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Fantasy Baseball
Jan 25, 2007 | 1:12PM | report this

     No special header for this one folks. In fact, you may not see one for sometime. This blog is completely about the fantasy issue. What if I owned this guy? Would I not come in last for once? What if I owned that guy? Would I have a better team.
     Thats right folks, it's Fantasy Baseball time. With the leagues starting to form, it's only a matter of time before you join one. Lets take a quick glance at who some of the top picks, the no picks and the dark horses should be in this year's fantasy leagues.
     Ok, for top picks, the obvious choices are Albert Pujols and Ryan Howard. These two were monsters last year, and if Howard can find his Pujols groove (of constant numbers each year), then he'll be up for another MVP award. Sure, he will probably never hit 58 homeruns again, because of the walk treatment, but he'll get you numbers. HR, RBI, Runs and the averages: OB, Slugging and OPS. The same for Pujols. It looks like Pujols and Howard will be the numbers 1 and 2 picks in each draft. just who will be 1 and who will be 2?
     Other top players are Chris Carpentar, Roy Oswalt, Manny Ramirez, David Ortiz, Brandon Webb, Johan Santanna, Joe Maur and Justin Morneau. All of whom will be top picks.
     Some don't pick these guys: Barry Bonds, JD Drew, Luis Gonzalez, Russell Martin, Geoff Jenkins and Gary Sheffield. Bonds will be injuried a lot this year, if he doesn't get arrested first. Drew, well, he agreed to terms almost two months ago with the Boston Red Sox and his deal hasn't been finalized yet because of an injury during an exam. Gonzalez is old and probably won't play as much as people think. If you want a lot of bases, you might want to take him but only as a late round pick. Martin will NOT be the Martin of last year: fact. Trust me. If you need a catcher, go for Brian McCann (who would be an iffy choice as well) or Maur. Jenkins and Sheffield probably won't see much playing time and haven't done well for a few years. Late picks if you desperately need outfield help.
     Some dark horses are: Yadier Molina, Anthony Reyes, Kevin Kouzmanoff, Stephen Drew, Carlos Quinten and Sammy Sosa. Molina and Reyes really came into their own during the postseason, most noteably the NLCS (Molina) and the World Series (Reyes). Both should have really good 2007 campaigns. Kouzy is a rookie 3B with a lot of pop. He'll fit into the middle of the young Friar's lineup and should produce 20+ homeruns, a lot of doules and some RBI. the DBack boys, Drew and Quinten, were stellar last year in the MLB debuts. This year looks better. Some starting experience under your belt is very good for young players, and you can bet that these two will have good years. And lastly, Sosa. Sosa was MIA in 2006 and looks to come back in 2007. He'll be playing a lot of DH, so his wear and tear will be low on his body so he MIGHT produce. In a hitter friendly park, his numbers MIGHT be good. See why he's a dark horse candidate? Lots of mights. He's the Frank Thomas of 2007. Injuries hampered him, full time DH. Take a shot if you're willing, but make it late.
     Thats all folks!

Add a comment   categories: St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs, Texas Rangers, Detroit Tigers, New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, Chicago White Sox, Arizona Diamondbacks, San Diego Padres
 
Still The Underdog?
Oct 25, 2006 | 6:16AM | report this

     Are the St. Louis Cardinals still the underdog? They beat the favored San Diego Padres three games to one. Then they beat the heavily favored New York Mets four games to three. Now, they lead the favored Detroit Tigers two games to one in the 2006 World Series. Did you see a pattern? Favored, heavily favored and favored. Thats the pattern. Thats right folks, the Cardinals were not suppose to beat the Padres. They definently weren't suppose to be in the World Series, e####ally if you listen to Dayn Perry. Heck, you can make a case that they shouldn't be anywhere near the postseason. I mean, this team had three losing streaks that added to 23 games lost. Can this team really be this close to winning their 10th World Series title?
     The Cardinals are, despite what you hear from Perry, real close to winning this year's title. Perry says that the Cardinals aren't good enough to be this good. They can't a series if they tried. He wants you to believe the Cardinals basically suck. Well, suck on this Dayn Perry: Cardinals are almost World Champions.
     After that rip at Perry because his writing this postseason has really irked me, I will leave you with this (e####ally since I wrote this in the 15 minutes I had before class started) the Cardinals are the best. They have the best manager, the best team and the best closer. Please accept this. Don't be part of the 90% of the world against the Cardinals. If you are part of that 90%, please don't overflow the oceans with your tears when the Cardinals win.
     Just to let you know, this article basically has no information in it. It's just a rip at the Cardinal haters because I'm gloating. That 90% of the world stat is probably not right (more than likely higher), so don't go by that. Made that up. Comment badly if you must, but I think St. Louis Cardinal fans will agree with me. It's been long enough, it's time to gloat because we're up two games to one and we have Jeff Suppan pitching tonight. So eat this article you Cardinal haters, e####ally the following: Jon Miller, Joe Morgan, Jeff Brantley, Dayn Perry, Steve Phillips, Dayn Perry and Joe Morgan (I don't like Dayn Perry and Joe Morgan is the worst announcer in history, so they get listed twice =P).

