Wednesday, February 27, 2008

We Will Cross the Mighty Ocean and the Charleston Bay / Sail Away

http://huskycomics.com/images/ichiro1.jpg



As far as I can tell, the Seattle Mariners play in the city of Seattle in Canada’s farthest southwest province, Washington. After a few abominable years, the Mariners started to show some signs of life last year, climbing into second place with their first winning season (88 Wins) since 2003. This year, they are looking to build on that success and challenge the Angels for the National League West title.

Team Projections (credit: Jim Street, Mariners.MLB.com)

Lineup
OF Ichiro Suzuki
SS Yuniesky Betancourt
OF Raul Ibanez
3B Adrian Beltre
1B Richie Sexson
C Kenji Johjima
OF Brad Wilkerson
DH Jose Vidro
2B Jose Lopez.

Starting Rotation
SP Felix Hernandez
SP Erik Bedard
SP Miguel Batista
SP Carlos Silva
SP Jarrod Washburn

Bullpen
RHP J.J. Putz
RHP Brendan Morrow
LHP Eric O’Flaherty
RHP Sean Green
LHP Arthur Rhodes

Manager
John McLaren

Why they’re good
All things considered, Ichiro is the best leadoff hitter in the American League and just may be the best leadoff player in the game. While the 2001 AL Rookie of the Year and MVP* does not have the power of Hanley Ramirez or the sheer speed of Jose Reyes, he has both extraordinary range in CF and a cannon arm (although the Gold Glove Award is all but meaningless, his seven gold gloves in seven seasons does not hurt my argument, especially considering how difficult it is to get one in RF, where he played his first six MLB seasons). And he shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, he’s even been hitting for a bit more power the last few seasons, averaging 21 2B, 9 3B and 10 HR per year, while still averaging a .325 BA with 38 SB over that span. Last year was, arguably, his best yet, with a .396 OBP and .431 SLG.

There is not quite as much to say about the rest of the lineup, though Betancourt is developing into an above-average shortstop, Ibanez is still chugging away and Johjima is solid behind the plate. I have never been a huge fan of Beltre, but he seems to be getting a bit more used to Safeco and the American League after signing a huge contract following his (possibly) steroids-fueled run to 48 HR in cavernous Dodger Stadium. At 23 and entering his third full season, Jose Lopez still has some time to blossom.

They already had King Felix and then added Erik Bedard. Both of these guys are capable to shutting any opponent out on any given day and they will make the Mariners tough in a short series, provided they can make it to one. Neither has yet managed 200 IP in a season, (though Bedard made 33 starts in ’06 and Hernandez made 31 in ’06 and 30 in ’07). Barring injury, and if the Mariners stay in the race, both should be able to crack 200 this year. As a side note, I do not know much about Hernandez’s personal life, but Bedard, the son and brother of elevator mechanics, seems like a really down-to-Earth guy. As an added bonus, he’s Canadian, which will help since he is playing half of his games there.

Finally, J.J. Putz is awesome. Over 71 2/3 innings, The Michiganian posted an unreal 0.70 WHIP last season, striking out 82, while walking only 13. To put this in perspective, Goldenboy Jonathan Papelbon, over 58 1/3, posted a 0.77 WHIP, struck out 84 and walked 15. Not only is Putz in good company, he’s better than it.

Why they’re not

First, they didn’t get A-Rod back. Additionally, although he is a capable player, Jose Vidro is not who you want to see as your Designated Hitter. I hate the DH and, even moreso, hate the idea of encouraging teams to get big, fat loads like David Ortiz, but it just seems like a waste to use a second baseman there. I love Brad Wilkerson, and he’s still got some power, but he’s a liability in the OF now and just doesn’t play well enough to justify starting at first base. Richie Sexson is coming off an abysmal year (less than .700 OPS). I mean, these are Rob Deer-type numbers. But, who knows, maybe he’ll bounce back. Infield depth could be an issue, especially if it leads to us seeing Miguel Cairo or Willie Bloomquist.

The rest of the pitching staff is pretty average. Batista has been lucky to keep his ERA at the league average the past four years, with WHIPs of 1.52, 1.43, 1.53 and 1.52 from 2004-2007 (though he pitched in relief in ’05). Silva is not striking anyone out, but if he can limit his walks and the long ball like he did in 2005 (9 BB and 25 HR in 188 IP) you cannot be too displeased. On the other hand, if he starts serving them up, we could see another season like he had in 2006, where he lost his spot in the rotation en route to posting a 1.54 WHIP and 5.94 ERA. Washburn has had flashes of brilliance in his career, but has not been more than an average pitcher of late.

Wildcards
This team needs Bedard and Hernandez not only to stay healthy, but to pitch deep into ballgames as well. Although Washburn and Silva will eat innings, Batista is not a sure bet to do so, and McLaren will probably have to lean heavily on his bullpen in close games with those 3, 4 and 5 starters.

The Mariners will also need more production from Beltre and Sexson this year if they want to make a push for the division title.

Overall Offseason
Although all the signs point to Adam Jones being a stud, I like the move for Bedard. As general manager Bill Bavasi said, “To go from a 60-win team, a lousy team, to 88 wins, that’s not tough. But going from 88 on, that’s a little tougher to do . . . if you don’t make a bold move, you have a real good chance of going back to 80 . . . it’s time to go out and try to win.”

I’m not in love with the idea of a 4-year, $46M (this is USD!) deal for Carlos Silva, because it just seems like you’re not getting all you could be for that kind of money. They did not have Bedard, who has two years left until free agency, when they signed Silva, but if they had, perhaps they could have included some of this money into a long-term deal.

Offseason Grade: B+
Overall Grade: B

*only persons affiliated with the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative should be eligible for the Most Valuable Player award

Thursday, February 21, 2008

The Rays' New Stadium

Since I know everyone who reads this (does anyone read this?) cares so much about the [Formerly Devil] Rays, I figured I'd post a link showcasing their new planned stadium. The Mets and the Yankees are each getting new stadiums in 2009, which we all should know by now. While both new facilities appear beautiful and luxurious (Yankee stadium is even planning to have a martini bar, mmm hedonism), I thought it was odd that both stadiums are designed to pay some sort of homage to older stadiums. This new Rays stadium is probably one of the coolest looking stadiums I've ever seen and could open as soon as 2012. It goes in the exact opposite direction of the two NY stadiums and has a rather futuristic design. The stadium is an open air stadium and even when the roof is closed it will still be open (don't make me explain, just click the link). It has a retractable transparent roof that will still let the sunlight in when it's closed. It's also right by the bay. I've heard some concerns with since it's always open, how will it deal with heavy rainstorms indigenous to the Tampa summers, but I'll just give the architects the benefit of the doubt. Hopefully it's not just all aesthetic flare and an inherently non-pragmatic design. Anyway, here is this link to it, judge for yourself

New Tampa Bay Rays stadium

And just in case you're interested, here are links to the new Mets and Yankees stadiums

Citi Field (is that David Wright on the scoreboard?)

New Yankee Stadium (there's a link on there with a slideshow of pictures, otherwise that page is useless)

Monday, February 18, 2008

Can the Tribe Stay Alive in the Central?

Flashing the Trivia: Former Cleveland Indians pitcher Jason Grimsley might now be well-known as a self-proclaimed steroid user, but what did he do in the mid-90's that apparently set the tone for the rest of his career as a cheater?















Maybe it was Victor Martinez who helped Bill Belichick
film pregame warmups.


Last season, the Cleveland Indians were able to scrape together their first AL Central division title since 2001. Not bad for a team that finished 18 games out of first place in 2006. What was the difference? Pitching. Especially the bullpen. Their bullpen finished with an ERA of 3.75, fourth best
in the American League as opposed to the atrocious 5.00+ ERA from the year before. Going into this season, the bullpen appears even more stable than last with the addition of Masahide Kobayashi who had 227 career saves in Japan (and in my opinion, should be closer by mid-season). Kobayashi was the only splash the Indians made in the off-season, bringing back mostly the same squad.

Behind the plate is the always solid Victor Martinez. He hit .301 with 25 homers and 114 RBIs in 562 at-bats last season. Martinez also played 30 games at first base last season, giving Ryan Garko the occasional rest. Travis Hafner is still a better fielding 1st baseman than Martinez but Hafner slumped last season (.266 AVG, 24 homers and 100 RBIS), it was necessary to keep Martinez in the lineup whenever possible. Hafner should bounce back, giving Martinez more of an opportunity to rest.

Garko had a solid season, his first as a full-time starter by hitting .289 with 21 homers and 61 RBIs. The 26-year-old has immense potential and as long as he hits 5th or higher in the lineup, there's no reason why he can't top 100 RBIs.

At second base lies the 22-year-old Asdrubal Cabrera who emerged as the starter towards the end of the year. Before his promotion in August, Cabrera hit .310 with 78 runs scored 23 doubles, three triples, eight homers, and 54 RBIs in 96 games at Double-A Akron. He only spent nine games in Triple-A Buffalo before being sent to the majors. He replaced the season-long-slumping Josh Barfield who looks like will begin the season in Buffalo. But don't write him off just yet, if Cabrera goes through a similar sophomore slump, look for Barfield to be back.

Jhonny Peralta enters his 3rd season at shortstop for the Indians. After a disasterous 2006 campaign where he hit .256, he came back last season by hitting .270 with 21 homers and 72 RBIs. He's a below-average fielder but Cabrera makes up for it presenting an above-average double-play combination. Peralta provides the power at the 6th spot in the lineup and should display consistency by matching his 2007 numbers.

