Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Guillen likes Garcia to Tigers, but not to Sox

Freddy Garcia got picked up by the Detroit Tigers on Wednesday, even though his fastball was said to be topping out in the mid-80's.

I personally asked his former manager/uncle (by marriage) Ozzie Guillen, about Garcia's signing. Guillen said he's happy for his family member, and then said he thinks Garcia would've been a good pickup for the White Sox next year. "My daugther-in-law's got more money," Guillen said.

Fantasy Impact: I'd steer clear of Garcia. He's been hurting for a long time, and it took the Tigers a while to make a move on him. Like Guillen said, it looks like he's better suited to pitch at a high level next year.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Crawford out, Rocco returns

Rocco Baldelli is finally back from his chronic fatigue issues, but the precursor to his return is a DL stint for Carl Crawford. Crawford, who's battled leg issues, hits the disabled list with a hand problem.

Fantasy Impact: Baldelli can be a conributor immediately, and the Rays could use his right handed bat. Crawford's been a disappointment all year, and a hand injury is nothing to sneeze at. Sometimes those problems can linger long enough to foul up a couple months of a season or more. If that becomes the case here, that's his season.

Contreras done for year

Jose Contreras is a pretty tough guy. Rupturing his achilles tendon while trying to cover first base on an infield hit by Jacoby Ellsbury, Contreras looked to be in pain, but actually got up and walked himself off the field. He's done for the year, but the way he handled himself you almost had hope that he could pitch again this season. That's not happening.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Zambrano Glaused

The Cardinals are killing the Cubs at Wrigley after hitting four home runs off of Carlos Zambrano. Big Z looked erratic. He struggled to locate his pitches and served up two rocket shots to Cardinals third baseman Troy Glaus.

Fantasy Impact: Earlier this year, I wrote that Scott Rolen will be the more valuable player in the Cardinals-Blue Jays trade this off season. How badly I was mistaken. Troy Glaus is proving to be almost the player he was before his injury problems. Glaus now has 21 home runs, and has been a stalwart in the middle of the Cardinals' lineup.

Wainwright to help waning bullpen

The Cardinals are grooming Adam Wainwright for a return to the bullpen once he returns from a rehab assignment.
"They've pretty much told me that they are grooming me down here to pitch in the back end (of the game) up there," Wainwright said after 27 pitches and an uneven two-thirds of an inning at Autozone Park. "They've made it clear to me that I'm down here for a reason, and that's to get ready to get guys out in the last inning or two. That's what I'm doing.

"Until they call and tell me otherwise," the righthander continued, "mentally I'm preparing myself to be in the bullpen."
By the time he gets back with the team the Cardinals might be out of the race.

Fantasy Impact: Whenever he returns, Wainwright will be a candidate for an immdediate impact in saves. The Cardinals need someone to step in and own that position. It will be interesting to see if they keep him there heading into next season.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Todd Jones - on the radar

With the Detroit bullpen still looking messy at best, it sounds like Kyle Farnsworth is not even in the conversation for closing games at this point. The job is still Fernando Rodney's, and with Joel Zumaya potentially heading for instruction on his curveball, could Todd Jones be back in the picture soon? Jones says he wants the role back when he returns from the DL, and Jim Leyland's latest quote is very Jones-friendly.
"Todd Jones has taken a lot of heat -- and I'm not looking to pick an argument with fans or anybody else -- but it's always easy to see somebody have a good night and say, 'Close with that guy,' " Leyland said. "It doesn't work that way. We're finding that out. ... People realize how tough Todd Jones' job has been, and what a hell of a job that guy has done."
Spitting Seeds wouldn't be surprised if Jones re-inherits the role from Rodney by the end of August.

Field of Dreams: China

MLB will pull out all the stops to get baseball back in the olympics after 2008. Now they're looking forward to a foothold for the sport in China thanks to the Beijing games.
Dropped from the Summer Games program after Beijing, baseball may have struck out as an Olympic sport but MLB still believes it can hit a home run in China where it has already invested millions trying to tap into 1.3 billion potential baseball fans.

"The Yankees the Dodgers are among the teams who have already made investments here," said Bob Watson, Major League Baseball's vice-president of on field operations and Team USA general manager.

"Major League Baseball thinks this is an untapped market just like basketball has.

"When you have over a billion people there has to be some people here, who with the proper instruction and development, can play at the professional level.

"The television market is huge. There are more TVs here than there are people in the United States."
The article goes on to talk about baseball's rises and falls in China in the past. It's great that MLB wants to grow the game, but it's funny how much import is suddenly being paid to the olympics. While it's a great place to market the game to foreign countries, and especially China, few americans will even notice what the U.S. team does in Beijing. The olympics seem outdated to me. The amateur nature of the olympic games is no longer of interest to me, and I question most of the results due to the inability to screen for new performance-enhancing drugs.

Baseball in the olympics means we can check out a few minor league stars to see how they're coming along for the future, but how do we know how good the competition is? Is it a fair trial of their abilities given that they're playing halfway around the world against competition they've likely never seen before? Olympic baseball is a loose structure, and it's not worth the time of fully digesting. It goes away in a month, and it won't return perhaps forever. I'm a rabid baseball fan, but I won't be paying much attention to the sport in Beijing. Will you?

Bud selective

Bud Selig is choosing to investigate the Manny Ramirez trade.
Bud Selig has ordered an investigation into Manny Ramirez's split with the Boston Red Sox, according to a report in the Boston Globe.

The paper reports a source directly linked to the investigation says Bud Selig has directed Major League Baseball executive vice president Rob Manfred to contact everyone involved in the trade to the Dodgers for individual accounts of how the transaction unfolded.
What's to investigate? Doesn't the commissioner's office have to sign off on these deals in the first place? Selig looks more and more bungling each passing day.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Here comes... everyone!

Aaron Harang takes the proper steps to get back with the Reds.

Travis Hafner and Josh Barfield working to return.

V Mart is doing all he can to play again.

All three of these stories posted at MLB.com at the same moment. Odd.

Upton benched for not hustling

Run out your grounders, kids. Not only might you eventually beat one out, you also might avoid getting benched, as B.J. Upton did Wednesday. Joe Maddon is the perfect manager for this young Tampa Bay Rays. He's tough, he's smart and he's committed.

In other Rays news, Dioner Navarro hit a home run for the second straight day. Those are his first two home runs since June 20th.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

27 for 27

Brad Lidge closed out his 27th save in 27 chances in a 2-1 Phillies win in St. Louis. Lidge allowed a runner into scoring position, but got out of the jam with a strikeout of Rick Ankiel, Lidge's second of the inning.

Fantasy Impact: Brad Lidge is the second best closer in baseball after K-Rod. Who could've expected this after last year's debacle?

Brewers Bushed

The Brewers name Dave Bush their fifth starter for the rest of the season, demoting Seth McClung to the bullpen. This ends a home/road platoon between the two pitchers.
"I told them both I wanted to try this and if it wasn't good for either one of them that I would have to make a decision, so that's what we did," manager Ned Yost said. "It was kind of getting to both of them a little bit. I just think that it's better to do it this way."
Fantasy Impact: If you have space, keep McClung around, as Bush runs hot and cold. Bush's home ERA of 3.30 is 3.65 points better than his road mark. This move upgrades him from fringe starter to a number five or six in fantasy play.

Lilly out duels Maholm

Paul Maholm loses for just the second time sine May 20th as the Cubs play "small ball" to beat the Pirates, 5-1. Ted Lilly picks up win number 11, striking out five in 6 1/3 innings while allowing one earned run. Maholm gave up five runs in six innings, allowing 10 base runners.

Fantasy Impact: Lilly and Maholm are nice number four starters on good baseball teams. Unfortunately for Pittsburgh, Maholm is the best they've got. Lilly settles in behind Carlos Zambrano, Rich Harden and Ryan Dempster in Chicago. As for fantasy play, these two are no better than number five guys on a good team.

Postseason predictions

Now that the big deals are done, it is time to make a few guesses at how the rest of 2008 plays out. Here's Spitting Seeds' selections for the postseason.

American League

AL East: Boston Red Sox - Manny is gone, the staff is stronger than New York, and Tampa failed to get a right-handed bat in the outfield.

AL Central: Chicago White Sox - They have to keep hitting homers to get it done. Minnesota will pester them to the end.

AL West: Los Angeles Angels - Nobody in that division can catch them.

