Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Playing Games with Milton Bradley

How troubled a guy is Milton Bradley? He's got a lot of baggage, literally and figuratively, having worn out his welcome in six different cities over parts of nine MLB seasons.

That the Cubs picked him up will only add to odd drama which plays out on the North side of Chicago. Bradley should be an interesting addition, as the Cubs basically move the ever-stable Mark DeRosa to insert Bradley in right field. The move is a risk with both Bradley's mercurial personality swings and health problems (he's played 120 games or more just twice in his career).

That said, don't fault the Cubs for releasing DeRosa for Bradley. This is a move by a team trying to win it all. Despite a career year in 2008, DeRosa's right-handed bat was the weakest in the Cubs' murderers row featuring Derrek Lee, Aramis Ramirez, Alfonso Soriano and Geovany Soto. The need for a lefty power bat made him the most expendable, especially when the Cubs landed utility-man Aaron Miles to fill in around the infield.

Bradley hits from both sides, and has put up better numbers than DeRosa for his career. If he plays more than halves of seasons in Chicago, and is availble for the postseason, Cubs fans should be pretty happy.

One big concern, however, is the money the Cubs have tied up in Kosuke Fukudome and Bradley over the next three years. Fukudome signed a $48-million deal last year. Now Bradley's signed a three-year, $30-million deal. If this doesn't work out, the Cubs could sink rather fast.

Fantasy Impact:Expect Fukudome to slide to center and platoon with Reed Johnson or win the job outright. He's good enough to play the lions share in center, and when Johnson starts, Fukudome can slide to right and give Bradley rest. He should hit better than he did in 2007. Bradley is coming off a career year, but don't expect those numbers to necessarily falter. He's in a good lineup, and his lefty bat should be right in the middle of the noise. His attitude and his health could be the only things that hold him back. Treat both players as fourth outfielders with good upside.

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