Beyond, I don't know, I don't know if we'll have enough time."
by Azantor on Nov 6, 2009 2:30 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
It's absolutely terrible.
He has such great physical gifts. But if he’s doing drugs, there’s no way he’ll ever have the initiative or work ethic to be a productive major league player. It’s too bad. He could have been something pretty special.
by aap212 on Nov 6, 2009 3:09 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
If he's this great on drugs imagine what he'd be like clean and sober
Maybe that’s why he smokes pot: to give baseball a fair chance.
by ThomasG on Nov 6, 2009 8:43 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Yeah..
If he wouldn’t smoke weed, just think…he could have won a Cy Young award, maybe even more and dominated hitters…ahh but that will never be now that he has smoked weed.
http://milbprospects.blogspot.com/
by garrioch13 on Nov 6, 2009 8:53 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
You'll be eating those facetious words...
when Timmy’s living in a van, down by the river!
by PissedMick on Nov 6, 2009 4:07 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
"could have been something pretty special"?
“There’s no way he’ll ever have the initiative of work ethic to be a productive major league player”
Well, we know he’s gotten results in the past. He still has the great pitches. He’s in great shape, all muscle and working to get stronger. So I hope your post is sarcastic.
I don’t know how much he smokes it or plans to in the future, but that was a really little amount – people aren’t perfect. Of course, as a giants fan, I would like it if he stopped, but at this point there’s no questioning his results or his work ethic.
Adopted Giant: Henry Sosa
by raisingcain on Nov 7, 2009 12:38 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
because I thought the OP was 100% sarcastic.
I guess there’s a chance though…
by PissedMick on Nov 7, 2009 1:49 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Strikes me as a pretty reasonable assumption.....
by CapgrasDelusion on Nov 7, 2009 4:57 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I've seen some dense people on this site...
but that’s jarring.
by aap212 on Nov 7, 2009 6:33 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
hey
I don’t post here a whole lot, and I’ve seen some astoundingly stupid comments on other baseball sites, so I try not to make assumptions. (Also, it seems more obvious now that I see the replies before mine and re-read your post – I just skimmed through the comments before). And I’m just generally bad at understanding sarcasm in writing. So maybe you should try not to look at it just from your perspective before you start being condescending and insult someone.
Adopted Giant: Henry Sosa
by raisingcain on Nov 8, 2009 12:40 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Come on
I said, “there’s no way he’ll ever have the initiative or work ethic to be a productive major league player.” It’s Tim Lincecum. Give me a break.
by aap212 on Nov 8, 2009 11:47 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Are you saying no one’s ever questioned his work ethic? There have been people who’ve worried that he stays out too late, people who claim to have seen him get really drunk at bars.
Anyway, I know it’s not a big deal, but my point is that there’s no need to call me “jarringly” stupid for one mistake. I’ll read more carefully next time, ok?
Adopted Giant: Henry Sosa
by raisingcain on Nov 8, 2009 1:07 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
what a sinner
He is doomed for hell and is probably planning some terrorist attack.
by FRANCHISEv2 on Nov 6, 2009 9:49 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Awesome
Maybe if a few more Lincecums and Phelps get “outed” people will continue to figure out just how bullshit our whole war on drugs has become.
by Guyute on Nov 6, 2009 10:37 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
+2
Lincie is instantly the greatest sports hero in San Fran history!
by DodgersBacktoBrooklyn2011 on Nov 6, 2009 6:52 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Orlando Cepeda
He still has him beat!!!!
"When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him."
-Jonathan Swift
by King Billy Royal on Nov 6, 2009 7:21 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Carver: You can't even call this shit a war.
Herc: Why not?
Carver: Wars end.
"We must win and we must know how to win rather than win because we have statistical people."
by Evan_S on Nov 7, 2009 6:36 AM EST up reply actions 1 recs
Not like this will hurt his reputation in SF
maybe if he was caught taking pain pills with Rush Limbaugh the Giants org. would have to do something
the ghost of stokes, camp, lugo strikes TB-sept 2009
by CubFanRaysaddict on Nov 6, 2009 12:16 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Shocking, really.
Who loves orange soda?
by Kenan and Kel on Nov 6, 2009 12:40 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
what a waste of resources
the War on Drugs is. Do people realize the damage that this is doing to the country, specifically the inner cities?
by Jimothy on Nov 6, 2009 1:17 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
" ‘We are losing the war against drugs.’ You know what that implies? There’s a war being fought, and the people on drugs are winning it…"
- Bill Hicks
by ThomasG on Nov 6, 2009 8:14 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
LOL
He was one of my favorite stand up comedians ever. RIP
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 8, 2009 4:21 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
take
Pot should be decriminalized.
Harder drugs should remain illegal, however the emphasis should be changed to DRUG TREATMENT, education, and rehabilitation, not punitive incarcaration. Throwing nonviolent drug offenders into jail with violent criminals is just stupid. The whole “war on drugs” thing is a travesty.
just my opinion.
by John Sickels on Nov 6, 2009 2:01 PM EST reply actions 1 recs
Obama's "Drug Czar" was on NPR the other day...
talking about this. Can’t remember the guy’s name.
Basically, he said that the administration hated the phrase “War on Drugs”, and would never use it. He said they want to create legislation that would direct police officers to treat marijuana use/possession as a low priority offense, and create policies that focus on treatment/rehab rather than incarceration.
He did go out of his way to say that the administration in no way supported legalization.
by PissedMick on Nov 6, 2009 4:13 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Nice Mr. Sickels
and I don’t even smoke the stuff
"Get on board early," Black said, alluding to, what he feels, is a crop of up-and-coming players.
"I would tell those fans that we're going to play good baseball. We're going to play hard. We're going to have exciting young players..." -Bud Black
by The Kipper on Nov 8, 2009 12:56 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
i don't either
I don’t either.
But I’ve known potheads and I’ve known drunks, and the potheads are less violent and less likely to hurt others than the drunks. In my experience anyway.
by John Sickels on Nov 8, 2009 1:12 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Lincecum likes weed?
Yeah, well who doesn’t?
by bravesfan91 on Nov 6, 2009 9:59 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Me
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 8, 2009 4:22 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I know
I really hate the smell. And all tobacco products too.
I reject your reality and substitute my own.
by WayneCampbell08 on Nov 9, 2009 10:01 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I bet Lincecum and the drug czar have met before.
Obamas Drug Czar is Seattles Ex chief of police and lincecum lives in seattle
by Marinerfanjake on Nov 7, 2009 1:05 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
It’s ridiculous that it’s even a misdemeanor really. It’s just not a big deal. And yet another dominant star athlete smokes from time to time…
Q: If on-base pct is so important then why don't they put it on the scoreboard? -Failcoeur
A: Because the Braves don't want to show their fans how bad you suck.
by timmy3 on Nov 7, 2009 12:30 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
he has long hair and a wears a skull cap
the surprise for me is this didn’t happen sooner
by son.of.sourman on Nov 7, 2009 12:56 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I want to be that guy...
and ask,
“How would this be different if it were a Yankee?”
http://yankeesmtom.blogspot.com/
by hallofamer2000 on Nov 8, 2009 7:16 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
bumbaclot
Timmy smokes two joints in the morning
Timmy smokes to joints at night
Timmy smokes to joint before he takes the bump
And everythings high and tight
"The key to winning baseball games is pitching, fundamentals, and three run homers."
by fourfingerwoo on Nov 9, 2009 12:14 PM EST reply actions 0 recs

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