Wild Card: Tampa Bay Rays - Just enough pitching to hold off the Yankees, even if the BoSox catch them for the division.

National League

NL East: Philadelphia Phillies - The starting lineup, as powerful as they come, needs to stay healthy.

NL Central: Chicago Cubs - The Brewers lost four games to Chicago at home in a four-game sweep. They've got an outside chance, but aren't consistent enough.

NL West: Arizona Diamondbacks - The best pitching staff in the National League will be hard to catch, even if the Dodgers got Manny.

NL Wild Card: Milwaukee Brewers - Sheets and Sabathia are hard to beat. The Marlins, Mets and Cardinals might be able to scrap, but Milwaukee's too tough.

Gardenhire clipped a game

Ron Gardenhire earned a one-game suspesion after getting thrown out the other night arguing balls and strikes.

Royals scramble at second

Mark Grudzielanek hit the 15-day DL with a severly sprained ankle. The Royals called up infielder Jason Smith form Triple-A Omaha. He's hit 20 homers, but strikes out a lot (128 times in 423 at bats). His average is just .253.

Fantasy Impact: German offers stolen bases and not much more. Smith is a minor league journeyman. He's 31, and he's played eight straight seasons at Triple-A. Don't expect much from him, although he might earn playing time while Grudzielanek is out.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Pirates waste no time

Pittsburgh has three newcomers in the lineup today: pitcher Jeff Karstens (from Yankees), third baseman Andy LaRoche (Dodgers) and right fielder Brandon Moss (Red Sox).

Karstens got through the first inning without giving up a hit against the talented Cubs lineup. LaRoche singled up the middle off the glove of Ronny Cedeno and later scored. Moss struck out.

The Pirates got these guys right into the lineup, hoping to learn whether they can help reverse 15 straight seasons of losing baseball. With a record of 50-58, Pittsburgh's in danger of equaling an old Phillies team with the losingest stretch in major sports history, 16 consecutive seasons of losing.

Howling for strikeouts

Never knew this before, but Cubs TV announcer Len Kasper says MLB umpire Jim Wolf is pitcher Randy Wolf's brother. The must've made sure that Jim was rotated away from Padres games while Randy was with San Diego. I wonder how that impacted Jim's schedule when Randy was moved to Houston before the trade deadline.

Jim's howling balls and strikes today in Chicago for the Cubs-Pirates tilt at Wrigley. Actually, he has a silent strike call. Too bad.

Zito - good enough to throw BP

Barry Zito threw batting practice Thursday for the Giants, a day before his latest start.
In his unfortunately ceaseless quest to get things right, Barry Zito pitched what amounted to a simulated game against the Giants' hitters rather than throw a normal side session in the bullpen. This is old school. When teams had four-man rotations, pitchers usually threw full-speed batting practice.

"It's always a great benefit throwing against hitters in game situations," said Zito, coming off a loss against Arizona in which he allowed six runs and five walks in five innings. "It's something I've done in the past in Oakland here or there. I've got 30 pitches on the side. Why not take advantage of the guys and get their feedback?"
Give the guy credit for trying everything and anything to get things right, but at this point nothing is working. Zito's lost 13 games this season, putting him in jeopardy of losing 20 before all is said and done.

Dump Dunc

The Cardinals release new information on once-slugging outfielder Chris Duncan. Duncan's been on the DL sine July 22nd with a bulging disc in his back. Now that's been downgraded to herniated disc.
Though Duncan's initial treatment has consisted of a series of injections, surgery is often required to address a herniated, or ruptured, disk, which is considered more serious than a bulging disk. A club source on Thursday suggested Duncan likely would require corrective surgery.
He's not coming back any time soon.

Fantasy Impact: At this point, little. Duncan did look like a nice fourth outfielder at the year's outset after he hit 22 and 21 homers the past two seasons. This year, however, he never got on track, hitting just six homers in 222 at bats. Leave him alone until next spring.

Brand new Nats

The Washington Nationals might have a brand new middle infield tonight against the Cincinnati Reds. The Nats dealt for Yankees reserve shortstop Alberto Gonzalez and then released Jose Lopez. Lopez had been starting for injured Cristian Guzman.

At second, look for Emilio Bonifacio (acquired in Jon Rauch trade with Arizona), who was recalled on Friday. Bonifacio is a speed demon and could unseat Ronnie Belliard for a starting job. The Nats have little to play for, so it could be audition time.

Pirates love Morris

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette says scouts glow about pitcher Bryan Morris (acquired in the Jason Bay deal) and his upside.
"The sky could be the limit for this kid," said Danny Darwin, the former Pirates pitcher who is Great Lakes' pitching coach.
...
"This kid is definitely a big league prospect," Darwin said. "He just needs to refine what he has."

Morris, 6-3, 190, throws his fastball 96-97 mph "on a good day," Darwin said, adding that his curve and slider are "swing-and-miss" pitches.
The Pirates are also high on Brandon Moss, and it sounds like he'll get a shot to start in left field.

Nomar defends Manny

Manny Ramirez wasn't the first player to leave Boston in a huff, and former/current teammate Nomar Garciaparra in Los Angeles is the first to come to his defense.
"The Red Sox don't deserve a player like me," Ramirez told ESPN the other day. "During my years here, I've seen how they have mistreated other great players when they didn't want them, to try to turn the fans against them.

"The Red Sox did the same with guys like Nomar Garciaparra and Pedro Martinez, and now they do the same with me. Their goal is to paint me as the bad guy."

This could be Manny being Manny. Or this could be the Red Sox being the Red Sox.

"There's a lot of truth to what he said," Garciaparra said at his Dodger Stadium locker Thursday, two hours after the Dodgers acquired Ramirez. "I can definitely understand and relate. Maybe he'll be next to me [in an adjacent locker], and we can chat and laugh about it."
I actually had a friend covering the Red Sox when Garciaparra was traded away. There was a lot written, good and bad, about Nomar at that time, but I'll never forget what my buddy told me: "Nomar is a cancer."

Dinner and Dessert

There are two games of the day.

The early one has the Angels sending Ervin Santana (11-5) to the hill attempting to make it five straight wins over AL East stalwarts Boston and New York. They should. The Yankees counter with shaky Sidney Ponson (6-2). This is more of a test to see if LA can win a game they're supposed to win after doing the unthinkable in sweeping Boston at Fenway and out-hitting the Yankees in the Bronx.

The late one features The D'backs at the Dodgers. Arizona opened a two-game lead over Los Angeles with a win at Dodger Stadium, but now the reinforcements arrive. Manny Ramirez and Clayton Kershaw go up against Randy Johnson. That's 20-year-old power-lefty Kershaw (1-3) going up against 44-year-old power-lefty Johnson (8-7). What a matchup!

Honorable mention: The Phillies and Cole Hamels 9-6) visit the Cardinals and Kyle Lohse (12-3) in a battle of two teams who could end up fighting for the NL Wild Card.

Friday Debuts

Two pitchers make debuts tonight for their respective ball clubs.

Jeff Karstens, acquired in the Xavier Nady and Damaso Marte deal with the Yankees, starts for the Pirates against the Cubs at Wrigley. He owns a 3-5 record and 5.65 ERA in 15 MLB outings. He's made nine starts at the Major League level. Karsten's opponent is the Cubs' Jason Marquis

Raymond Thomas Hunter makes his MLB debut for the Rangers tonight against the Blue Jays Shaun Marcum. He goes by Tommy, so don't be confused. He's had some success in the minors, albeit modest success by prospect standards. In his most recent stop at Triple-A Oklahoma, Hunter went 2-2 in five starts with a 3.24 ERA. He's not a strikeout artist and says one tiny adjustment is the reason for his recent success in the minors.
"The only big difference is learning to keep the ball down, keep it in the bottom half of the strike zone instead of thigh high where it gets crushed. It really came from the first four starts when I was in Bakersfield. I had to learn quick (after posting a 5.14 ERA). That's one big part of being able to win in professional baseball, keep the ball down."
This might be a one-start opportunity for Hunter.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Crash Lannan

Ignoring Nationals' starter John Lannan might be the best trade-deadline non-move by contending teams. Considered a potential target for those looking for left-handed pitching, Lannan was cruising along with nine quality starts in his last ten games. Then came Thursday against Philadelphia.