1 Comment | Add a comment   categories: St. Louis Cardinals, Boston Red Sox, New York Mets, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds, Detroit Tigers
 
$100 Million Doesn't Buy What It Use To
Oct 18, 2006 | 12:00PM | report this

     There are five teams in the Major Leagues that have payrolls of $100 million or more. They are the New York Yankees ($198 million), the Boston Red Sox ($120 million), the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim ($103 million), the Chicago White Sox ($102 million) and the New York Mets ($100 million). Look at these five teams. What has happened to these teams this year? You have a loss in the first round of the playoffs (Yankees) and a pending loss in the second round of the playoffs (Mets). The other three teams lost their divisions and didn't make the playoffs. Thats pathetic for $100 million plus payroll teams.
     Lets look at who did make the playoffs: Los Angeles Dodgers ($99 million), St. Louis Cardinals ($86 million), San Diego Padres ($68 million), Detroit Tigers ($82 million), Oakland Athletics ($62 million) and the Minnesota Twins ($63 million). Big difference, right? So why don't the teams that do have big payrolls win and the teams that are under $100 million (though the Dodgers are fairly close to $100 million) win? Well, to put it simply, spending. The teams with big checkbooks spend thriftly buying all the best offense they can. The teams with lower payrolls spend wisely and buy up the cheap offense to go along with their personal big bopper creating a balanced lineup and quality pitchers to put in the rotation and the bullpen. What? I didn't say pitching for the big spenders? Maybe for a reason? Yeah, for a reason. Look at the Mets, the Yankees, Red Sox and Angels. They have no pitching staff. Only the White Sox have pitching, and they have a lot of it. The Yankees have two pitchers that collect Social Security after every start (Mike Mussina and Randy Johnson) as do the Mets (Tom Glavine). Then, they fill their bullpen with over priced and washed up pitchers, the same with the back of their rotation. Pedro Martinez was good in 2004 and hasn't been since. Maybe these teams that spend money on offense need to buy some quality pitching.
     I got into an argue with my brother a few months ago. I kept telling him the American League is a pointless league because they buy up all the talent they can and don't care about their spending. He told me the National League does the same. Then I spat into his face with this comment: Name 5 teams, other than the Mets, that have enormus payrolls. He had no answer. Then he came up with this: Take out the top spender and lowest spender in each league and see what the average payroll is (so the number isn't skewed by the Yankees or the Florida Marlins). So, I'll do it now. Here is the average payroll for the American League (excluding the Yankees and Tampa Bay Devil Rays) and the National League (excluding the Mets and Marlins):
American League Average Payroll 2006: $78,056,695 million
National League Average Payroll 2006: $73,708,125 million
     Now, at first look you say, "haha, you were wrong! There is only a $5 million difference!" Well, that may be true. I would respond with, "How many teams are in the AL? The NL?" True baseball fans would know this right away. There are 14 teams in the AL and 16 in the NL. Then, you figure I took off two teams from both leagues, that leaves 12 in the AL and 14 in the NL. Thats right, the AL has a higher average payroll without the Yankees and three other teams.
     Knowing all of this, you can now understand why the NL loses in the All-Star game and in the World Series. You also know that the AL is stacked with teams that want to win so badly, they'll spend as much as they can to do it (and the Marlins were in the Wild Card chase till a late fade with a $15 million payroll. Food for thought there). Enjoy this new found knowledge!
*All numbers for payrolls were rounded up to the nearest million except in figuring the average. The numbers were taken from Espn.com. Thank you ESPN for the information!*

2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals, Detroit Tigers, Oakland Athletics, Chicago White Sox, San Diego Padres, Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
 