Casey Blake is a player that the Indians have used at first base, third base, and right field to mentor young players at each respective position. He started in right field (where Franklin Gutierrez eventually took over), then to first (where Ryan Garko, a former catching prospect, took over) and now at third (where former Atlanta Braves prospect Andy Marte was supposed to emerge but after a very weak hitting last two years, Blake has remained). Blake has been a bit below-average at the plate, hitting .270 with 18 homers and 70 RBIs. Blake should remain, Marte is not the answer. The most optimal infield for the Indians would be Peralta at third, Cabrera at shortstop (his natural position) and Barfield at second. Of course this is a long-shot, but we will see.

I'm not sure what's going on in left-field for the Indians (Jason Michaels and David Dellucci platoon?) I doubt that will last too long. The 25-year-old Ben Francisco will be given every opportunity to seize the position. Kenny Lofton's name continues to be tossed around but I believe Francisco should be given a shot at the full-time position. Francisco hit .310 with 12 homers and 51 RBIS in Triple-A Buffalo last season and hit .274 with 3 homers and 12 RBIs in 62 at-bats with the Indians last season.

Grady Sizemore is the total package in center. He really came into his own last year by hitting .277 with 24 homers, 78 RBIs and 33 stolen bases in 628 at-bats. There are many, including myself, that think Sizemore is much better than that. There's much to improve on his 155 strikeouts last season (obscenely high for a leadoff man). But unless Sizemore is dropped in the batting order (I don't see that happening, the Indians just don't have a better leadoff option) his numbers should be around the same with perhaps a better average.

The designated hitter position is manned by Travis Hafner (Ryan Garko and Victor Martinez switch too occasionally). From 2004-06 he was solid, hitting at least .305 with at least 28 homers and at least 108 RBIs. But in 2007 he slipped a bit by hitting a weak .266 (.222 with runners in scoring position) with 24 homers and 100 RBIs. He also had a terrible ALCS by hitting 4-for-27 (.148) with one home run and two RBIs. Hafner also set an ALCS record by striking out 12 times. Barring injury, Pronk should bounce back without issue.

The rotation remains very adequate and definitely above average. C.C. Sabathia anchors the rotation as he went 19-7 with a 3.21 ERA last season. Fausto Carmona, after a disasterous 1-10, 5.42 ERA rookie season, came into his own by going 19-8 with a 3.06 ERA. Jake Westbrook was his typical mediocre self, going 6-9 with a 4.32 ERA. Paul Byrd, usually mediocre as well had the second-highest win total of his career going 15-8 with a 4.59 ERA. Aaron Laffey, who took over mid-season for the injured Cliff Lee, went 4-2 with a 4.56 ERA.

Laffey will be very interesting to watch, as he did win the Bob Feller award as the Indian's top minor league pitcher (13-4, 2.75 ERA in 131 innings pitched with both Double-A Buffalo and Triple-A Akron last season). Laffey should at least top 10 wins in the back end of the rotation.

The Indians bullpen carried them all year last season. RHP set-up man Rafael Betancourt went 5-1 with a 1.47 ERA last year. He was brilliantly complimented by 25-year-old LHP Rafael Perez who went 1-2 with a 1.78 ERA last season. The only question mark once again is closer Joe Borowski. He did lead the American League with 45 saves last season but also carried a 5.07 ERA. But if consistency is an issue again this season, look for Eric Wedge to pull the plug, giving either Perez or newcomer Kobayashi a shot.

While the Indians have a solid team once again this year, alas, they are not the Detroit Tigers. But I do believe the Indians should be able to capture the wild card (over the Yankees). This season will ride on C.C. (and his expiring contract) Carmona (was last year a fluke?) and the back-end of their bullpen (will this be it for Borowski?).

I expect at least 94 wins in this team's future and a wild card birth.


Flashing the Trivia answer: In 1994, while the Cleveland Indians were playing the Chicago White Sox at Comisky Park, Albert Belle's bat was confiscated by umpires during the first inning. White Sox manager Gene Lamont was tipped off that Belle had a corked bat (which was indeed true). Here's the rest of the story from an SI article:

The New York Times reported that he took a cork-free bat belonging to Paul Sorrento, because all of Belle's bats were corked. Jason Grimsley said he knew there was an escape hatch in the ceiling in the clubhouse and figured there was one as well in the umpires' dressing room.


With the help of an unidentified Indians' employee, he navigated his way to the spot. Crawling on his belly, a flashlight in his mouth, he finally found it, dropped down on a refrigerator and swiped the bat from Phillips' locker.

"My heart was going 1,000 miles a second," Grimsley told the Times. "I just rolled the dice, a crapshoot."

After the game, the umpires immediately suspected foul play -- the bat, after all, bore Sorrento's name. The American League even spoke of bringing in the FBI.

Finally, the Indians were told that if they supplied Belle's bat there would be no punishment for the switch. Belle received a 10-game suspension that was reduced to seven games on appeal.

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Saturday, February 16, 2008

Stick to Brewing Because Baseball Isn't Your Thing

I'm glad I don't live in any of the surrounding areas encompassed by baseballs central division. This division is so mediocre! So lets start with the Milwaukee Brewers. Francisco Cordero is gone, and they came up with a wonderful replacement in Eric Gagne. Wonderfully bad, that is. Yeah, Gagne was good with Texas, but he's not anymore. He couldn't even pitch a good inning on a World Series winning team. Maybe Milwaukee will turn out to be just the right place for him, but I'm certainly not counting on it. If I join any fantasy leagues where you get points for the most blown saves, then Eric Gagne will be on my draft list.

Gagne pumping his fist in excitement because he can't believe he
still has a job in the Majors.


Ok now that I have my hatred for Gagne out of the way, lets get to the rest of the team. I see they have Guillermo Mota. Now there is a name I'm familiar with, being a mets fan. He was pretty good in 2006 with the Mets, when he was taking steroids. Or HGH. Whichever one it was made him a decent relief guy. But then in 2007 when he came back after his suspension, and presumably not taking any illegal performance enhancers, he sucked big time. Besides that though, how can you want someone on your team who has listed in their biography on brewers.com that he is an experienced dominoes player!? Yeah, I'm sure thats gonna help the Brewers create a huge gap in the NL Central this year. What were the Mets thinking when they let this expert dominoes player go!!!?!? Thats more valuable than acquiring some scrubby pitcher like Johan Santana.

More pitching woes for them Brew Crew. Ben Sheets, when hes healthy hes good. But he is not healthy a lot of the time, which isn't very good. And then their #2 starter, Jeff Suppan, whose career ERA of 4.61 doesn't look too great to me. I remember him last year being the Best Starter in Baseball for a part of the beginning of the season. How the hell did that happen? And foolish little me, I picked him up in one of my fantasy leagues from the waiver wire. Of course when I did that he reverted to the real Jeff Suppan and started being mediocre, like the team he plays for. So in other words, the Brewers pitching staff isn't great.

Now for offense. Look for Prince Fielder to tear it up again; How could he not with a name like Prince? Last year he improved his batting average over the previous year by 16 points (.288), and I think he has a shot at batting .300 this coming season. He will definitely be in the top in Home Runs again as well I think. Maybe we'll even see another inside the park HR from him! My next favorite offensive player is definitely Ryan Braun, the Rookie of the Year in the NL for the 2007 season (He did win that, right?). He had an awesome rookie year batting over .300 and hitting 34 home runs. He supposedly wasn't a great fielder, I wouldn't really know since I haven't ever really watched a Brewers game, but last season he was at third base. This coming season he has been shifted to left field, so defense shouldn't be too much of a problem as long as he doesn't have a Johnny Damon arm. I look for him to produce a similar season as he did last year.

The Brewers have also added Mike Cameron to be their new center fielder. Hes got some good defense and speed, but he is atrocious at the plate, and with their crappy pitching, Mr. Cameron won't really be helping the team much no matter how many good plays in the outfield he makes. But of course, him being an ex-Met, I have a special place in my heart for him. J.J. Hardy was a fluke last year in the first half of the season, hitting like a million home runs everyday.

Overall I've never liked the Brewers, and this season they're still not giving me a reason to like them , but they still have a shot at winning the division since the rest of the division sucks as well. Hopefully they won't though.

Peace out Cub Scouts,
Mike


Statistical info courtesy brewers.com Pictures courtesy random websites I found on Google

Purple Mountain Madness



The next team up in the NL West are the Colorado Rockies. If any team can compete with the Arizona Diamondbacks Cinderella-esque story of last year, it's the Colorado Rockies. Many preseason predictions had the Rockies pinned as the best 4th place team in the division (possibly 5th). Despite showing flashes of competitiveness and legitimacy in 2006, the Rockies still did not look like they could compete against the rest of the NL West. But then Barry Zito, Jason Schmidt and Randy Johnson all flopped for their respective teams, the Dodgers collapsed and the Rockies as a team matured all at once to finish with the second best record in the National League (and only by half a game). Amazing? Yes. Lucky? Sure. But a complete surprise? Ehh maybe it was just me who thought it wasn't too surprising, but the Rockies had very quietly established a solid foundation and a fundamentally sound team.