Lannan's line:

5.2 IP, 9 H, 8 R, 6 ER, 3 BB, 7 K, 2 HR

Lannan's ERA jumps to 3.61 after he had worked for three solid outings to pull it all the way down to 3.33. Jason Werth smoked Lannan for home run number 15. Jimmy Rollins hit his 8th in a convincing 8-4 Phillies victory. Kyle Kendrick threw pretty well for the Phils, giving up two earned in 6 2/3 innings for his ninth win.

The Phillies stand alone in first in the NL East thanks to a Mets loss at Florida.

Freakout, then breakout

16 runs, 20 hits, four homers and one ejection makes for one exciting baseball game in Minneapolis. Down 4-3 at the time of manager Ron Gardenhire's ejection for arguing balls and strikes (or really just one particular strike) when he came flying out to complain about a call against Denard Span.

The Twins responded after their firey leader's dismissal. Jason Kubel launched his 14th home run, a three-run shot that proved the game-winner in a 10-6 comeback at the Metrodome. The second-place Twins stand just a game in back of the White Sox with the victory.

Fantasy Impact: By the way, Span scored three runs tonight without getting a hit. He's batting .311 this season, and doing a good job in the leadoff spot. Here's wondering if he's capable of sticking in that role, especially if Carlos Gomez can't get it figured out.

Lowe scoring

Solid pitchers duel in Los Angeles with the D'Backs; Brandon Webb edging Dodgers starter Derek Lowe for his 15th win, 2-1. Their lines:

Webb: 8 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 K
Lowe: 6.1 IP, 7 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K

Lowe actually outpitched Webb until the seventh, where he gave up both of his runs and left before getting out of the inning.

Drunk on hype

With all the talk about Milwaukee catching the Cubs this past week, the Brewers forget how to hang on to first place once they grab it. Five straight losses, including a four-game home sweep to the Cubs, drops Milwaukee five in back of first-place Chicago.

The Cubs did it with a bit of everything on Thursday, blasting three home runs (Edmonds, Soriano, Fukudome) and getting another pitching gem out of Rich Harden. He went seven, struck out nine and earns his first win as a Cub. The final: 11-4, Cubs.

Big flies against Pettitte

Angels center fielder Torii Hunter extends his hitting streak to 13 games with a three-run homer off of Andy Pettitte in the first inning in the Bronx. Hunter's homer to right center comes right after Vlad Guererro flew out to the warning track in deep left.

Update: The pounding continues all night. LAA smashes three three-run homers. Juan Rivera followed Hunter with his in the third. Vlad whacked his off Chris Britton. Los Angeles roles, 12-6, as Pettitte picks up the loss, giving up nine earned in 5 1/3 innings. Jon Garland pitches well enough for his 10th win, as he's a pretty steady back-end rotation guy in fantasy.

Update: This was the first time in 30 years that three Angels hit a three-run homers in the same game. Can you name the 1978 trio?

Jays wanted Ibanez

Interesting stuff from the Seattle Times on the Blue Jays' late push for Raul Ibanez. Geoff Baker writes in his Mariners Blog:
Why would Toronto do an Ibanez deal? I'd wondered that earlier. Until my buddies back east reminded me of a cardinal rule of covering the Jays that I'd forgotten about during my two years here. That optics mean as much back there as reality at times.

To realists, like most of you, and me, a snowball has a greater chance of lasting the afternoon in this Texas heat as the Jays do of making the playoffs. But in Toronto, the Jays could acquire Ibanez, then tell their fans they still have a chance and that they're going for it.
Everything I read about Toronto sound slike smoke and mirrors these days. They're probably lucky they didn't make the deal as Ibanez is getting up there in age, and Toronto has slugging prospect Adam Lind to fill the position.

Jocketty jovial about Reds' trade

Reds general manager Walt Jocketty spoke with WLW radio about the Griffey trade. The Reds ended up receiving two players in the deal: right handed starter/reliever Nick Masset and left-handed hitting minor league second baseman Danny Richar.
In Masset and Richar, the Reds got two players Jocketty said he's been eyeing for years. Masset will join the Reds and could be with the team as soon as Friday, while Richar will be assigned to Class AAA Louisville.

"Initially we'll use him as a reliever," Jocketty said. "We don't have a lot of depth in pitching. If we had something happen to one of our starters, with (Daryl) Thompson and (Matt) Maloney at AAA it gives us more depth."

Masset, 26, is 1-0 with a 4.63 ERA in 32 games for the White Sox this season. He's also been a starter during his career, starting two big league games, including one this season.

Richar, 25, is hitting .263 with eight home runs and 38 home runs in 60 games for Class AAA Charlotte. He hit .230 with six home runs in 56 games with the White Sox last season.

To make room for Richar on the 40-man roster, INF/OF Ryan Freel was transferred to the 60-day disabled list.

"We added quality players we'll control for quite a while," Jocketty said. "That's what you've got to do building an organization."
Masset came to the Sox along with John Danks in a deal for Brandon McCarthy. Danks was then, and is now, the more-regarded prospect. Richar was considered a starting candidate for the White Sox this season during spring training, but a back injury derailed the start of his season. He's never made it back from Triple-A. Richar's got some decent pop for a second baseman.

Pirates haul in Bay-Ramirez deal

Andy LaRoche is the marquee name in this trade. He joins his brother Adam in Pittsburgh to eventually become one half of the LaRoche-LaRoche corners of the Pirates infield. For now, however, he'll have to battle Jose Bautista, who's hit 12 home runs for Pittsburgh at third this year. Andy struggled to get back to the big leagues with an injury problem to start the year. A low draft pick out of community college in 2003, he's blossomed into a valued prospect at the age of 24. In his last six stops in the minors LaRoche hit over .300 five times, with power.

From Boston, Pittsburgh reels in Brandon Moss, a guy who was nothing more than a role player on a talented Beantown roster. He was originally an 8th round pick and turns 25 in September. In 78 at bats in Boston he hit .295 with two home runs.

Both LaRoche and Moss will join the Pirates 25-man roster for tomoror's game in Chicago.

The Pirates also nab two former first-round picks: Red Sox top selection overall in 2005, pitcher Craig Hansen, and Dogers number-one pick from 2006, pitcher Bryan Morris.

Hansen is a big 25-year-old right hander (6'6, 230) who struggled with his command at the MLB level this year. He gave up 23 walks in 30 2/3 innings. He's been used mostly as a setup man and will join the Pirates 25-man roster tomorrow. He was the 26th overall pick in 2005.

Morris, a 21-year-old Class-A righty, is a starter to this point in his career and a pretty good one. He's only 2-4, but owns a solid 3.20 ERA and strikes out a little under a batter over 81 2/3 IP. Like Hansen, he was the 26th overall pick, but in 2006. He'll head to Class-A Hickory.

Fantasy Impact: LaRoche is the best bet to get a shot, but when that comes is anybody's guess. He's been pretty mediocre when called on in Los Angeles, but with extended at bats he could easily unseat Bautista in the Pirates lineup and blossom. Consider him a stashee for now.

Manny in LA-LA Land

So the Dodgers get their batman, the Red Sox get Jason Bay, and the Pirates get some prospects.

I missed the event unfolding (although it sounded like this was hush-hush at the deadline) because I was watching the new Batman movie The Dark Knight. It was OK. The trade is more interesting than the film.

Fantasy Impact: The Dodgers outfield is a crowded place, but Manny and Matt Kemp should remain starters. Interesting that the Dodgers are not a very good defensive outfield. Bay's played well this season, and he'll be a solid fixture for the Red Sox.

Bay to the Jays?

The drama is only getting more interesting. Now the Toronto Blue Jays have inquired about Jason Bay, a Canada native. Pittsburgh's asking price is pretty steep, as both Shawn Marcum and Travis Snider have a lot of potential.

Manny being Maddening

There are now at least two reports on Manny Ramirez getting traded to the Florida Marlins. The West Palm Beach Post reported that an agreement had been reached on Wednesday, but has been no further confirmation. Now, this media outlet picks up on that story and publishes another "Manny to the Marlins" piece.

Baseball Prospectus is reporting similar information.

Update: Ken Rosenthal isn't quiet ready to call it a deal, but he seems to believe the right moves are being made to get the deal done.

Update: Ken Rosenthal proclaims the deal "dead... for now." Talk about twisting in the wind.

Marlins seeing the light

Hard to tell if there's anything more than a columnist guessing here. If this deal is a possibility, however, that giant light bulb you saw going on over the horizon is the imagination of the Florida Marlins, whose pint-sized payroll might make them capable of bringing in not only Manny Ramirez, but also A.J. Burnett. With deals those two players Florida becomes an instant contender in the National League.