Cardinals' Young Pen A Force
Oct 14, 2006 | 11:57AM | report this

     The St. Louis Cardinals have Albert Pujols and Chris Carpenter. That's what most people say. For us Cardinal fans, we say differently. Sure, we have the reigning MVP and Cy Young Award winners, but we also have Scott Rolen, Jim Edmonds, Yadier Molina, David Eckstein and Juan Encarnacion. There is, however, one more thing that has been added to that list and that is the bullpen. The past two years we've had the best bullpen in the majors. This year, everyone knew the Cardinals bullpen wasn't as good as it has been. Without Ray King and Julian Taverez, it shouldn't be. Instead, the Cardinals started from scratch. They started with Jason Isringhausen, Randy Flores and Brad Thompson. They filled the spots with Ricardo Rincon, Josh Hancock, Adam Wainwright and Braden Looper. Now, Rincon and Isringhausen are gone because of injuries. Now, they filled those two roles with Josh Kinney and Tyler Johnson, both rookies. Lets break down the young pen and show you how they are doing it.
     First, lets start with the guy that was there last year and did great, started bad this year and finished good: Brad Thompson. Thompson has got a sinking fastball, groundball pitcher. He doesn't over dominate you, but he'll get the job done. He gets mostly grounders to get you out, and he does it well. He started the season good but in the middle became really rocky when the bullpen fell apart. He was sent to Triple A Memphis to be a starter and work out the kinks, which he did. Since coming back up, Thompson appeared in 10 games in the regular season (the end of August and all of Spetember and October) and had a 1.13 ERA. In the postseason so far, he's appeared in two games and pitched one inning combined for a 0.00 ERA and one strikeout and one walk. Not bad. Thompson, before last year, was thought of as a future number 5 starter come 2007. Now, I don't think Tony La Russa and Dave Duncan want him pitching every fifth day because he's become so good out of the bullpen. This is one pitcher that has the bright lights of fame in front of him.
     Adam Wainwright is the new closer for the Cardinals. He started the year in Spring Training competeing with Sidney Ponson and Anthony Reyes for the fifth starter job. Wainwright was considered a long shot. At the end of Spring Training, Ponson was the number five starter, Reyes was at Memphis and Wainwright was in the bullpen. The bullpen? Wasn't this guy considered a long shot? He was a long shot, but the Cardinals needed help in the bullpen, and Wainwright got the job over Reyes because of Reyes' lack of warming up in a hurry and if the Cardinals needed Reyes for the rotation, he'd be ready by starting at Memphis. So, Wainy was in the pen working some good innings and pitched great. He pitched in 51 games before Spetember and had a 2.84 ERA. Thats impressive. E####ally for a guy who'll be in the starting rotation next year. When he was still pitching in relief, then moved to being a setup man then moved into the closer's role in September, he posted a 2.79 ERA over 10 games and was 2 out of 2 in saves. In the postseason, he's gone four and a third innings over four games and is 1 out of 1 in saves and has yet to allow a run. Way to go Wainy!
     Tyler Johnson was a nasty lefthander that was taken in the Rule V draft in 2004 by the Oakland Athletics. The Cardinals knew he would taken because he was so good, but they didn't have room for him on their 40 man roster. The Athletics though returned him and the Cardinals then added him to thier 40 man roster because they didn't want to lose him again. When Rincon went down early, it was Johnson that got the call, not Carmen Cali (who is now basically done in the Cardinals organization). Johnson pitched ok to start with, then got rocky and then pitched amazing. He ended the year with a 4.95 ERA over 56 games. In the postseason, he's showed why he's so good. Todd Walker of the San Diego Padres said his slider (his best pitch) is the nastiest thing he has ever seen. He also has a very good fastball and can get the lefties out in a hurry. He can also dominate the right handed batters if he comes in with that slider. He is key kog to this revamped bullpen.
     Last, but certainly not least, is Josh Kinney. First off, let me say Kinney pitched at Quincy Unniversity during his college years and QU is my hometown's college, so I like Kinney more than anyone else (Josh Rabe of the Minnesota Twins also played at QU). Kinney was pitching with an independent league team a few years ago when the Cardinals found him. They persuaded him to come into their organization. He did, and he's flourished. He wasn't at Spring Training and he has bounced around all over the Cardinals organization, but has finally made it. He is the setup man to the new closer Wainwright and has pitched well since his recall from Memphis. When he first came up, he had a 4.97 ERA over his first 10 games and was sent down. When Spetember came along, he got recalled and proved he was better than what he showed in July. He pitched in 10 games and had a 1.97 ERA in Spetember and October and has pitched extremely well in the postseason so far: 3 games, 0.00 ERA, 2 Ks, 2 BB in 3 innings. Not bad at all.
     Now that you know how good these four have been, think about next year. Hancock and Looper will be back and Isringhausen will be healthy. Johnson and Flores will still be the dynamic duo against lefties and Kinney will be out there as well. Wainy will be in the rotation. That's six guys. Know what that means? They can either sign a veteren (maybe Kerry Wood? Great fastball, former starter. He could be a good setup man) or callup Mark Worrell. The possibilities are endless right now.