It all began when the Rockies dealt Jason Jennings and Miguel Asencio (yea, I don't know him either) for Willy Taveras, Jason Hirsh and Taylor Buchholz. Some questioned the move at first, Jason Jennings was ROY for the Rockies back in 2002 and was their best starting pitcher. However, Jennings was a year away from free agency, the Rockies needed a center fielder and Jason Hirsh lit up the minors (Buccholz isn't so bad either). In 20/20 hindsight, the trade looks absolutely genius. Another big component to last season was the emergence of Troy Tulowitzki (he was the NL ROY in my mind). Tulowitzki, after a slow start, adjusted to the majors and aside from having one of the best defensive seasons for a shortstop, put up some pretty solid offensive numbers (.291, 24 hrs, 99 rbi, 104 runs, 7 sbs) and stepped up as a leader. His attitude on and off the field suggested he is wise/mature beyond his years. Along the way, the Rockies suffered their share of injuries, Taveras and Matsui missed clumps of time with various injuries and the starting rotation was basically decimated. Aside from Francis and Fogg, everyone else in the rotation suffered injuries (in 2006 Rockies starters suffered the least injuries of any starting staff). Aaron Cook, Jason Hirsh and Rodrigo Lopez all went down and (with the exception of Cook who only did in the postseason) didn't resurface the rest of the year. However, these injuries appeared to be more of a blessing than a curse. The Rockies got to see Ubaldo Jimenez and then Franklin Morales rise from the minors and pitch better than most could have predicted. Some more stuff happened too but aside from Manny Corpas emerging as a reliable closer not much of it is worth mentioning.

The Rockies this year are generally regarded as being a team that can go either way. Some expect them to continue growing and become even better, but most tend to think that they got hot at the right time and were a flash in the pan and that they can't compete with the Dbacks, Padres and Dodgers (sound familiar?). Their biggest question going into next year is who will replace Kaz Matsui (gone to Houston) and play second base? They have practically a baseball team-worth of players competing for this spot. Jasyon Nix is going into spring training as the favorite due to his superior defense and his fine offensive performance at AAA. But in the mix are Omar Quintanilla, Clint Barmes, Marcus Giles, Jeff Baker and Ian Stewart. Its an interesting mix of candidates; veterans trying to reclaim lost glory, utility men hoping to be more than just utility men or prospects trying to get their chance at full time play. I personally would like to see Stewart prove he's a deft second baseman and get the gig. His offensive potential is great and I'm not sure how much more he can get from the minors. But this is a competition I'll let spring training and the Rockies decide. The bullpen is also a little questionable. After Brian Fuentes, the 'pen lacks lefties. This is where Franklin Morales could shine if he doesn't make the rotation (although I'd like him to have a little more seasoning in AAA). Also, Chris Iannetta is a big question mark in my opinion. He was a ROY candidate last year but struggled Andruw Jones-style for most of the season. He was then sent back down and when he came up (albeit a small sample), all he did was hit. If he can regain and maintain whatever he was doing at the end of last season, he could add another strong bat to the NL West's strongest lineup. Also in the mix are Greg Reynolds and Casey Weathers. Both are former first round picks and both can have an impact on the club this year. Reynolds showed he had talent (1.42 era in 50.2 innings with 9bb and 35k's at AA), but suffered an injury and needed exploratory surgery (he's back to 100%, or so they say). Casey Weathers was their first round pick from last year and is a right-handed relief pitcher from Vanderbuilt. He's expected to have a relatively quick ascent through the minors and could provide solid bullpen help down the stretch.

Since we all know the Rockies have a sick lineup with Taveras, Tulo, Holliday, Helton, Atkins and Hawpe, what it all comes down to next year for the Rox is pitching. If Aaron Cook and his mighty sinker can reach potential, and if Jason Hirsh, Ubaldo Jimenez and someone out of the Franklin Morales/Josh Towers/Victor Zambrano/Kip Wells/Mark Redman debacle can rise up, the Rockies will be nothing short of a National League juggernaut.

Peace, Paul.

(image provided courtesy of USAtoday)

Friday, February 8, 2008

Off-season, Hot Stove Recap

Okay, now that the Bedard deal is official I am posting this. All writers for this blog, it is now your responsibility (if it is within your beat) to post all major transactions that occur. Thanks for your participation and continued support.

Hey everyone, this is going to be a long post so I am going to omit the "Flashing the Trivia" and quote from this post. I would first like to thank our four new bloggers for signing up because this was getting impossible to do myself. But now, I'm very confident we can get more readers because of the time each of us have to not only post, but even promote a little bit. Let's see if we can get to a dot-com goal by our-year anniversary in February 2009. I think we can do it.

On Baseball-Reference.com we are currently sponsoring:



















Joe Mauer Huston Street Jeremy Accardo Joel Zumaya


I will now update every major transaction since Thanksgiving, so here we go:




RHP Kerry Wood resigns with the Chicago Cubs for one-year and $4.2 million.

This deal carries $3.45 million in incentives based on games finished if he eventually does end up as the team's closer. As Ryan Dempster enters the rotation, the Cubs are left with a closer-by-committee into Spring Training with Wood, Bob Howry, and Carlos Marmol. Marmol is the clear-cut favorite going in as he had a breakout year last season and posted a 1.43 era in 69.1 innings and 96 strikeouts. Howry has had experience as a closer as he was for a brief time in in Pedroia in the Rookie of the Year voting last season, hit .288 with 13 homers and 93 RBIs in his first full major league season. Though expected to cover the an is one of the top bullpen prospects in baseball; a power pitcher that was a closer in Class A Fort Myers before he was bought up to Class AA New Britain. Morlan went 5-3 with a 3.11 ERA, 18 saves, and 99 strikeouts in 69.2 innings last season for both squads. Jason Pridie is more known for his defensive prowless as he as only committed 18 errors in 538 games in the minors. But he is solid offensively as well, hitting around .300, bouncing between AA Montgomery and AAA Durham. All and all this trade should work out rather well for both teams.

LHP Doug Brocail signs one-year $2.5 million deal with the Houston Astros.

Brocail was signed to stablize a bullpen back-end that was stablized last year with the emergence of set-up man Heath Bell. Brocail will probably take the ball in the seventh inning as the 40-year-old looks to mentor a young bullpen with only two pitchers 3o years or older (Dave Borkowski and Geoff Geary are both 31).


The Minnesota Twins trade RHP Matt Garza, SS Jason Bartlett, and minor league pitcher Eduardo Morlan to the Tampa Bay Rays for OF Delmon Young, 2B Brendan Harris, and minor league outfielder Jason Pridie.


In lieu of Torii Hunter signing with the Texas Rangers, the Twins got who they hope will be a long-term replacement in Delmon Young. Young, who finished runner-up to Dustin Pedroia in the Rookie of the Year voting last season, hit .288 with 13 homers and 93 RBIs in his first full major league season. Though expected to cover the bat of Hunter by hitting third in Twins order, he comes with an infamously colorful history. Two years ago he got suspended for 50 games while in Triple-A for violently flipping his bat into the chest of an umpire. In 2005 he got suspended three games for bumping an umpire. Some of his coaches also questioned his hustle during a few games late last season. He displayed durability last season when at 22 year of age, he played in all 162 games last season. He also displayed quite the arm in right field (and some center) by getting 16 assists, good for 3rd in the American League amongst outfielders. As long as Young stays out of trouble, he will more than fill Torii Hunter's shoes for years to come.

Matt Garza should fill the number three slot in the Rays rotaion behind Scott Kazmir and James Shields. Last season, Garza went 5-7 with a 3.69 ERA in 16 appearances after being called up in July. Garza has great stuff but needs to develop his breaking pitches for him to be successful. The 28-year-old Harris just completed his first full season as a starter by hitting .286 with 12 homers and 59 RBIs in 521 at-bats. Harris solidifies second base for the Twins who never really found a replacement for Luis Castillo who was traded right before the deadline to the New York Mets. Jason Bartlett is average both offensively and defensively, though he does bring some more speed to the lineup as he stole 23 bases last season. But still, he's a significant step up from Ben Zobrist and Josh Wilson. Morlan is one of the top bullpen prospects in baseball; a power pitcher that was a closer in Class A Fort Myers before he was bought up to Class AA New Britain. Morlan went 5-3 with a 3.11 ERA, 18 saves, and 99 strikeouts in 69.2 innings last season for both squads. Jason Pridie is more known for his defensive prowless as he as only committed 18 errors in 538 games in the minors. But he is solid offensively as well, hitting around .300, bouncing between AA Montgomery and AAA Durham. All and all this trade should work out rather well for both teams.

The Cincinnati Reds sign RHP Francisco Cordero to a four-year deal worth $46 million with a $12 million club option for 2012.

Cordero will be closing for the Reds whose bullpen posted a 23-31 record, with a league-high 5.13 ERA, and only converting on 34 of 61 saves. David Weathers, who had 33 of those saves with a 3.59 ERA, will move into the set-up role. The deal helps solidify the back-end of the bullpen, but the team still has a long way to go in solidifying it's middle relief. Last season, Cordero was one of the best closers in baseball by posting a 2.98 ERA with 44 saves and 86 strikeouts in 63.3 innings. Because of how bad the Reds will be once again this year, consider Cordero almost a non-factor (though he will be stellar).

The Colorado Rockies re-sign catcher Yorvit Torrealba to a two-year, $7.25 million deal.