If there's nothing to this, what's the point of adding more confusion to trade deadline day, TSN? Odd.

Marlins make move

No Manny, no catcher. For the Marlins, at least for right now, it's Arthur Rhodes. The Fish acquire the lefty reliever from Seattle for minor league pitching prospect Gaby Hernandez. Hernandez has struggled after moving from Double- to Triple-A.

Fantasy Impact: Once a setup man, always a setup man for Rhodes, who stands little chance in notching saves with Kevin Gregg around.

Todd Jones - bum shoulder

The Detroit Free-Press outlines the bullpen-by-committee that will emerge with the Tigers acquisition of Kyle Farnsworth.
With Wednesday night’s revelation that Todd Jones has been battling shoulder pain, it appears that Leyland has three internal options to close games now: Fernando Rodney, Joel Zumaya and Farnsworth.

Detroit’s bullpen alignment remains fluid, as evidenced by Wednesday’s chaotic victory over the Cleveland Indians.
Now we know the source of Todd Jones' problems, but it might take a while to hash out the closer role.

Rumblings in Seattle

Jarrod Washburn's name originally surfaced as a potential trade candidate to the New York Yankees, then the Phillies and Mets, but now the lefty's got a new suitor: the Colorado Rockies.

The same story says the Diamondbacks and Cubs still pursue Raul Ibanez, and it's mostly former Seattle manager Lou Piniella's doing in Chicago.
The Ibañez-to-the-Mets deal may be dead, but Arizona is still interested and, in Chicago, Lou Piniella has asked his Cubs management to look into obtaining Ibañez as a platoon player.

A starter and heart-of-the-lineup hitter in Seattle, most teams view Ibañez as a fifth or sixth hitter – and their offers reflect that assessment. They’re dangling mid-level minor leaguers, not true prospects or big-league players
Fantasy Impact: Washburn's stock rises if he's dealt anywhere other than Washington, just because he'll be in line for more wins. If Ibanez goes anywhere but the Cubs his value should remain as an average-to-above outfield talent. In Chicago, if he ends up platooning, that changes.

Manny to Boston

"Manny being Miserable" was the overnight headline in the Boston Herald. Now The Herald reports that it's less than a 50-50 shot that the Red Sox deal their disgruntled left fielder.
Even though the source said the deal is “far from done,’’ the forward momentum suggests that there is still time before the 4 p.m. trading deadline for the Sox, Marlins and Pirates to work out a relatively complex three-team blockbuster that would send Ramirez to Florida, Marlins outfielder Jeremy Hermida to Pittsburgh and Pirates outfielder Jason Bay to the Sox. The 29-year-old Bay, who plays left field, is hitting .282 with 22 homers and 64 RBI.
While a trade fluctuates between imminent and impossible, we've seen this all before. Last year Boston worked its tail off to rid the enigmatic slugger. It didn't happen. At least for now it looks like it will play that way again.

Prospects of a Rays deal

If the Tampa Bay Rays make no deals today, it may be because they are unwilling to give up any of their top-level minor league talent.
As being reported now, the Pirates could end up with Marlins OF Jeremy Hermida (a young potential star) and two or three good prospects, though there are numerous conflicting reports. Though a deal was not completed, it sounded as if the Rays and Pirates were talking more about a package of prospects, and the Rays have been consistent in saying they would not include their elite ones, such as SS Reid Brignac, LHP David Price and RHPs Wade Davis and Jeremy Hellickson.
The Rays have a very good, young nucleus at the Major League level, so you'd think they could part with one of the three pitchers for a player like Brian Fuentes or Jason Bay. It's not every year you have a shot at a world title.

Rockies might roll with Fuentes

The Rockies think they still have a shot in the whimpy NL West, and that means Brian Fuentes might not be traded.
"I want to be here," Fuentes said. "We have been playing better. And I think if I stay, we can win. Even I don't stay, these guys can win. But I believe I can help."
The Rockies stand just seven games out of first despite a horrible first half of the season in which injuries drastically starters Matt Holliday, Brad Hawpe, Troy Tulowitzki. First baseman Todd Helton is now on the shelf.

Fantasy Impact: With Manny Corpas and Taylor Buchholz waiting in the wings, Fuentes might just keep his job. It wouldn't be much of a surprise. Fuentes lost the closer role in Denver last year to Corpas, then won it back after Corpas collapsed at the beginning of the year. If Fuentes stays, it's his job to lose, but he's not a number one closer. If he goes, he might become a setup man for a contender. Here's wondering if the Cubs come calling at the last minute.

Update: ESPN concurs.

Junior back to Junior Circuit

Ken Griffey Junior is headed to the Chicago White Sox as long as Griffey OKs the move. Sounds like Ken Rosenthal talked to someone on the inside in Chicago.
The White Sox, leading the American League Central by a game and a half, would use Griffey mostly in the outfield, the source said. However, they do not have an obvious spot for him unless they make another deal.

The Sox are set at the corners with Carlos Quentin in left and Jermaine Dye in right. They could play Nick Swisher at first to open center for Griffey, a move that would reduce the playing time of first baseman Paul Konerko. But Griffey has not played center regularly since 2006.

Griffey, 38, is batting .245 this season with a .355 on-base percentage, 15 home runs and 53 RBIs in 359 at-bats. Earlier this season, he hit his 600th home run.
Fantasy Impact: Griffey might actually lose at bats because he's moving to a team with two better-hitting corner outfielders. Like Rosethal speculates, centerfield would seem difficult for Griffey given the point he's reached in his career. With injuries always a concern, you have to wonder if he can run balls down on a nightly basis in the biggest part of the park. The Sox have added a dangerous lefty bat that's lost a lot of its sting. The safest bet is Griffey becomes a four to five starts a week guy who is spelled on occasion. That situation would benefit both player and team.

Todd Jones injured

Todd Jones, recently demoted as Tigers closer, could end up on the DL after he "felt something" while pitching on Wednesday. This second setback for Jones (notes section of story) in the last handful of days could mean the 40-year-old's time as a closer could be coming to an end.

Fantasy Impact: This is your typical "adding insult to injury," or in this case it would be adding an injury to the already insulted Jones, who is becoming less and less likely to regain his closer role. The Tigers acquired Kyle Farnsworth from the Yankees in exchange for Ivan Rodriguez earlier in the day. Jones' injury and possible DL stint would leave him out of the equation potentially for good.

Rally son of old Notre Dame

That's what the Cubs might be asking of Jeff Samardzija. The rookie, just up a few days with the parent club, might get the call at closer. With Kerry Wood on the DL and Carlos Marmol on the fritz, Samardzija, a former Notre Dame wide receiver, hasn't looked so wide-eyed in the big leagues. He touches the high 90's on the gun, plus he's got impressive sink, and if the Cubs have another gem in this rookie, they can throw the kitchen sink at you.
''We want to get this guy some late-inning, closing experience, on the road especially,'' Piniella said. ''He hasn't had that, and it's part of the education of pitching in the bullpen. I'll tell you what, he looked good. He gave up a run [Tuesday], but that's OK. He threw strikes and pitched well.''
Fantasy Impact: How did this guy play anything but quarterback in college? I'm sure there are several answers to that question. The Cubs' answer at closer is eventually Wood, but if Marmol is no good, Samardzija is a pretty solid stop gap.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Closing Time for Farnsworth

Eric Karabell assumes the Tigers will name Kyle Farnsworth their closer. You know what you do to "u" amd me when you assume. That closer role didn't work for Farnsworth in Detroit once before, and there are those who believe he's only a setup man.

Fantasy Impact: Believe both stories. Farnsworth is probably going to get a shot as Tigers' closer. Don't, however, have a whole lot of faith in him. Maybe he's matured over the last few years, but he floats through portions of seasons. Closers don't do that. They perform at a high level nine times out of ten.

Catching hinges on Inge

The Tigers will make Bradon Inge their starting catcher in the wake of Ivan Rodriguez going to the Yankees for Kyle Farnsworth.
"Brandon Inge is ready to tackle being the everyday catcher. He gives us a quality chance to win on a day-in, day-out basis and this allows us to address the one area of our club that needs to be addressed the most, which is our bullpen,” general manager Dave Dombrowski explained. He also said Inge will be the No. 1 catcher next season.
Fantasy Impact: Inge's fantasy value improves only because he'll be getting more regular at bats. He's a better power option than most catchers, but his .227 batting average is bad no matter where he's playing.