Add a comment   categories: St. Louis Cardinals, Oakland Athletics, New York Mets, Florida Marlins, Atlanta Braves, San Diego Padres, New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox
 
Boston Red Sox: Offseason Moves
Sep 30, 2006 | 11:40AM | report this

     Let this be known right away, I am not a Red Sox fan or a Yankee fan. I cannot stand the American League East, or the American League for that matter. So don't think I'm a homer. Since that is now known, I can finally type my story. Theo Epstein has an ok team in front of him, but he really needs to do something else. He needs to address about every part of his roster this offseason. Here's what the Red Sox need to do in order to keep pace with the Yankees next season. Some of these moves probably won't happen, but they can work.
     ANDRUW JONES: The Braves want to resign. Jones wants to stay a Brave. Does this mean this will happen? No. Could it? Yes. The Braves don't really have enough money to reisgn Jones after this season, and if Jones goes to Beantown, he could make a lot of money. Plus, the Braves could benefit a lot from a trade of Jones. They could trade Jones to Boston for Coco Crisp (to play left field and leadoff), Mike Lowell, Kason Gabbard and Manny Delcarmen. Now, you ask why trade a center fielder for a left fielder? Simple, the Braves need someone out in left that is good. Also, Crisp could be their leadoff man (or Edgar Renteria could take that spot). They just need to bump Marcus Giles from the leadoff spot. He's not comfortable there, and everyone knows it. This could also be beneficial because that will allow the Braves to sign Torii Hunter (if he's a free agent) to play center. Their lineup would get a big boost. Gabbard could be in the rotation for the Braves in the second half of next season (starting at Triple A) and all of 2008. Delcarmen could be out in the bullpen and help out their to bridge the gap to Bob Wickman. Lowell would be good for Chipper Jones. Jones and Lowell are getting up there in age and their play is starting to show it. If you platoon these two, their injuries could be done and both could impact the club.
     For the Red Sox, they get a great hitting center fielder whose bat has finally come alive in recent years. Jones is also a super defender and is a big boost over Coco Crisp and anyone else that they put out in center.
     BARRY ZITO: The Red Sox have an ok rotation. They'll have Josh Beckett (inconsistent), Curt Schilling (old and inconsistent), Jon Lester, Jon Papelbon, Matt Clement and Tim Wakefield. All of those pitchers are either young, old, consistent or a combonation of some. Thats not good enough to compete with the Yankees offense (they have a pitching staff other than Wang and Johnson?). They need to add a boost. That's where Zito comes in. Zito can fit in nicely in this rotation as the number one starter. That'll put these pitchers following Zito: Beckett, Schilling, Paplebon and Lester. This lets the pitchers know where they stand in relation to their peers so they can pitch better. If you're told you're the ace of the staff, that can mess with your head if you've never been one before. Schilling can't carry this staff anymore and Beckett is Beckett. Zito is needed to keep this rotation together. This also makes Wakefield and Clement expandable to trade off for some pitching help. They really don't have a closer, unless Keith Foulke or Craig Hansen and take the duty. Look at this bullpen: Foulke, Hansen, Mike Timlin and Julian Taverez. Is that threatening? Not really. They really need to add some people. They can look to teams that have a lot of youth coming up, that way they don't care if they give up some veterens. They could also look to signing Joe Borowski to help build a bridge, maybe even be the closer. Eric Gagne will be available, maybe they could go there. No matter what they do, they need to stock the bullpen along with adding Zito to help improve this offense.
     GARY SHEFFIELD & MARK LORETTA: Yes folks, Gary Sheffield. Sheffield is getting old, but based on the other night, the guy can still hit when healthy. To help keep him healthy, the Yankees moved Sheffield to first. Well, the Red Sox just traded off Lowell. Remember? The Red Sox really want to move Kevin Youkilis back to third, and thats why they traded Mike Lowell. This allows them to move Youkilis to third and sign Sheffield to play first. Look at that, their defense is almost completed. They just need to resign Loretta. They did have a middle infield combo coming up in Hanley Ramirez and Dustin Pedroia, but they traded Ramirez. This leaves Pedroia, who has and can play second and short. This is big. They can move him to short and keep Loretta to play second and their defense has taken a big leap. Also, their offense has as well. We have one more move, then I'll show you the updated lineup.
     GEOFF JENKINS: Yes folks, Jenkins. Sure, he's not great anymore, but neither is Trot Nixon. Thaats why I'm letting Nixon go and I'm trading two Single A players to the Milwaukee Brewers for Jenkins. Jenkins, en turn, will play in a platoon with Wily Mo Pena and Manny Ramirez. Pena is good enough to play everyday, but he needs to be kept fresh. With this platoon, he'll play about 100 games (three out of five games he plays) and Jenkins would play about 62 games in right. Then, he'd also be used to give Ramirez a day off. Meaning, he'd play about 20 games in left. He could also be used in the DH spot as well, once in a while.
     Ok, so here's the new lineup that I would put out there everyday:
SS  Pedoria
RF  Pena/Jenkins
DH  David Ortiz
LF   Ramirez
CF  Jones
 