The deal also comes with a $500,000 signing bonus. Torrealba came close to signing a three-year deal with the Mets and the deal looked all but done until the Mets acquired catcher Johnny Estrada (who they have since non-tendered). The Mets and Torrealba then ceased all contact causing rumors that Torrealba had failed his physical which was untrue (Torrealba played with a strained shoulder last season). His shoulder plagued him last year defensively as he only threw out 15 of 76 baserunners (20%). Healthy, in 2006, Torrealba threw out 21 of 52 baserunners (40%). Offensively, he is nothing great (.255, 8 homers, and 47 RBIS) though he was a big contributor against the Philadelphia Phillies in the NLDS (.500, 3 RBIS, 3 runs scored). As long as he is healthy and still calling a good game, he'll be an average catcher.


The New York Yankees re-sign catcher Jorge Posada to a four-year, $52.4 million deal.

Posada had a career year last season, hitting .338 (4th in the AL) with 20 homers and 90 RBIs, all that while playing in 144 of 162 regular season games. With three young pitchers entering their first full season in the majors (Joba Chamberlain, Phil Hughes, and Ian Kennedy), it was very important for the Yankees to maintain productive veteran leadership behind the plate.


The New York Mets trade outfielder Lastings Milledge to the Washington Nationals for right fielder Ryan Church and catcher Brian Schneider.

This move, at the time, gave the Mets three catchers with signficant major league experience, causing them to non-tender Johnny Estrada. Thus, trading Guillermo Mota remains nothing more than a salary dump. The Nationals recieve the 22-year-old Milledge who they intend to be their opening day center fielder. Milledge hit .272 with 7 homers and 29 RBIs in 184 at-bats last season. While a good fielder with above-average speed, Milledge has had issues with both management and teammates over the years. In 2006, he was criticized for slapping high fives with fans down the right field line after hitting his first career home run (a home run that had tied the game in the tenth inning). Also that year, Milledge's complaining got him in the doghouse with his teammates, to the point where Billy Wagner placed a sign on his locker that said, "Know Your Place, Rook!" Last May, Milledge appeared in a rap song called "Bend Ya Knees" prompting the Mets organization to denounce the song repeatedly because of the sexist nature and explicit language of the song. Milledge's natural position remains center field, which showed often the past two years as his corner outfield play was awkward at best, prompting the Mets to trade the controversial outfielder. If he can get his act together, Milledge has the potential to be a great player, possibly even an all-star.

Ryan Church is an above average fielder with an average bat. Though most importantly for the Mets, he's left handed and experienced playing right field. He hit .272 with 15 homers and 70 RBI, similar numbers to what Milledge is projected to put up next season. Brian Schneider is a superior defensive catcher, their first since Charlie O'Brien back in 1990. He is also 5 and a half years younger than their former catcher (and Washington's new catcher) Paul LoDuca (who's name surfaced on the Mitchell Report). Last season, Schneider hit .235 with 6 homers and 54 RBIs in 129 games behind the plate. This move gives the Mets the chance to give both Schneider and backup catcher Ramon Castro the time behind the plate (probably 70/30, advantage to Schenider), as Castro is much stronger offensively. This also opens up the catching spot in Washington for Rule 5 draftee Jesus Flores in a few years (from the Mets of all teams). This move is great short-term for the Mets though so far they have lacked the big move this offseason to justify this small one (Johan Santana anyone?). But whether or not Milledge (and Flores) reaches his potential will justify whether this move works out or not in the end.

Update: The Mets recent trade for Johan Santana now justifies this move.

The Houston Astros sign second baseman Kazuo Matsui to a three-year, $16.5 million contract.

Matsui hit .288 with four homers and 37 RBIs with 32 stolen bases for the Colorado Rockies last season and also played a big part in the team's postseason run. Matsui brings both speed and solid contact to the top of the Astro's line-up. He'll be hitting second in the lineup behind the Astros new centerfielder Michael Bourn. Both players (well the jury's still out on Bourn, but from what I have seen from him in Philly) are slap hitters and should set the table well for Hunter Pence, Lance Berkman, and Carlos Lee. Matsui fits well into this lineup, look for him to at least maintain the numbers he put up last year.

The Arizona Diamondbacks trade left-fielder Carlos Quentin to the Chicago White Sox for single-A infielder Chris Carter.

Barring a spring training breakout from Jerry Owens, Carlos Quentin should be the White Sox starting left fielder. Quentin was plagued by injuries once again last season only hitting .214 with five homers and 31 RBIs in only 229 at-bats for the D-Backs. The injuries started when he first injured his shoulder by swinging a bat during spring training. In August, he was fully displaced by Justin Upton once Quentin's hamstring started acting up. I think he'll end up a fourth outfielder once again this year, Owens is too talented to be sitting on the bench (once Quentin suffers the inevitable hamstring injury of course).

The Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays trade Elijah Dukes to the Washington Nationals for Class-A LHP Glenn Gibson.

Having the chance at some point to watch the trio of Elijah Dukes, Lastings Milledge, and Wily Mo Pena man the outfield at Nationals Park will be an unforgettable experience (especially if this happens during interleague play). Throw in the ' roid raging passionate Paul LoDuca, the wifebeating comeback player of the year Dmitri Young, and the always lovable Jon Rauch, there's no reason why this can't be baseball's model franchise. GM Jim Bowden is taking some interesting risks but understandably when you only have so much money to work with, you don't have a choice. At the least, the Nationals should be a fun team to watch (not necessarily for the right reasons).

The 23-year-old Dukes was drafted in the third-round by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays and became a top prospect in their system, but his off the field issues and weak bat in 2007, gave the Rays enough reason to give up on him. Earlier in the season, The St. Petersburg Times reported that a la Dmitri Young Dukes' estranged wife filed a restraining order against him. He's also been suspended numerous times in the minors for bad behavior. The Nationals hope that Dukes can live up to his potential and possibly be a middle-of-the-order, 25-40 home run bat of the future. I don't think that Dukes will be that dynamic at the plate but .275, 20 homers, 20 stolen bases, 70 RBIs I don't believe is out of reach.

A fourth-round pick in the 2006 First-Year Player Draft, Glenn Gibson, 20, went 4-3 with a 3.10 ERA in 12 starts for Class A Vermont.

The Florida Marlins send third baseman Miguel Cabrera and LHP Dontrelle Willis to the Detroit Tigers for prospects: outfielder Cameron Maybin, LHP Andrew Miller, catcher Mike Rabello, pitcher Eulogio De La Cruz, pitcher Dallas Trahern and pitcher Burke Badenhop.

Here are the Marlins doing what they do best, trading big pieces of their past (the last two members of their 2003 championship) to help develop their future. Though because the expectations of these teams are so different, it should work very well for both sides in the end. At only 24 years old, Cabrera is a four-time all-star coming off a season in which he batted .320 with 34 home runs and 119 RBIs. He made $7.4 million this past season and will earn more than $10 million in 2008. Willis, a two-time all-star, is coming off his worst season going 10-15 with a 5.17 ERA. He is Florida's all-time leader in victories and is the Marlin's only 20-game winner with his 22-10 mark in 2005. Cabrera should fit well into the heart of the order, probably hitting third, right in front of Magglio Ordonez. Willis will take over Andrew Millers former rotation spot, fourth, behind Justin Verlander, Kenny Rogers, and Jeremy Bonderman. This is a good rotation spot for the lefty, it will help take the pressure off knowing he no longer has to carry a franchise. He will feel growing pains this season though after spending so much time in the National League. Fantasy-wise, I wouldn't touch him with a ten-foot pole. Cabrera, on the other hand, shouldn't have much problem adjusting. He should put up around the same numbers he put up last year hitting behind the on-base machines Curtis Granderson and Placido Polanco.

Now the Marlins will be a very fun team to watch for all the right reasons (then again, they always are). The anchors of this deal, Maybin and Miller were two of the top prospects in baseball last season. Offensively, Maybin has been scouted to be extremely similar to Hanley Ramirez, someone who you have to bat lead-off because of speed and OBP, but really should bat third because of solid power. Maybin's downfall is his inexperience, at only 20 years of age, he was the youngest player to crack the majors last season (though standing at 6 foot 4, 205, you would never guess he's 20). He also has only 91 games and 323 at-bats under his belt in the minors (2 games A ball, 83 games AA ball, 6 games AAA ball). As of right now, he's the favorite to be NL Rookie of the Year. Unless he strikes out an obscene number of times, he should attain the award. Miller, 22, is a top-of-the rotation prospect who went 5-5 with a 5.63 ERA. In 78 Minor League innings in 2007, he allowed 71 hits and struck out 61 batters. There's no question he'll crack the rotation in spring training, the only question is where he will land. Scott Olsen has been so inconsistent over the past few years, with a stellar spring, Miller might just open as the number two (soon to be ace over Olsen). Mike Rabelo is the favorite to take over at catcher for the departed Miguel Olivo. There's not much written up on the 28-year-old Rabelo, who hit .256 with 1 homer and 18 RBIs in 168 at-bats backing up Ivan Rodriguez for the Tigers last season. The 23-year-old De La Cruz went 5-6 with a 3.43 ERA with the AA Erie Seawolves and 0-0 in 2.1 innings with an 11.57 ERA with the AAA Toledo Mud Hens. Apparently he possesses an 100 MPH fastball, then again so do Kyle Farnsworth and Joel Zumaya. De La Cruz should crack the bullpen this season though so we shall see.

As a result of this deal, both teams will be very dynamic and fun to watch next season, for two totally different reasons. Any less than reaching the ALCs will be an ultimate failure for the Tigers while a wild-card run would be quite the miracle for the Marlins.

The Kansas City Royals sign outfielder Jose Guillen to a three-year deal worth $36 million.