Pudge for Farnsworth

No Jorge Posada, no problem. The Yankees acquired Ivan Rodriguez from Detroit for Kyle Farnsworth.The move certainly helps New York, but Farnsworth's addition in Detroit is interesting. If Fernando Rodney and Joel Zumaya can't hold down closing duties, the Tigers would have the option of going to Farnsworth or back to Todd Jones.

Fantasy Impact: Gut feeling? The Tigers will give Rodney, Zumaya (if he's healthy) and Farnsworth opportunities to close. Jones will be the fall-back option if nobody wins the job. He's at least experienced, and only blew three saves this year, even if he was erratic.

Bombers blast O's

Bobby Abreu is having a good week today. The Yankees' outfielder is 3-3 with four runs scored and two home runs. He's knocked in four RBI as the Yankees pour it on Baltimore, leading 13-2 in the seventh. Alex Rodriguez also homered, hitting his 23rd.

Joba Chamberlain worked six innings, striking out six, and is in line for his fourth win.

Fantasy Impact: Abreu is on pace to hit more homers this year than last (13 now vs. 16 in 2007) but steal fewer bases (13 now vs. 25 in '07) and score fewer runs (63 now vs. 123 in '07). He's a nice all-around outfielder. Chamberlain is emerging as a staff ace, and could become more of one as he gets stretched out as a starter.

Stern recommendation

NBA commissioner David Stern is pumping Mark Cuban to MLB.
Stern has fined the Mavericks' owner more than $1 million for ciriticizing referees. But when Stern was asked by Bloomberg News what he would tell Major League Baseball owners about Cuban, the league boss replied in an e-mail: "They should welcome him."
I like the first comment made after the post, because I had a similar reaction. Does Stern really want Cuban around in the NBA? Is this a backhanded attempt to move Cuban on to divergent interests?

Either way, Cuban looks like a serious contender for purchasing the Cubs.

Jose, can you see?

ESPN reports that Jose Guillen wants out of Kansas City because of manager Eric Hillman, and ESPN reports that Jose Guillen doesn't want out of Kansas City whatsoever.
"Guillen and Hillman are not on speaking terms, they don't talk," said the source. "Guillen is definitely not happy, he's not comfortable and he would do anything he can in economic terms to ease his way out of Kansas City."

Guillen, however, denied he wants out.

"This is completely catching me by surprise," Guillen told The Kansas City Star. "This isn't coming from me. Trey and I are fine right now, and I've never said I wanted out of Kansas City.

"This is the team that is paying me a lot of money, and this is where I want to be. I don't know where all of this stuff is coming from. I hate to be put in this situation, and now I look like a bad guy again."
This strikes me as irresponsible journalism. ESPN reporter Enrique Rojas takes information from a "source" and then asks Guillen about the information. Guillen denies the matter, and Royals general manager Dayton Moore knows nothing of any unhappiness between Guillen and Hillman. So what does ESPN do? ESPN goes ahead and runs a story based on source information which is refuted by the athlete. You run source info when nobody is talking, not when the source, Jose Guillen is telling you the opposite is true. If anything there is no story here, and ESPN should've realized that.

Guillen's been disgruntled before, but he's new to KC, and like he says, he's making good money. Is this digging up dirt just for the sake of digging? If I'm Guillen, I'm peeved about this story and rightly so.

Northsiders consider Ibanez

Ken Rosenthal has the Cubs now interested in Raul Ibanez.
At the moment, the Cubs are set in the outfield with Alfonso Soriano in left, Jim Edmonds and Reed Johnson in center and Kosuke Fukudome in center and right, with center fielder Felix Pie hot at Class AAA.

The addition of Ibanez would force Fukudome to center full-time, leaving the Cubs with below-average defenders, Soriano and Ibanez, in left and right. It also would reduce the playing time of Edmonds and Johnson, both of whom have been productive.
Not sure this makes the Cubs very good defensively in the outfield, but Ibanez' bat is better than Edmonds.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Baby birds busted

First Rick Ankiel and Gary Bennett, now three Cardinals minor leaguers are busted for using performance-enhancing drugs. The organization has had itself in plenty of bad light the past couple of year but seemed out of the woods until now.

Not Joshin'

Josh Robbins is crazy. The California native hit 26 MLB ballparks in 30 days, which might be a world record. Why they're keeping tabs on baseball park visits I don't understand, but it's still quite a feat.

Most impressive? He averaged less than $77 on gas per day during his trip.

Teixeira fantasy impact

The Sporting News lists four suitors for Braves first baseman Mark Teixeira: Angels, Diamondbacks, Rays, Red Sox.

From a fantasy standpoint, a trade to Arizona would make the biggest impact. If Teixeira's headed to the desert Chad Tracy is out of a starting spot at first base. Tracy's played outfield at the major league level, but hasn't done so since 2005. With Conor Jackson in left, and Justin Upton on the mend with an oblique injury, it would appear Tracy could end up a spot starter a few times a week. Then again, if Teixeira is moved for Tracy (the D'backs are not interested in dealing Jackson), this concern is moot as Tracy would become the Braves' first baseman.

Teixeira's trade to the Red Sox would probably precipitate Manny Ramirez's ouster in Boston. Kevin Youkilis would go to left field, leaving first base open for Teixeira.

CC and the Cy Young

CC Sabathia's so-so performance against the Cubs in a 6-4 Milwaukee loss has this blogger backing off the thought that Sabathia could win the NL Cy Young.

I'm not sure I'd even consider Sabathia in the running. Pitching just half a season in the National League, he'd have to be near perfect to beat out a guys like Tim Lincecum and Brandon Webb.

Monday, July 28, 2008

If not Manny, then Raul?

The Mets are reported to be interested in Mariners' left fielder Raul Ibanez. They need outfield help badly, and Ibanez is a professional hitter who is not likely to slump much even if he faces all new pitchers after changing leagues.

What's next, underhand pitching?

The International Baseball Federation is crazy. They're trying to turn baseball into softball, testing extra inning tiebreaker rules like placing a runner at second base to begin innings. This would occur in the 11th inning and all innings thereafter. The thinking is this might speed up problematic extra innings games to help make baseball logistically attractive in terms of formatting for futures olympic games.
“The upcoming Beijing Olympic competition may be our last unless we are successful in adding the sport back to the Olympic program for the 2016 Games,” said IBAF President Dr. Harvey W. Schiller. “We must demonstrate to the International Olympic Committee not only does our game belong alongside the other great sports of the world, but our sport is manageable from a television and operational standpoint.”

Dr. Schiller continued, saying the change is both a positive and necessary step for the sport of baseball.

“One of the unique aspects of our game is that it has no time limit. Extra-inning contests can bring about the most exciting results for players and fans, but such circumstances also make it difficult in the context of the Olympic program. Delays cause scheduling and logistical nightmares. Planned security, transportation, drug testing, broadcasts, and entertainment are just a few of the activities that may be seriously affected,” Dr. Schiller continued.
This is insane, and if that's what it takes to get baseball back in the olympics after 2008, forget it. Baseball and the olympics are a bad marriage that cannot be reconciled by changing the covenant after a short break.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Not just Rodney

Reports have Fernando Rodney taking over the Tigers' closer role, but Jim Leyland wasn't ready to go with Rodney alone. Joel Zumaya is also on the shortlist to replace Todd Jones, who blew three saves in the month of July.

Zumaya left Sunday's win over the White Sox with a triceps injury, another setback after offseason shoulder surgery.
Leyland said he'd planned to "tinker with" new closer Fernando Rodney and Zumaya in the ninth inning, and the timing of his latest injury is difficult for Zumaya to take.

"I'm very frustrated now," said Zumaya, who had reconstructive surgery on the AC joint of his right shoulder nine months ago and returned from the disabled list less than six weeks ago.

"I've been through a lot. It gets pretty old being on the shelf."
Fantasy Impact: If he's out for only a short spell, expect Zumaya to rival Rodney for the bulk of the save opporutnities. Zumaya hits triple digits on the gun when he's right. He's got closer makeup while Rodney's struggled to save half of his career save chances.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Tribe trading

Looks like the Indians are going to win the award for most deals this season.

Baseball Musings caught the first of two Cleveland deals today. Here's the second one.

