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.