C   Jason Varitek
1B  Sheffield
3B  Youkilis
2B  Loretta
Thats a pretty good looking lineup right there. Speed and on-base percentage at the top, then comes a very good power supply with the 2-5. Then comes some good hitters with the 6-8. Then, it's your second leadoff man in the ninth spot to get it back to the top of the lineup.
     Now, that sounds like a very productive offseason. What do you think?

3 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres, Los Angeles Dodgers, Florida Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, Oakland Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals, Cleveland Indians
 
Playoff Predictions!
Sep 25, 2006 | 12:50PM | report this

     So, now that there's only a week left in the regular season, it's time to get down and dirty with the playoff predicitions. Now, only two divisions have been clinched, two more will be clinched in three days or less and the other two will go down to the wire, along with the Wild Card races (of both leagues). So, I'm going to show you my predicitions below, and all the teams I have in are the teams I think (or all ready know) will be in the playoffs.
     First, the best league out of the two, the National League. This is how the National League side will break down:
NEW YORK METS vs. LOS ANGELES DODGERS
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS vs. SAN DIEGO PADRES
The Dodgers will be the Wild Card team and the Padres won the West. The Cardinals blow out the Padres, again, in a three game sweep. The Mets, with their pitching lacking, get beat by the Dodgers in five games. The Mets have a great offensive team; however, you need pitching to help you win. Ask the Boston Red Sox what all offense and no pitching gets you. Sure, the Mets have Pedro Martinez (who is very inconsistent and still a little injuried) and Tom Glavine (inconsistent) and Steve Trachsel (enough said). That's it though. Oliver Perez is a joke, ask the PITTSBURGH PIRATES! If you get sent down by the Pirates, and then traded, you're pretty much useless. Sure, he has pitched ok in New York, but only ok. In retrospect, he pitched ok in Pittsburgh too. John Maine, a guy that hasn't smelled the postseason. You want to count on him? Good luck with that. The Dodgers, though, have a proven force of attack. They have three starters with World Series rings (two coming in the last three years), a pitcher who won 15+ games a year for more than a decade who is also a 300 game winner and a very good, hard throwing rookie. Their rotation is much better than the Mets and thats what will stop their offense. The Mets' pitching staff will not be able to halt the Dodger's offensive enslaut and they will end up winning the series.
     The Cardinals will sweep the Padres. I know I'm a Cardinal fan and everything so my answer is kind of bias, but still: Cardinals have a better team. The Padres have two good starters and a starter with a good postseason history (whose numbers are flawed because he pitched with the New York Yankees in their World Series run). The Cardinals have the regining (and more than likely repeat) Cy Young Award winner, a starter who has been nothing short of dominate in the second half, and two vets that can eat innings. The Cardinals have a balanced offense with David Eckstein back and three guys that have put up a combined .291 AVG, 60 HR (Juan Encanracion needs one more to be the fourth Cardinal with 20 bombs this year) and 211 RBI behind the regining (and more than likely repeat) Most Valuable Player Albert Pujols. In June, the Cardinals missed his bat a lot and these players (Encarnacion, Chris Duncan and Scott Rolen) didn't step it up to make up for Pujols' bat, proving they need him in the lineup to win. Now that Pujols and Eckstein ar ehealthy, and the three backing up Pujols are having decent seasons (Duncan by the way doesn't even have 300 at bats yet and has 20 homeruns), the Cardinals can blow the Padres out of the water.
     The next series, the League Championship Series, will be a tough one. You have the well balanced Dodgers who just beat the best National Leagaue team during the regular season and the Cardinals, who have been the best team in the National League the last two years. This series will go all seven games, most definently. The Cardinals will come out on top, but by a slim margin. The Dodgers have three great starters and then a so-so starter, whereas the Cardinals have one great starter, a good starter and then two so-so starters. If the Cardinals get their way and have Jeff Suppan and Chris Carpenter start Games 1 and 2, then get Jason Marquis and Jeff Weaver to start Games 3 and 4, they'll be in good shape. With the Dodgers being the Wild Card team, the Cardinals would have homefield advantage and Carp and Supp have pitched better at home and vice versa for Weaver and Marquis. Game 5 would belong to Anthony Reyes so Carp and Supp could pitch at home, if needed. The Dodgers would throw Greg Maddux in Game 1 against Carp, Derek Lowe in Game 2 against Supp, Brad Penny in Game 3 against Marquis and then Chad Billingsley in Game 4 against Weaver. This is where the Dodgers need to be creative. They could pitch Maddux in game four and save Billingsley for Game 5, and then pitch Lowe and Penny in the final two games. This would also assure Maddux to be ready for Game 1 of the World Series (if they make it, which won't happen). This could also assure the Dodgers a better suited matchup for an important Game 4 and it lets Billingsley pitch against a fellow rookie. I'll stop myself from my rambling to move on and say the Cardinals are in the World Series.
     Tune in on Thursday for the American League AND World Series Matchup blog!