Looks like Cleveland is looking to get younger, although the deal for Reyes is a mixed bag. He's young, promising, but has faced injury problems. We'll wait to see what role he earns.

Reyes dealt to Tribe

The Cardinals traded Anthony Reyes to Cleveland for minor leaguer Luis Perdomo and cash. Perdomo will head to Double-A in the Cardinals organization per the St. Louis press release.

Update: The Plain Dealer just posted a short article saying that Reyes will provide "starting pitching depth."

While the Cardinals looked shaky with their starting staff earlier this year, it appears they feel comfortable with the group they currently have moving forward. The deal for Perdomo is an attempt to eventually strengthen the 'pen. He has closer experience in the minors.

ROY running

The Rookie of the Year standings continue to evolve. Here's how it should look if things wrapped up today:

American League -
1. Evan Longoria (3B), TB (.276-50-19-61-6)
2. Alexei Ramirez (2B), CHW (.314-35-8-35-7)
3. Joba Chamberlain (P), NYY (2.30 ERA, 1.24 WHIP, 93 K in 78 1/3 IP)

Honorable mention: Armando Galarraga (P), DET; Jacoby Ellsbury (OF), BOS

National League -
1. Geovany Soto (C), CHC (.274-40-17-58-0)
2. Jair Jurrjens (P), ATL (3.02 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 10 W)
3. Joey Votto (1B), CIN (.272-41-13-44-4)

Honorable Mention: Kosuke Fukudome (OF), CHC; Jorge Campillo (P), ATL

NFL rivals MLB streaming

The NFL is dipping its big toe in the pool of online game streaming. The league won't challenge MLB in terms of the amount of content available, but giving fans the opportunity to choose camera angles is revolutionary.
The league and NBC say it is an experiment. They hope to prove they can lure new viewers and people who are already watching at home by adding interactive elements. Viewers will be able to choose from among at least four live camera angles and review statistics that update during the game, according to the league. The league and the network will share in ad sales.

"I think the consumer of media is more and more interested in a greater sense of control over their media experience," said Gary Zenkel, NBC Sports' executive vice president of strategic partnerships. "Whether that translates to sports viewing or not, no one knows. But this is certainly an opportunity to experiment."
As someone who knows a thing or two about cameras, camera angles and covering live sporting events, I think the opportunity to control viewpoints will not be a major draw to watching NFL games online over time. There's a reason the networks prefer the angles they do during games -- those are the best ones. MLB would be even less attractive to watch in terms of choosing your own camera angles. Consider this: choosing camera angles does not mean you'll have the chance to switch angles during play, and the ability to choose angles during play isn't fun. It's work, and that's why people are hired to do it, so the rest of us can watch comfortably at home.

Nady, the X-factor

The Xavier Nady deal that sends an overachieving (breakout?) outfielder to the Yankees is baffling to me. Nady's hitting .330 with a .383 on base percentage, but he's already 29, and he's hit .281 for his career. It's safe to assume he'll fall back to earth a bit, and when a hitter changes leagues he is seeing new arms constantly. Couple that with the fact that Yankee Stadium has a deep left field, plus the fact that New York has pieces returning to replace Nady as a starter if he doesn't deliver, and I'd be worrying as a fantasy owner whether this guy can keep up the pace on what is to this point a career year.

Fantasy Impact: Nady might thrive in New York, but I'd say sell high. He's hit 13 home runs this season, which is nice, but there's going to be a lot of risk involved down the stretch. I'm never a fan of trade-deadline deals that involve hitters from outside the league. It's a lot to ask a guy to figure out an entire league of pitchers over just two months. Deal Nady, and watch your opponent suffer the probable fall.

Pearcing the starting lineup

Steve Pearce is headed to the big leagues with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Xavier Nady's trade to the Yankees for prospects means the Pirates have an opening in their outfield, and the first report says Pearce will get a shot at full-time at bats.

Fantasy Impact: We've been waiting to see what Pearce can do at the MLB level for a long time. He progressed from A-ball to Double-A to Triple-A last season hitting .347-.335-.320, but this year he's struggled at .258 with 11 home runs. Pearce has a lot of pop, and since he's getting regular at bats he's worth taking a flier on, especially if you need outfield help.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Marlins liking the road

The Chicago Cubs out-homered the Florida Marlins 2-1 at Wrigley Field on Friday afternoon, but it was Jeremy Hermida's ninth inning solo shot that propelled the visitors to a 3-2 victory. The loss, just the 13th of the season for the Cubs at home, brings the Milwaukee Brewers within a half-game of first place in the N.L. Central.

Chicago, dealt with the unavailability of Kerry Wood due to a blister and Carlos Marmol having thrown 38 pitches the night before, used two relievers outside of their customary roles. In his Major League debut rookie Jeff Samardzija allowed one run in two innings giving up the lead. Bob Howry pitched the ninth, serving up Hermida's home run.

The Marlins' win brings Florida within one of making it a .500 record on the road this season. Only three other National League teams have accomplished that feat thus far: Milwaukee, St. Louis and Philadelphia. In the American League only the Boston Red Sox (.500) and the Los Angeles Angels have played even or better baseball on the road. The Angels' 31-18 mark is better than their 31-21 home mark, making them the only team in MLB with better numbers away from home and a winning record in both columns.

Chipped Jones

Braves third baseman Chipper Jones is out of the lineup tonight with yet another injury. It looks like he'll miss his goal of playing in 150 games this year, which is a shame considering he's one of the elite hitters in baseball with a .369 average.

The return of Liriano

The Twins are getting close to bringing back Francisco Liriano. With him and a number of pitchers in the rotation possibilities to move to the Minnesota bullpen, it appears that Livan Hernandez would be most in danger of losing his starting job.
Hernandez, who has allowed a major league-high 178 hits, has dropped four straight road decisions since beating the White Sox on May 7. Despite reaching double-digit victories for the ninth consecutive season, he could be pitching to save his spot in the rotation with Francisco Liriano waiting in the minor leagues.

''He's one of my friends, but the situation is not easy right now,'' Hernandez said, adding: ''I think nothing is going to happen, because everybody is pitching good.''
Fantasy Impact: Expect Hernandez to be demoted sooner than later. Who cares if the Twins are 14-7 in his starts? He's 10-6, but his 5.29 ERA suggests it's run support that's getting him by.

Goodwill from Gotham?

Jayson Stark's latest says the Yankees are interested in Jarrod Washburn, but only in order to help Seattle, which can't afford the languishing lefty for the duration of his huge contract.

Sorry, but I don't think the Yankees do anything "goodwill," and this article from the New York Times would seem to suggest that there's a good deal of motive behind acquiring Washburn.

Fantasy Impact: With a series of strong starts Washburn is getting back to respectability after an awful start to his year. With an ERA at 4.75 (and falling) some Yankees offense would net him some extra wins. Consider him if a deal goes through.

Pedro's pain

Pedro Martinez left the Mets on Wednesday and will miss Friday's scheduled start as he returns home to the Dominican Republic following the death of his father.

While on the DL earlier this season Martinez went home to care for his ailing father. He hasn't pitched well this season, posting a 6.25 ERA and a 1.63 WHIP in 44 2/3 innings.

Fantasy Impact: You have to wonder if the gravity of having his father hurt Pedro's performance on the field. He's battle various injuries this year as well, but if he comes back inspired from the personal tragedy Martinez may still offer something special down the stretch.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Brewing victories

Milwaukee's got some good karma (or maybe just good players) after all their recent deals.

CC Sabathia had it humming in St. Louis tonight. Sabathia held the third-place Cardinals to three hits in a complete game 3-0 shutout. The win pulls Milwaukee within a half-game of the Cubs and one back in the loss column. The Brewers have won seven straight. The can sweep the Cardinals in four straight at Busch on Thursday, and the pitching match up is in Milwaukee's favor with Ben Sheets facing Todd Wellemeyer.

JJ Hardy homered for the 14th time while Ryan Braun hit his 25th off of Jason Isringhausen to start the ninth. The Brewers got hot at the start of 2007 but faded down the stretch. They're working in reverse to this point in 2008.

Soriano's worth

It would be hard to say Alfonso Soriano's return catalyzed the Cubs offense in the first at Arizona; Derrek Lee hit the home run to put the Cubs up 1-0. Soriano's presence, however, must help the Cubs in any regard. Save for a 9-0 win in Houston the Cubs have scored just four runs in four games since the All-Star break.