Guillen will help stablize a very average outfield that also includes David DeJesus and Mark Teahen. He'll fit well by hitting between Alex Gordon (3rd) and Mark Teahen (5th), taking the pressure off of Gordon will be very important as this could be his breakout season. Guillen hit .290 with 23 homers and 99 RBIs in 593 at-bats for the Seattle Mariners last season.

The Pittsburgh Pirates trade RHP Salomon Torres to the Milwaukee Brewers for relief prospects Marino Salas and Kevin Roberts.

In this deal the Brewers acquire insurance if Eric Gagne happens to falter in his return to the closer's role. Torres ended 2006 and began 2007 as the Pirates closer, but lost the job last June after suffering his fourth blown save in 16 chances. He then missed parts of two months with inflammation of his right elbow and finished the year 2-4 with a 4.35 ERA in 56 games.

Salas, 26, is considered a potential future closer and split last season between Double-A Huntsville and Triple-A Nashville, posting a combined 2.77 ERA and 17 saves in 51 games. The Brewers plucked him off waivers from the Orioles last year. Roberts is 23 and went 6-3 with a 3.44 ERA in 45 relief appearances for Class A Brevard County in 2007, then pitched 15 games in Hawaii Winter Baseball and posted a 4.82 ERA. He was the Brewers' fifth-round Draft pick in 2005.

The Boston Red Sox re-sign Mike Timlin to a one-year, $3 million deal.

Timlin had a great year after coming back from an injury plagued 2006 campaign by going 2-1 with a 3.42 ERA with one save over 50 appearances. Timlin, 41, got a couple of critical strikeouts in the clinching Game 4 of the World Series at Colorado. During the 2007 postseason, Timlin registered a 3.18 ERA over six outings, walking none and striking out seven. He will once again be an important component in the seventh-inning, setting up both Hideki Okajima and Jonathan Papelbon. Timlin has pitched in 1,011 regular-season games during his career, going 71-69 with a 3.55 ERA while posting 140 saves.

The New York Yankees avoid arbitration and agree with LHP Andy Pettitte to his one-year option worth $16 million.

Pettitte was 15-9 with a 4.05 ERA in 34 starts for New York this season, serving as a main veteran presence on a roster that was forced to rely on the contributions of rookies early. Having put off similar thoughts of retirement, Pettitte ranked ninth in the American League with 215 1/3 innings pitched and turned in the team's most dominant performance in October, pitching 6 1/3 strong innings against the Cleveland Indians in Game 2 of the AL Division Series. Pettitte will remain the number two starter behind Chien-Ming Wang.

The New York Yankees sign reliever LaTroy Hawkins to a one-year, $3.75 million deal.

Hawkins comes to the Bronx after making 62 relief appearances for the Colorado Rockies in 2007, going 2-5 with a 3.42 ERA. He is projected to fill a middle innings and setup role vacated by reliever Luis Vizcaino, who coincidentally left to sign a two-year contract with the Rockies as a free agent. The Yankees envision using right-hander Kyle Farnsworth as a setup man for closer Mariano Rivera, who agreed to a new three-year contract in December. I don't envision this lasting too long, look for Hawkins or Joba Chamberlain to be the set-up man by mid-season. Look for Hawkins to be very mediocre, like he was when he pitched for the Twins. Still a solid pickup for the Yankees.

The Milwaukee Brewers sign RHP Eric Gagne to a one-year, $10 million deal.

In losing Fransciso Cordero, the Brewers found themselves a void a closer. For their sake, they better not just hand the closer's role to Gagne in the spring. Gagne, 31, posted seasons of 52, 55 and 45 saves for the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2002-04, but injuries to his elbow and back limited him to 15 innings over 16 games the next two seasons. Last year, he was a combined 4-2 with 16 saves in 20 opportunities and a 3.81 ERA with Texas and Boston. Boston got him at the deadline hoping for a solid compliment in the eighth inning to Hideki Okajima but to no avail, he went 2-2 with a 6.75 ERA in 18.2 innings pitched. He was also deligated to mop-up duty in the playoffs by going 0-1 with a 6.23 ERA in 4.1 innings. Despite past struggles, I think Gagne will rediscover himself in the National League where he strived with the Los Angeles Dodgers. In a weak NL, I expect him to be at least an above-average closer.

The Baltimore Orioles trade shortstop Miguel Tejada to the Houston Astros for Luke Scott, third baseman Michael Costanzo, LHP Troy Patton, RHP Matt Albers and RHP Dennis Sarfate.

Miguel Tejada is the 14th new player that the Houston Astros have added to their squad this offseason leaving only Lance Berkman and Carlos Lee from last year's opening day lineup. Tejada, 31, hit .311 during his four years with Baltimore. He has 252 career home runs, a 2006 average of .303 with runners in scoring position and a .382 average with runners in scoring position and two outs. The only downside for the Astros is that he's very far from Adam Everett defensively, though not quite a liability, just a slightly below average fielding shortstop. Oh and not too mention those pesky steroids questions (he allegedly gave Rafael Palmiero a tainted shot of vitamin B-12 two years ago). But he couldn't have roided himself up too many times, his durability has never been a question as he hit in 1,152 consecutive games played before being hurt this year. Offensively, the Astros now become the NL powerhouse, with an also extremely balanced lineup: Michael Bourn, Kaz Matsui, Lance Berkman, Carlos Lee, Miguel Tejada, Hunter Pence, Ty Wiggington, and J.R. Towles (watch this guy). This gives them a legitimate shot at the wildcard, but no more than that, their starting pitching remains too weak (though I do like their bullpen).

In return, Baltimore recieves Luke Scott who will start for them in left field. Scott, 29, can help offset the loss of Tejada's offensive production by adding some pop to an outfield that lacked consistent punch last season. In his first season receiving regular playing time with the Astros, Scott hit .255 with 18 homers and 28 doubles, while logging time at every outfield position. The previous season, he hit .336 in limited playing time. But for the O's, this deal was centered around pitching. In Patton, 24, and Albers, 22, the Orioles acquired two arms with minimal Major League experience, but plenty of potential. Patton, a left-hander, went 0-2 with a 3.55 ERA in two starts and a relief appearance for the Astros last season, after beginning the season with Double-A Corpus Christi. The Orioles also received Sarfate, 26, a starting pitcher who's earned only brief bullpen cameos in parts of two seasons with the Astros and Brewers, and Costanzo, 24, a third-base prospect who came to Houston earlier this offseason in the deal that sent Brad Lidge to the Phillies. In retrospect, this deal should in the end work out for both teams. The O's received future help, let go questions about steroid allegations, and let go payroll. The Astros received a star shortstop who will not only give them production, but legitimacy, showing free agents that the Astros are looking to contend now.

The San Francisco Giants sign centerfielder Aaron Rowand to a five-year, $60 million deal.

Looking to free themselves from everything Barry Bonds was, the Giants sign the anti-Bonds in Aaron Rowand. Numbers aside, he has always played with passion and is a tremendous clubhouse leader. Rowand, 30, is above average at the plate and stellar defensively. As a reigning Gold Glove winner he will strengthen the outfield, thus underscoring the Giants' renewed emphasis on pitching and defense. Rowand, a career .286 hitter, recorded a .309 average last season with Philadelphia while reaching personal bests in hits (189), runs (105), doubles (45), RBIs (89), total bases (315) and games (161). As the roster currently stands, Randy Winn and Bengie Molina would bat third and fourth, respectively. This move was absolutely necessary for the team, though they clearly overpaid for him. Despite the move, I'm still not so sure that the Giants can overtake the Dodgers and not finish last in the division. But definitely a move in the right direction.

The Los Angeles Dodgers sign Andruw Jones to a two-year, $36.2 million contract.

This signing, is very similar to the signing of Aaron Rowand. The Dodgers want to shed a bad rap (their lack of team chemistry), get a team leader, and shore themselves up both offensively and defensively. And again this signing will have the same result of the last signing, nothing, other than that the Dodgers should place second-to-last in the NL West, just like last year. Jones, a 10-time Gold Glove winner and five-time All Star, will take over center field, with Juan Pierre likely moving to left. The market for Jones had been underwhelming in the wake of the worst season of his career by having a .222 average, 26 homers, and 94 RBIs. The native of Curacao finished second in National League MVP voting in 2005 after leading the Majors with 51 homers and leading the NL with 128 RBIs. Over the past 10 seasons, in addition to earning a Gold Glove each year, Jones has averaged 35 home runs and 103 RBIs, and he has topped the 25-homer mark in each of those campaigns. In his 12 Major League seasons, Jones has appeared in the postseason 10 times, hitting .273 with 10 homers and 33 RBIs in 17 playoff series.

The New York Yankees re-sign Alex Rodriguez to a ten-year, $275 million deal.

Alex Rodriguez, trying to upstage the sport of baseball for the hundredth time in the past few months, decides to announce his all-important re-signing on the same day the Mitchell Report is released. This guy seriously thinks he is bigger than the sport, it pisses me off to no end. I've blogged too much about this guy already. I could mention how much he means to the team, even in the playoffs, how he's probably the best hitter of all-time, blah, blah, blah, but you all know all that already.

The Arizona Diamondbacks send RHP Jose Valverde to the Houston Astros for second baseman/outfielder Chris Burke, RHP Chad Qualls, and RHP Juan Guiterrez.