4 Comments | Add a comment   categories: St. Louis Cardinals, Minnesota Twins, Philadelphia Phillies, Detroit Tigers, New York Yankees, New York Mets, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Houston Astros, Cincinnati Reds, Boston Red Sox
 
Indians Need To Do This....Now!
Jul 27, 2006 | 2:31PM | report this

     The Cleveland Indians 2006 season is a lost cause. Their only goal now is to not lose to the Royals. So, what the Indians need to do is cut their loses and move on. They have two guys they need to get rid of, and this is the perfect solution for it. They need to make a three way trade between the San Diego Padres and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Why? That's a very simple answer. The Padres have what the Indians want, the Angels have what the Indians want and Indians have what the Padres and Angels want: third baseman.
     The Padres have been pleading with teams to trade them a third baseman. Well, that's what the Indians have for them, a third baseman. Well, actually, a second baseman. Ronnie Belliard can play third base and second base. He's young, can play third. The Padres are thinking: HIM! YES HIM!
     The Angels are using Macier Izturis at third base for them because Chone Figgins needs to play center with Darrin Erstad out. The Angles need to cut their loses and find a young guy to play center with Figgins, move Erstad back to first base and find a third baseman until Dallas McPherson gets off the disabled list. So, who better to play third than Aaron Boone?
     So, here's the deal. The Indians just added Shin-soo Choo from the Mariners. So, there's the left fielder of the future. Andy Marte is the third baseman of the future. Erick Aybar is the second baseman of the future. George Kottaras is the catcher of the future and moving Victor Martinez to first would be a huge benefit. Now, where the heck am I getting Aybar and Kottaras from? The Angels and Padres, respectfully. Now, for the long awaited trade:
INDIANS GET: Aybar (Angels), Kottaras (Padres)
PADRES GET: Belliard (Indians), Joe Saunders (Angels)
ANGELS GET: Boone and Jason Michaels (Indians)
     The Indians then recall Marte and add Aybar and Kottaras to the roster. This way, the three players get to finish the year with two plus months of Major League experience and the Indians are ready to roll the next year. The Angels get to use Figgins and Michaels in center field, and when Erstad gets off the DL, he can go to first. They also get to use Boone at third until McPherson gets off the DL. The Padres add their third baseman of the future in Belliard and add a fifth starter in Saunders. That also lets them move Chan #### Park to the bullpen and add more depth to their pen with Park.
     I highly doubt all this happens, but I'm telling you right the Indians, Angels and Padres need to make this deal. Not only for the future, but for the present. The Angels can't get to the playoffs with an injuried Erstad in center and Izturis at third. The Padres need a third baseman for the future.....and for the present. They can't win their divison without Belliard. As for the Indians, who wants to lost to the Royals? KM