Cubs making moves

Alfonso Soriano is back in the lineup for the Cubs tonight in Arizona. He'll bat leadoff.

Meanwhile, the Cubs have Carlos Marmol in Kerry Wood's closer role and could bring Jeff Samardzija up from Triple-A. Samardzija would enter a long relief or setup role, not the closer job.

Fantasy Impact: Get Soriano active, and enjoy Marmol while Wood's blister heals. Watch Samardzija's progress for next year.

Hand it to Hanrahan

Baseball's newest closer is the Nationals' Joel Hanrahan, who inherits the job left vacant with Jon Rauch's trade to Arizona. He has the pedigree: striking out more than a batter per inning and yielding just 47 hits in 59 1/3 innings pitched.

Fantasy Impact: This is not necessarily a permanent move. Hanrahan has to prove he can handle the stress of closing out ballgames, but he's got room to make a few mistakes with the Nats out of the playoff race.

Gibbons to Milwaukee

The Milwaukee Brewers continue to acquire players in an attempt to make a run at the World Series. Jay Gibbons is their latest pick up.
Gibbons, 31, who was released by the Orioles at the end of spring training, is expected to spend the next 10-to-14 days at Double-A Huntsville before being promoted to Triple-A Nashville, if all goes according to plan. He had been playing with the Long Island Ducks of the independent Atlantic League.

"He's a little rusty, self-admittedly rusty," Brewers assistant general manager Gord Ash said according to MLB.com. "The idea is to get him some minor league at-bats and then evaluate as we go along."
It's a low-risk move by Milwaukee, and one that could prove important down the stretch as Gibbons provides pop from the left side. Gibbons was named in the Mitchell report, so we'll have to wait and see if the power comes back.

Urine test for HGH

A urine test is on the way for detecting Human Growth Hormone.
MLB spokesman Rich Levin said in an e-mail to the newspaper that MLB could move to include a urine HGH test as soon as scientists validate the test. Greg Bouris, spokesman for the MLB Players Association, told the paper the union had no comment.

NFL Spokesman Brian McCarthy told USA Today, "We are always open to reviewing any test but have yet to see a test that is available on a commercial basis." NFL players union officials couldn't be reached for comment. Use of an HGH test would have to be collectively bargained between the NFL and the union, USA Today notes

Scientists explained to the Washington Business Journal how the test works. It uses "nanoparticles, which work much like a crab net, filtering bodily fluids and using chemical bait to snare, isolate, compile and preserve some of the world's smallest matter to help detect diseases or toxins earlier, faster and cheaper."
At least they're trying, but as long as chemists can make new designer steroids they're capable of getting their way around or remaining one step ahead of the new technology.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Dominican Dandy

Johnny Cueto looked like a prodigy against San Diego striking out 10 in six innings. Cueto threw 78 of his 120 pitches for strikes, but failed to pick up his eighth win thanks to a shaky third inning. Cueto walked the leadoff man, then got the next two batters before allowing three straight hits that scored three runs. He earned a no-decision when the Reds forced extra innings.

Cincinnati wins the game 4-3 in the 11th on a Jeff Keppinger double that scored Jay Bruce. Bruce extended his hitting streak to 11 games.

Fantasy Impact: Cuteo continues to mix good and bad outings in his rookie season. He's a little big better at home, so take your chances when he's at the Great American Ballpark more often than when he's on the road.

Not even 17-thousand

Despite starting the night in first place, the Rays drew just 16,800 for a Tuesday night tilt with Oakland. Those not in attendance didn't miss much. Dallas Braden made his debut for the A's, giving up one earned run in five innings, and Jack Hannahan drove in four in an 8-1 Oakland win.

Andy Sonnanstine falls to 10-5 as he picks up the loss. Tampa's got both Boston and New York breathing down its neck.

Closing in on Tampa

The Yankees explode for seven runs in the sixth and seventh innings against Minnesota's Kevin Slowy and company en route to a comfortable 8-2 win. With first-place Tampa losing to Oakland, the Yankees are very much in the race in the AL East, standing just 3 1/2 games back.

Most encouraging for the Yankees tonight might have been the pitching of Darrell Rasner, who worked into the sixth before yielding two runs. He picks up his sixth win, though he couldn't pick up a quality start.

Fantasy Impact: Rasner tossed three quality starts in his first four outings of the season, but then lost his ability to get past the fifth. He almost broke the spell tonight. Keep an eye on him as a potent Yankees lineup can work wonders for any pitcher.

Six apiece, four each

Some similar numbers from the players that mattered most in Baltimore. Both starting pitchers, Shaun Marcum and Garrett Olson, worked 4 2/3 innings and yielded six earned runs. Neither figured in the decision.

Both players of the game, Adam Lind and Nick Markakis, went 4-5 with a home run. Despite Markakis knocking in five runs to Lind's three, the Blue Jays win the game, 10-8.

Fantasy Impact: Marcum, just off the DL after sitting out sine June 19th with an elbow strain, looked terrible in his return. He allowed eight hits and walked three. You may want to sit him until he's comfortable again. Olson is looking more and more like he needs a return to the minors. His ERA is an ugly 6.11.

Lind is intriguing at this time. Cito Gaston has handed him the reigns in left field, and Lind is hitting .289 with six home runs. Start both him and Markakis in all formats.

Blanton blasted

Joe Blanton's first start for the Phillies is not pretty: five earned runs, six innings, two home runs allowed against the Mets. This one wasn't even played in Philadelphia, where the experts believe Blanton's deep Oakland flyouts will turn into home runs. Mets beat the Phils, 8-6.

Fantasy Impact: If you own Blanton, bench him. He doesn't offer much unless his National League anonimity helps him get by. It didn't tonight. Carlos Delgado and Ramon Castro connected for the Mets' longballs. Neither of them inspire fear, although Delgado's been swinging a hot stick.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Ninth heaven

Down a run in the visitor's half of the ninth in Houston, the Pittsburgh Pirates grabbed the lead and then some. After Jose Valverde retired Ryan Doumit to begin the inning, Jason Bay blasted his 20th home run, a solo shot to knot things at three. The Pirates continued to pound away. After a Xavier Nady single, Adam LaRoche ripped his 12th home run for a 5-3 Pirates advantage. After Valverde exited the game, but before Pittsburgh batted around in the inning, Freddie Sanchez tallied a three-run inside-the-park home run.

Pittsburgh scored seven in the inning with Valverde posting six earned runs in 1/3 an inning of work. The Pirates prevail, 9-3.

Longoria goes long

Rays third baseman Evan Longoria went long for the 19th time this season in Tampa's 4-0 win over Oakland. Longoria finished the night 2-5 with a run scored and two RBI.

Fantasy Impact: Longoria is this year's Ryan Braun. His average dropped to .272 around the All-Star break -- and rookies are often slump-prone -- but he's certainly the one to have this year.

Kazmir rolls

No All-Star hangover for Scott Kazmir. The Rays starter, who wasn't supposed to pitch in the midsummer classic but ended up winning the game in the end, went seven innings against Oakland, striking out nine to pick up his eighth win.

Fantasy Impact: Kazmir's fought off arm troubles in recent seasons to become the dominant lefty in baseball. As his ERA drops to 2.80, his stock rises. Finally on a winning team, he's become a fantasy ace.

Pounce on Ponson?

Somehow Sidney Ponson is 6-1. For a guy who allows a high number of base runners (1.58 WHIP entering tonight), Ponson continues to get run support. First he got it in Texas. Now it's coming in New York, as the Yankees scored eight runs in the first three innings against Minnesota in a 12-4 victory in the Bronx. Ponson gave up three runs over 5 2/3 innings, pushing his ERA up to 4.02.

Fantasy Impact: It's hard to endorse Ponson. Since 2005 his WHIP is over 1.50, a tell-tale sign of a guy who is in over his head. Wins, however, may continue to drop in his owners' laps if the Yankees score runs like this. More often than not they will keep Ponson in the game, so if you can afford a guy who won't help you in any other category but victories, why not try Ponson?

Weeks welcomes challenge

Rickie Weeks reacted well to his club's trade for a second baseman. Milwaukee acquired Ray Durham for two minor leaguers on Sunday. Monday night Weeks got the start at second, going 2-5 with a home run (9) and three RBI. The Brewers beat the Cardinals, 6-3.