In Valverde, the Astros finally get some solidarity in the closer role after Brad Lidge's up and downs over the past few years. Valverde, 28, was 1-4 with a 2.66 ERA and a Major League-leading 47 saves for the Diamondbacks in 2007. His 47 saves also marked a career-high total, and he appeared on the National League All-Star team for the first time. The Arizona franchise-record 47 saves also ranked tied for 15th all-time in a single season, and Valverde also struck out 78 hitters in 64 1/3 innings while walking 26 and allowing 46 hits. The D-Backs receive who hit .229 with 6 homers and 28 RBIs, mostly as Craig Biggio's backup. Burke's future is more in a utility role and defensive replacement. I can't find too much about Qualls and Guiterrez. I'm not sure why the D-Backs made this deal, especially after acquiring Haren, I would guess a salary dump. But they might just get above average production out of Chad Qualls who was 6-5 with a 3.05 ERA, five saves, and 78 strikeouts in 82.7 innings pitched. Great trade for Houston, for Arizona, not so much.

The Oakland Athletics send RHP Dan Haren and pitcher Connor Robertson to the Arizona Diamondbacks for LHP Brett Anderson, LHP Greg Smith, LHP Dana Eveland, outfielders Carlos Gonzalez and Aaron Cunningham, and infielder Chris Carter.

Well I guess this deal clearly explains the Valverde deal, a salary dump indeed in order to lock up Haren long-term. But I just have that feeling that this deal will end up being fatal for the D-Backs. Anytime Billy Beane receives two prospects let alone six in a deal, you know he has something up his sleeve. Clearly, Beane knows something we don't. In 2010 when these guys see the light of day, Beane will look like a genius once again. With the addition of Haren, the D-Backs have a very solid rotation of Brandon Webb, Haren, Randy Johnson, Doug Davis, and Micah Owings. Their lineup could be very dynamic as well if Justin Upton, Mark Reynolds, Chris Young, and Conor Jackson come into their own this season. I fully expect them to win the NL West again. Haren, 27, has won at least 14 games in each of the past three seasons for Oakland. Last year, he was 15-9 with a 3.07 ERA, he was 14-13 in 2006 and 14-12 in 2005.

Connor Robertson appeared in three games for the A's last year, but had a good year at Triple-A Sacramento, where he was 4-1 with a 4.35 ERA in 31 relief appearances. Carlos Gonzalez was regarded as the club's best position player prospect, but he became expendable when Arizona signed Eric Byrnes to a three-year, $30 million deal last August. Greg Smith and Brett Anderson were both highly regarded pitching prospects in the organization. Smith, a sixth-round pick in the 2005 First-Year Player Draft, had some injury issues last season, but pitched well in the Arizona Fall League and could have had a chance to pitch for the D-backs at some time during 2008. Aaron Cunningham, 21, was acquired last summer from the White Sox, and in 31 games for Double-A Mobile, he hit .288 with five homers and 20 RBIs while compiling an .898 OPS. Dana Eveland, 24, was acquired by the D-backs from the Brewers prior to last season. Scouts rave about the left-hander's stuff and he's always put up good numbers in the Minor Leagues, but he has yet to translate that success to the big league level. Chris Carter, who will be 21 next week, was picked up during the Winter Meetings from the White Sox in exchange for outfielder Carlos Quentin. Carter hit .291 with 25 homers and 93 RBIs for Class A Kannopolis.

The New York Yankees re-sign closer Mariano Rivera to a three-year, $45 million deal.

Rightfully so, this deal locks up that the 38-year-old Rivera will end his Hall of Fame career as a Yankee. Rivera made 67 relief appearances for the Yankees in 2007, compiling a 3-4 record with a 3.15 ERA. He was much stronger after a shaky beginning -- in Rivera's final 59 appearances of the season, he was 2-2 with a 2.23 ERA and converted 30 of 32 save opportunities. Rivera has pitched for the Yankees since 1995, compiling an AL-record 443 saves in the regular season. The most dominant postseason pitcher of his generation, Rivera owns a Major League-record 34 saves in the playoffs, where he has a 0.77 career ERA -- last updated when Rivera worked 4 2/3 scoreless innings in the ALDS against Cleveland.

The Chicago Cubs sign outfielder Kosuke Fukudome to a four-year, $48 million deal.

Fukudome has spent his entire nine-year pro career with the Chunichi Dragons, for whom he batted .305 with a .397 on-base percentage and a .543 slugging percentage in 1,074 career games. A two-time Central League batting champion, Fukudome led the league in on-base percentage three times and won a Gold Glove for defensive excellence four times. He was the league's MVP in 2006, when he hit .351 with 31 home runs and a career-high 104 RBIs. Fukudome, if all pans out, should help take the pressure off Derrick Lee and Aramis Ramirez. Fukudome is the first Japanese player ever signed by the Cubs. By not doing too much this move still keeps the Cubs an above average team, which is still probably good enough to win the NL Central again.

The Seattle Mariners sign Carlos Silva to a four-year, $46 million deal.

He was 47-45 in his four years with the Twins. Last season, he was 13-14 with a 4.19 ERA. He made 33 starts and pitched at least six innings in 24 of them, including a pair of complete games. Silva, who came up with the Phillies, has a 55-46 record in six big league seasons (125 starts). He has had three starts at Safeco Field, going 2-1 with a 3.98 ERA. He has a 16-8 record against the American League West with a 3.48 ERA. He has beaten the Angels three times in four career decisions. Silva fits well into the Mariners rotation behind ace Feliz Hernandez and Jarrod Washburn. His value lies as an innings-eater. Over the past four seasons, Silva has tossed 203 innings, 188, 180 and 202. The Mariners, already with a decent rotation, are looking to balance it out further by pursuing a trade with the Baltimore Orioles for lefty Eric Bedard (a deal believed to include top prospect and right fielder Adam Jones). Silva is a solid number 3, good pickup by the M's.

The Philadelphia Phillies sign outfielder Geoff Jenkins to a two-year, $13 million deal.

After Aaron Rowand departed for the Giants, the Phils didn't have too many options left. But in signing Jenkins, both the offensive numbers do not suffer too much of a drop-off (Jenkin's .255 AVG, 21 homers, and 64 RBIs to Rowand's .309 AVG, 27 homers, and 89 RBIs...the drop-off is not as big as it looks, Rowand had a career year in 2007.) The defense and durability is where the big difference is (Jenkin's 9 errors, .988 fielding percentage, and 7 assists in 121 games to Rowand's 2 errors, .995 fielding percentage, and 11 assists in 161 games). Though as much as they lose in defense, they save in cash (Rowand: five-years $60 million, Jenkins: two-years, $13 million). Rowand's desire on the field is priceless and will be hard to replace.

The Cincinnati Reds send outfielder Josh Hamilton to the Texas Rangers for RHP Edinson Volquez and Danny Herrera.

Hamilton, 26, had a wonderful 2007 campaign coming back from a history of drug problems to hit .292 with 19 home runs and 47 RBIs in 298 at-bats. Picked up a year ago by the Reds in the Rule 5 Draft, he was taken by the Tampa Bay Rays with the first overall pick in the 1999 First-Year Player Draft but had to overcome a long history of personal issues and drug abuse before reaching the Major Leagues. Hamilton will be the Rangers' center fielder with Milton Bradley in right, Marlon Byrd in left and Frank Catalanotto as the primary designated hitter. David Murphy, Nelson Cruz and Jason Botts remain in the mix and a fourth outfielder will play an important role because both Bradley and Hamilton have a history of injuries. He should be solid, hitting either 6th or 7th in the lineup. Of course it's a risky move but acquiring an above-average player, getting paid $380,000, he's a bargain.

The Rangers had to give up one of their top five starters to get Hamilton. Volquez was 2-1 with a 4.50 ERA in six games in September and was penciled in as the Rangers' fifth starter going into Spring Training.

The San Diego Padres sign RHP Mark Prior to a one-year $1 million deal with $4.5 million in incentives.

Prior, 27, who is 42-29 with a 3.51 ERA in 106 career starts, last pitched for the Chicago Cubs in 2006, going 1-6 with a 7.21 ERA in nine starts. Prior was the No. 2 overall pick in the 2001 Draft out of USC and two years later was named to the National League All-Star team, the same season he went 18-6 with a 2.43 ERA. A San Diego native, Prior has tallied 21 double-digit strikeout games and 65 outings in which he has issued two or fewer walks. He is averaging 10.37 strikeouts per nine innings over his career. Not bad at all for a projected number 5 starter. Even if he busts, $1 million isn't such a bad gamble.

The Oakland Athletics send outfielder Nick Swisher to the Chicago White Sox for outfielder Ryan Sweeney, LHP Gio Gonzalez and right-handed starter Faustino De Los Santos.

Swisher, 27, who is signed through 2011 with an option for 2012, joins shortstop Orlando Cabrera, left fielder Carlos Quentin, right-handed reliever Scott Linebrink and utility infielder/outfielder Alexei Ramirez as the bulk of the White Sox's offseason pickups, following last year's dismal 72-90 showing. Swisher will be playing center field, where he previously has played 61 games in parts of four seasons. Last season, he batted .262 in 2007, with 22 home runs and 78 RBIs in 150 games. Adding Swisher puts a career .361 on-base percentage into a lineup that ranked last in all of baseball for this particular 2007 category. The switch-hitting Swisher provides another strong right-handed bat against the tough southpaws scattered throughout the American League Central, a group of pitchers who contributed to the White Sox 16-28 record against left-handed starters in 2007.