Fantasy Impact: Weeks is only hitting .219, but speculation has it that Milwaukee brought Durham in for depth rather than to replace their light-hitting second baseman. Keep Weeks active until Durham starts getting more at bats.

Harden vs. Johnson

Quite the pitchers duel in Arizona with the Cubs' Rich Harden and Diamondbacks' Randy Johnson combining for just one earned run and three hits over 14 innings. Harden carried a no-hitter into the sixth, where Alex Romero met him with a solo home run.

The D'backs beat the Cubs, 2-0.

Fantasy Impact: Harden is unlucky not to win after two dominant starts for Chicago. Johnson improves to 7-7 and lowers his ERA to 4.98. The 44-year-old right hander has 99 strikeouts in 105 innings, just the third time he's on pace for less strikeouts than innings pitched since 1990. He's certainly not the power pitcher he once was, but he's good enough to be a part of most rotations in fantasy.

We want a pitcher II

Royals reliever Jimmy Gobble had a bad night (90.00 ERA), but that was nothing compared to Kip Wells, who pulled a Kip Wells Monday night. Wells is notorious for exasperating melt downs, and it doesn't get much crazier than this. The Dodgers tagged him for seven hits and eight runs in just 1/3 of an inning. Seven of the runs were earned, giving him an ERA of 189.00 after 40 pitches.

Fantasy Impact: Wells owned a solid 2.29 ERA but a WHIP of 1.54 in 19.2 innings heading in. This outing raises his ERA to 5.40, which is about right for a 1.54 WHIP.

We want a pitcher

The Kansas City Royals got no pitching tonight. The first three KC pitchers gave up more runs than innings pitched. Starter Luke Hochevar gave up seven runs in five innings, but that was nothing compared to Jimmy Gobble, who gave up 10 runs in one inning of work.

Fantasy Impact: Gobble's ERA soars from 7.99 to 11.31 while Hochevar's climbs to 5.47. The young Hochevar showed some promise earlier in the year, but after this outing it's time to drop him. He offers nothing but an occasional win.

Kershaw returns

The Dodgers have recalled Clayton Kershaw from Double-A Jacksonville. He will stay with the staff for the rest of the year, according to Dodger manager Joe Tore.
"He didn't wallow in his misery [after being demoted]," said Manager Joe Torre. "From our reports, his off-stuff has improved."
Kershaw's strikeout numbers have decreased. They were down once he reached the majors and remained down once he was sent back to Jacksonville. He still dominated his opponents.

Fantasy Impact: If Los Angeles asked Kershaw to go down and work on his offspeed stuff, it looks like he's succeeded. Kershaw can be the type of shot in the arm LA needs to make a run at the postseason.

High tech memorabilia

Not sure this is an article as much as it seems to be a press release, and a poorly written one at that. The last graph, however, strikes me as quiet funny.
Here's how it works: When a fan catches a home run ball, a security guard will link up with the fan and place a unique hologram on the ball. This information will be wirelessly up-loaded to MLB's IBM DB2 9 data server. This way, if the fan decides to sell the ball to a retailer, potential buyers can verify its authenticity immediately online.
Like the guy who catches Barry Bonds' 715th home run is going to stop and get a hologram on his ball when there are 200 lunatics trying to mug him for possession of the spheroid. Ha!

Wood might hit DL

Kerry Wood is expected to hit the DL with his blister issue. That means Carlos Marmol is the Cubs' closer for the immediate future.

Answers on Rios & Hill

Jordan Bastien, who writes for the Blue Jays' site took a couple of questions today regarding Alex Rios' power outage and Aaron Hill's status. I've been waiting for both of these subjects to come up. On Rios and the idea that last year's home run derby ruined his power stroke:
It's hard for me to believe that professional hitters can have their swings forever altered by one night of swinging for the fences. Statistics can be skewed to back up most arguments and this is no exception.

Consider that Philadelphia's Ryan Howard won the Home Run Derby in 2006 and finished with 58 homers that season. The big lefty then went on to launch 47 long balls the following year and Howard currently leads the Major Leagues with 29 home runs. Apparently, he was immune to the problem.
I agree with him that last year's home run derby likely could not alter a professional player's swing enough to stop him from hitting the long ball. Rios might only have a handful of home runs this year, but how could the derby ruin his power ability?

On Hill:
I can tell you that Hill's situation is one that the Blue Jays are definitely worried about. The second baseman was struck on the side of the head during a collision with shortstop David Eckstein on May 29 and Hill has been battling post-concussion syndrome ever since.

Hill is currently rehabbing in Florida, though he's still only able to take part in very light activities. On Saturday, Jays general manager J.P. Ricciardi said no one has told him anything to believe that Hill's career could be in jeopardy, but the team isn't dismissing the thought that the second baseman might be done for the year.
Hill's injury recovery is very slow and has to raise a few red flags.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

It's time for Congress to investigate ticket brokers

Enough with steroids and all the ills associated with the scourge that's plaguing professional and even amateur sports. Well, not enough with steroids, it's good there's at least an attempt to mete out this and other instances of cheating from baseball and other high-end athletics. It is, however, time to turn part of our attention to ticket brokers and the evil deals between professional sports and the middle men who exist for the sole reason of profit-mongering.

I recently paid over $300 to obtain two tickets for bleacher seats at Wrigley Field. If I remember correctly, I paid $12 a pop for those same seats back in the early 90's. That's an 80% mark up over 16 years? Insane. I haven't read much about ticket brokers and organizations such as Stub Hub, but in doing business with said organization recently things seem a little too corporate for this to be ad hoc capitalism designed to help fans sell to fellow fans. Why do tickets that cost $38 face value go close to $160 on the internet? How is this legal, and why isn't anyone looking into this? Something stinks.

This article in the Chicago Tribune is worth reading, and it provides a glimpse into what would seem in my mind to be very shady business. MLB's contract/relationship with Stub Hub should be investigated. Hard.

Damon-less Yankees

Maybe the Yankees are wise to not rush Johnny Damon back. Damon stayed on the DL today with a bad shoulder (he says he's ready to play today) and still mananged to sneak out a 2-1 win over Oakland. The Yankees sweep the first three games to begin the second half and now stand just five games out of first in the AL East.

8-point Font

Mike Fontenot just ripped his eighth home run off Astros starter Brandon Backe. That brings Fontenot's slugging average over .500 for the season. He's a little guy - 5'8, 170 - but you have to think he can earn some at bats down the stretch if he continues to hit balls out of the park.

Update: Fontenot singles and scores in the seventh when college teammate Ryan Theriot knocks him in from second with a base hit. Cubs lead Houston, 4-0.

Fantasy Impact: Fontenot is hot enough to earn some starts right now, but once Alfonso Soriano gets back, Mark DeRosa will slide back into his starting spot at second base. Fontenot is a good add for about a week, then he's a bench player again unless he somehow outperforms DeRosa for the long haul.

Jose going away

Jose Contreras hits the DL and lands in Ozzie Guillen's doghouse.
"I wasn't too pleased the way he handled the situation because he didn't let [team trainer] Herm [Schneider] know, he didn't let myself or [pitching coach Don] Cooper know about it and he was continuing to pitch that way," said Guillen. "I don't want any of my players go out there with any kind of pain and try to be a hero. I don't want to say I was upset, but I was a little disappointed when one of my players is hiding stuff from us for no reason."
Shades of Scott Rolen and Tony La Russa, anyone? Here's wondering if Contreras is wearing out his welcome on Chicago's south side.

Johnny on the DL (still)

Johnny Damon did not come off the DL today as originally expected.
"There's nothing more I need to do," said Damon, who is batting .319 with 50 runs and a .387 on-base percentage. "I'm going to feel it, probably, until the offseason, but it's not a situation where it's going to get worse. Some days I'll wake up and it'll be a little tight, but I'll come in here, jump in that hot tub and go."

With such significant players as starting pitcher Chien-Ming Wang and designated hitter Hideki Matsui also out with injuries, Damon recognizes why the team is waiting.

"I think they want to be extra cautious," he said.
Actually, you'd think they'd be rushing these guys back to play considering they're in third place in the AL East and it is decision-making time in terms of making trades.

Pujols sits

No worries, Albert Pujols is not injured. He's just getting a rare day off in the Cardinals' series finale with San Diego. Those thinking he wasn't in the lineup because he was hurt will be relieved to know that Tony La Russa was merely giving his slugger a break since he didn't get one for the All-Star game.