Gonzalez, 22, and De Los Santos, 21, were considered the top pitching prospects in the organization, and aside from Josh Fields, just might have been the White Sox prime prospects at any position. Sweeney, 22, had the only Major League experience of the trio, but the 2003 second-round draft pick never reached his full potential during his short big league stints. Gonzalez struck out 185 in 150 innings over 27 starts for Double-A Birmingham last year while De Los Santos posted a 10-5 record and 2.65 ERA in 26 games between Class A Kannapolis and Class A Winston-Salem.

Good trade for the Oakland Athletics once again. Gonzalez has had great numbers as he has risen through the minors, getting as far as AA last season. He was 9-7, 185 strikeouts, with only 10 home runs allowed in 150 innings pitched. He'll probably a mid-season call-up and it should be fun to watch. For a team that has holes beyond their first two starters and a plethora of outfield talent, this move is questionable at best for the White Sox. Swisher though, is signed through 2012, with his deal with the A's so we know it's cost effective. Swisher will be above average for the White Sox, but I don't know if dealing Gonzalez was such a great idea.

The Texas Rangers sign LHP Eddie Guardado to a one-year, $2 million deal, with $4 million in incentives.

Guardado, 37, is a two-time All-Star closer who had 140 saves from 2002-05 -- including a league-leading 45 in 2002 -- and 183 in his career. He prefers to close but knows he will be in a open competition for the job with left-hander C.J. Wilson (who the Rangers got from the Braves in last year's deal for Mark Teixeira). A quality pickup for the Rangers who's bullpen has a lot to prove. Whoever doesn't win the closer's role will be the set-up man, both guys are solid.

The Oakland Athletics send outfielder Mark Kotsay to the Atlanta Braves for RHP Joey Devine and minor leaguer Jamie Richmond.

This is a deal I believe should work out for both teams. Over the course of the past three seasons, he has hit .267 with a .388 slugging percentage and .321 on-base percentage. Entering the 2005 season, his career statistics included a .287 batting average, .425 slugging percentage and .343 on-base percentage. Kotsay, 32, who has batted .282 with .337 on-base percentage in his 11-season career, is looking for a new beginning. The .214 batting average he produced in limited and painful action this past season is just a tangible sign of the frustrations he felt over the course of the past year. Kotsay should give the Braves a little time to keep the centerfield spot warm for Jordan Schafer. The Braves will be responsible for just $2 million of his $7.325 million salary. A cost-effective pick-up for the Braves.

Devine never really caught on with Atlanta, only pitching in mop-up situations, and bouncing around for the past three years. The only time he got to pitch in a major situation, he surrendered Chris Burke's 18th-inning, walk-off homer that ended the 2005 National League Division Series against the Astros. Devine, though, has immense amounts of potential. Again, the Athletics should be a fun team to watch over the next few years.

The Chicago White Sox sign RHP Octavio Dotel to a two-year, $11 million deal.

Dotel, 26, posted a 2-1 record, 4.11 ERA and 11 saves between Kansas City and Atlanta in 2007. Since 1957, he ranks fifth among Major League relief pitchers with an average of 11.7 strikeouts per nine innings. Brad Lidge (12.6), Rob Dibble (12.17), Francisco Rodriguez (11.97) and Billy Wagner (11.84) are the only relievers who rank higher. He is coming off elbow surgery in 2005, but passed his physical with the team. As long as he's healthy (a big if) Dotel should help solidify the 7th inning for the White Sox.

The Minnesota Twins send LHP Johan Santana to the New York Mets for outfielder Carlos Gomez, RHP Kevin Mulvey, RHP Philip Humber, and RHP Deolis Guerra. The Mets sign Santana to a six-year, $137.5 million contract extension.

I'm not sure what the Twins were thinking exactly when this trade was done but perhaps it will unfold over the next few years. This deal, as believed by analysts, was the fourth-best one for Santana this offseason. As an immediate impact, only Gomez qualifies. Gomez is not near the talent level of Phillip Hughes, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jon Lester, or Melky Cabrera (the components of other trades offered for Santana).

Gomez, 22, needs some time to grow and become more patient of a hitter, but he does pack some pop and could be a five-tool player one day. He hit .232 with 2 homers and 12 RBIs in 125 at-bats. Mulvey, 22, spent most of last season at AA Binghampton, going 11-10 with a 3.32 ERA and 110 strikeouts in 151.2 innings. Humber, 25, spent most of the season in AAA New Orleans but had a brief stint in the majors including his first major league start against the Washington Nationals on September 26th. At New Orleans, he went 11-9 with a 4.27 ERA and 120 strikeouts in 139 innings. Guerra, 19, spent the season in A-ball going 2-6 with a 4.01 ERA and 66 strikeouts in 89.2 innings. Of all the prospects, Guerra is said to have the most potential.

Santana won the AL Cy Young Award in 2004 and 2006, winning 20 and 19 games, respectively, in those seasons. His record last season, 15-13, included his lowest win total in four seasons and as many losses as he had suffered in the previous two seasons combined. He won eight of first 12 decisions and produced a 2.60 ERA in his first 13 starts last season. But he won merely four of his subsequent 14 starts, losing seven. His ERA in his final seven starts was 5.11.

This deal won't pan itself out until the 22-year-olds Gomez and Mulvey and the 19-year-old Guerra play consistently in the majors. Honestly, I don't see Humber doing much of anything, he'll be a middle-to-back of the rotation guy at best. But as it stands right now, none of the Mets prospects seem to be sure things while Santana is very much a sure thing, so advantage Mets. The Twins should have held out for Fernando Martinez (not that I'm complaining, obviously), or waited for the deadline so Santana would have even higher trade value (a run at the pennant for the Twins wouldn't have been out of the question either).

The Baltimore Orioles send LHP Eric Bedard to the Seattle Mariners for outfielder Adam Jones, LHP George Sherrill, minor league RHP Chris Tillman, RHP Tony Butler, and RHP Kam Mickolio.

The Baltimore Orioles build for the future big-time in this deal, recieving three prospects in return. As of right now, Jones and Sherrill will be the quickest contributors at the major league level. Jones, who hit .314 with 25 home runs and 84 RBIs for Triple-A Tacoma, was named Seattle's Minor League Player of the Year last season. That was the second time he's earned that designation. Jones, a former shortstop and former first-round draft pick, made his big league debut before his 21st birthday and has hit .230 in 139 Major League at-bats. Tillman, Seattle's Minor League Pitcher of the Year, has averaged nearly 10 strikeouts per nine innings in the Minor Leagues. The former second-round draft pick made 20 starts in the offense-friendly California League last year, notching a 6-7 record and a 5.26 ERA. The 19-year-old rung up 105 strikeouts and walked 48 batters for Class A High Desert.

Bedard had his best season as a pro last year going 15-11 with 171 strikeouts and a 3.76 ERA in 196.1 innings pitched. He did this for a team who went only 69-93 and stood as the only pitcher on the squad with double-digit wins. The win leader after Bedard, was Daniel Cabrera who had nine wins, along with 18 losses. Bedard will seemingly fit into the rotation second behind 21-year-old phenom Felix Hernandez. It will also give them their second lefty (along with Jarrod Washburn) to compliment the right-handers Hernandez, Carlos Silva, and Miguel Batista. Perhaps the Mariners gave up too much for the injury-plagued Bedard, but only time will tell.



All statistical information and some hot stove information in this entry is courtesy of MLB.com, baseball-reference.com, and espn.com.



The Chris Young Invitational

I will be inviting a few lucky readers/board members to participate in a yahoo league with yours truly

Here are the league settings

League ID#: 41175
League Name: The Chris Young Invitational
Password: email christopher.young61@gmail.com for password
Custom League URL: http://baseball.fantasysports.yahoo.com/league/thechrisyounginvitational
Season Type: Full
Draft Type: Live Draft
Draft Time: Sun Mar 2 6:00pm EST [ Add to My Calendar ]
Max Teams: 12
Scoring Type: Head-to-Head
Player Universe: All baseball
Max Moves: No maximum
Max Trades: No maximum
Trade Reject Time: 2
Trade End Date: August 17, 2008
Waiver Time: 2 days
Can't Cut List Provider: Yahoo! Sports
Trade Review: Commissioner
Post Draft Players: Follow Waiver Rules
Max Acquisitions per Week: No maximum
Min Innings Pitched: 7
Weekly Deadline: Daily - Tomorrow
Start Scoring on: Week 1
Roster Positions: C, 1B, 2B, 3B, SS, OF, OF, OF, Util, SP, SP, RP, RP, P, P, P, BN, BN, BN, BN, BN, BN, BN, BN, DL, DL
Stat Categories: R, HR, RBI, SB, BB, K, AVG, W, CG, SV, BB, K, ERA, WHIP


show me what you got men!

email me or leave your email in the comments section for the password if you would like to join

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

The Fantasy Impact






Were in the middle of winter, and I am knee deep in a fantasy basketball team in need of salvaging, and I can only think of one thing. Setting my pre ranks for my time to shine, Fantasy Baseball ‘08 Last year was a disappointing end to a year of troubles that saw me barely able to compete with a team anchored by players like Ryan Braun, B.J. Upton, Carlos Lee and Ichiro on the offensive side and Johan Santana, Justin Verlander and Roy Oswalt, and the disgusting part of it all was I had to trade for or pick up all those players except for Santana and Lee. Fantasy owners, especially those in private leagues, are getting smarter by the minute and while I may have not been graced with one of the better teams in this respective league, it has become increasingly more difficult to win leagues nowadays. Knowing this may be a tad bit repetitive to some hardcore owners, I have compiled a list of the Top Ten at each position ( fully knowing that I only really needed to do research on about 5 players at the C spot ). Enjoy. Don’t forget to send emails with comments and concerns at christopher.young61@gmail.com or just leave a comment on this post. Next write up I will respond to what I can.





Catchers
1. Victor Martinez CLE
any catcher that can give you 500+ Ab’s with a .301 25 and 114 clip is more than enough to make him no.1
2. Russell Martin LAD
and any catcher who gives you 20/20 is more than welcome to slide into the #2 position
3. Jorge Posada NYY
OBP, HR’s, RBI’s and Walks are more than serviceable in this position
4. Brian McCann ATL
still has not reached full potential but still more than worthy (92 RBI’s 2nd amongst C)
5. Joe Mauer MIN
excellent hitter but must stay on the field to really show his true value
6. Bengie Molina SF
things get a little dicey after the top five but the Molina of the Bengie variety gives you some pop, if nothing more
7. Ivan Rodriguez DET
in the DET lineup, there is nowhere to hide, the artist formerly known as Pudge should benefit
8. Kinji Johjima SEA
225+ TB and a .280+ clip is acceptable to go with 500+ AB’s, at least getting good playing time
9. Ramon Hernandez BAL
needs to stay off the DL the regain any sort of value
10. Ronnie Paulino PIT
young catcher with average offensive game, production should increase this year

Bubble: Miguel Olivo FLA, John Buck KC

1st Basemen
1. Albert Pujols STL
I smell monster year for last years consensus No. 1 pick
2. Prince Fielder MIL
while some state their case for Howard at this spot, Fielders numbers better all around
3. Ryan Howard PHI
right behind Prince IMO, needs to lessen K’s and increase AVG
4. Mark Teixeria ATL
nasty numbers in the ATL, I would expect nothing more from him in ‘08
5. David Ortiz BOS
always a consistent bat although injuries hampered a great year from papi (.332, 35, 117, 116)
6. Travis Hafner CLE
Finally has 1st base eligibilty to create flexibility in lineups
7. Justin Morneau MIN
expect morneau to be back to his ‘06 form, probably dropping in drafts that he shouldnt be
8. Carlos Pena TB
ranked low here because I don’t expect his numbers to duplicate ‘07 and will go super high in drafts this year
9. Lance Berkman HOU
always a second half hero, expect him to do more of the same this year, still great value
10. Todd Helton COL
a return to form in ‘07 leads me to believe he will be a huge contributor in the middle of atkins and holliday


Bubble: Kevin Youkilis BOS, James Loney LAD, Adam LaRoche PIT, Adrian Gonzalez SD

2nd Basemen

1. Chase Utley PHI
one word: BEAST, expect nothing less than ‘07 production
2. Brandon Phillips CIN
contributor in every facet of the game, will only get better this year
3. Robinson Cano NYY
a little inconsistent, but still able to post a .300+ AVG and close enough to 20/100 for me
4. Dan Uggla FLA
his AVG is the only downfall, everything else is there for a solid 2B
5. Brian Roberts BAL
Roberts will guarantee you a victory in SB every week, a little concerned where the Mitchell Report will leave him
6. Placido Polanco DET
his avg makes owning guys like Adam Dunn less of a concern (.341)
7. Freddy Sanchez PIT
good avg and RBI’s for the former ‘06 Batting Champ
8. Orlando Hudson ARI
great consolation prize later on in rounds, a budding offense around him as well
9. Jeff Kent LAD
always consistent and always ‘stached
10. Aaron Hill TOR
still young enough to show more improvement, and is off to a great start with ‘07 campaign (17/78/.291)

Bubble, Dustin Pedroia BOS, Kelly Johnson ATL, Ian Kinsler TEX, Kaz Matsui HOU

3rd Basemen

1. Alex Rodriguez NYY
if you have the number one pick in your draft, and you don’t pick him, you’re an idiot. End of story
2. Ryan Braun MIL
only player who out preformed in on a game to game basis was A-rod, OF eligibility coming soon
3. Miguel Cabrera DET
the most feared bat in a lineup of potential all stars in DET, crazy potential for an MVP type year
4. David Wright NYM
struggled between him and lowell, but age and his ceiling is much higher
5. Mike Lowell BOS
a throwback to his FLA days, an absolute steal of the waiver wires last year
6. Garret Atkins COL
still young and streaky, many owners dropped him after his garbage start to ‘07, don’t do that in ‘08
7. Aramis Ramirez CHC
missed 30 games but still was a very solid hitter, must stay healthy
8. Chone Figgins LAA
gives you speed from the corner position if your in need
9. Chipper Jones ATL
youll need a backup option with jones because he will go on the DL at some point
10. Hank Blalock TEX
still a great hitter, needs to rebound big from the sidelines of ‘07

Bubble: Ryan Zimmerman WAS, Akinori Iwamura TB, Adrian Beltre SEA

SS
1. Hanley Ramirez FLA
the epiphany of the 5x5 roto player (29/81/.332/51/95)
2. Jimmy Rollins PHI
all around contributor and mvp candidate
3. Jose Reyes NYM
71 steals and look for more in ‘08
4. Troy Tulowitzki COL
amazing second half of a storybook rookie year projects to a special player
5. Michael Young TEX
power down slightly but should not deter fantasy owners
6. Derek Jeter NYY
consistency is the name of the game for the cap’n of NYY
7. Carlos Guillen DET
hard to put this low, but I expect numbers to drop following cabrera deal
8. Edgar Renteria DET
detroit cant possibly have two guys at SS can they? Edgars always on point
9. Miguel Tejada BAL
like Roberts, hard to tell where Mitchell Report lands him
10. J.J. Hardy
tailed off huge in second half, but still worthy of starting role

Bubble: Orlando Cabrera CHW, Jhonny Peralta CLE, Ryan Theriot CHC

Outfield
1. Matt Holliday COL
all around game makes his guy a coors field superhero
2. Magglio Ordonez DET
I expect to see him tail off as well, unless DET has a beast of an offensive year
3. Vlad Guerrero LAA
he doesnt have a strikezone, which is scary considering he only struck out 62 times in ‘07
4. Alfonso Soriano CHC
great tools and a 30/30 guy
5. Carlos Beltran NYM
will be lighting it up in Shea all summer
6. Carl Crawford TB
a perennial 30/50/.300 speed OF, and looking to increase his HR’s
7. Grady Sizemore CLE
five tooler with a little bit of a downer in ‘07, will fall and when he does, snatch him up like the 5 o’clock free crack giveaway
8. Ichiro SEA
in terms of speed categories, always consistent, and always on the field producing
9. Curtis Granderson DET
Mr. 20 can do it all
10. Carlos Lee HOU
write it down, 35 and 110, with atleast 10 HR’s hitting the train in Hou

Bubble: Adam Dunn CIN, B.J. Upton TB, Eric Byrnes ARI, Manny Ramirez BOS, Alex Rios TOR, Vernon Wells TOR, Torii Hunter LAA, Nick Markakis BAL, Jeff Francouer ATL, Hunter Pence, HOU, Jason Bay PIT

Starting Pitchers
1. Johan Santana NYM
now that hes got an offense... pencil in 21 wins
2. C.C. Sabathia CLE
big nasty will no doubt benefit from another full year with Fausto
3. Josh Beckett BOS
best pitcher in the game for a majority of ‘07
4. Jake Peavy SD
k king will no doubt be at it again in the 619
5. Dan Haren ARI
the all star starter for the AL should have a little more help on the offensive side and not have to worry about carrying the load because of
6. Brandon Webb ARI
nasty sinker and had three straight CG last year
7. Justin Verlander DET
18-6 last year and will have the run support to put up another campaign like so
8. John Lackey LAA
never flashy but always gets the job done on the west coast late nights
9. Carlos Zambrano CHC
came back in the second half last year like an angry monster, hopefully keeps the trend going in ‘08
10. Roy Halladay TOR
top flight starter that should be heavily discounted in drafts

Bubble: Fausto Carmona CLE, Aaron Harang CIN, John Maine NYM, Diasuke Matsuzaka BOS, Cole Hamels PHI, John Smoltz ATL, Roy Oswalt HOU, Eric Bedard BAL, Francisco Liriano MIN

Relief Pitchers
1. J.J Putz SEA
dazzled his way to a 1.68 era with 40 saves in 42 opportunities
2. Jose Valverde HOU
tendency to have on again off again years will be put to the test with the train tracks in the foreground in HOU
3. Francisco Cordero MIL
its always good when your closer has a 2:1 K to SV ratio and the saves are 45
4. Francisco Rodriguez LAA
see Cordero above (less saves, more k’s)
5. Joe Nathan MIN
may not have the opp’s that he did last year with santana out of the picture
6. Jonathan Papelbon BOS
always solid, and another year of having great save opp’s
7. Mariano Rivera NYY
down ‘07 and age taking a hold of the games greatest closer
8. Bobby Jenks CHW
only 2 HR’s given up is a great sign
9. Takashi Saito LAD
def a late round steal if hes there
10. Billy Wagner NYM
still able to get hitters out, but one dimensional fastball catches up with him from time to time

Bubble: Jason Isringhausen STL, Trevor Hoffman SD, Manny Corpas COL, Brian Fuentes COL, Chad Cordero WAS, Brad Lidge PHI

Hopefully in the next few posts ill be able to post the results from the expert league that I am currently taking part in. Post replies and any questions comments and disagreements as they are welcome. Good Luck to all in your upcoming drafts and I hope that I was of some help.

-The Chris Young