Add a comment   categories: Cleveland Indians, Kansas City Royals, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, San Diego Padres
 
Will Wickman Help Braves? No
Jul 20, 2006 | 8:10PM | report this

     Bob Wickman was recently traded to the Atlanta Braves. Wickman is one of the best closers in the game. Lets face it, the Braves need a closer. When you've used five different guys in the closers role and you have 20 blown saves on the year, you need help. Lets face this though, the Braves don't have the guys to setup for Wickman.
     The Braves have decent pitching. Decent starters and decent relievers. However, they don't have the guys that can hold a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the 8th. So, if you don't have the guys to hold on to 1-0 lead, how can they get the game to Wickman? That's right, they can't. The Braves can benefit from this trade, but not much. What they really need to do is go out and add another closer like guy to pitch the 8th and get it to Wickman. Say, like Scott Linebrink? Wilson Betemit has been scouted by the San Diego Padres as an everyday third baseman for them. Of course, they said Linebrink won't be moved, but if the Braves throw in a prospect....you never know. Something could happen. Maybe even Chan #### Park could be traded to Atlanta. He's been used in the closers role before. He could benefit from moving out of the rotation.

5 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Atlanta Braves, Cleveland Indians, San Diego Padres
 
The Wild West (NL) Shakedown
Feb 19, 2006 | 11:18AM | report this
Team Name Record GB
Los Angeles Dodgers 90-72 --
San Diego Padres 87-75 3
San Francisco Giants 85-77 5
Arizona Diamondbacks 75-87 15
Colorado Rockies 62-100 28

 

Los Angeles Dodgers


The Dodgers have completely revamped their team. They added players to 7 different positions and look good this year. They have a backup closer if Eric Gagne is still recovering, two new starters, a leadoff hitting shortstop, a batting champ/gold glover third baseman and a shortstop switching positions. They look great this year and should be a threat.

San Diego Padres


The Padres are defending West Champions, and besides retaining Brian Giles and Trevor Hoffman, they really haven't done anything huge. They did get rid of Phil Nevin last year and added a quality starter (that is adjusted to his new team and new league now), but they didn't have a first baseman. They added Mike Cameron to cover spacious center field, and that's a good move. They moved the speedy Dave Roberts to left, another good move. They put Ryan Klesko at his natural position, another good move. Will these moves add up to another division title, most likely not. They have Mika Piazza too, another good move. The Padres are a great team, but I don't think they can edge out the Dodgers, but, the Wild Card may be their's. Will it? Tune in on Saturday...

San Francisco Giants


I didn't think much of the Giants last year. Without Barry Bonds, the Giants pretty much blow. They added Steve Finley to the mix of old farts (like the Yankees, but the Yankees actaully have talent). The Giants are lucky that the Diamondbacks are in a rebuilding year and the Rockies blow as well. Otherwise, they'd be in last. They have no offense (and Bonds can't carry the entire team, no matter what people say), no defense and no pitching. They're worthless, and sorry to you Giants fans, but they are.

Arizona Diamondbacks The Diamondbacks are in a rebuilding year. They'll have all their top prospects up in 2007 and will be ready to fight. They need to wait, but the team they have isn't ABSOLUTELY horrible. They're trying to build around certain players. What they need to do is to add a surplus of young arms, like the Marlins, and that way their pitching will be just as good as their defense and offense will be when Stephen Drew, Justin Upton, Chris Young, etc. are up. They look good.........for the 2007 season.


Colorado Rockies Not much to say here. The Rockies sit on their butts and do nothing. They need to move to a place where altitude doesn't play a huge role in the runs or hits. Moving to Las Vegas could be what they need. Their minor league system is good, and they have veterns who are good. This team could contend if they weren't in the altitude. That has a big factor on how they finish in this division. You could be 81-0 on the road, but not winning at home can put a huge damper on your win-loss record, not to mention your morale.


8 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Sunday Shakedown, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres, San Francisco Giants, Arizona Diamondbacks, Colorado Rockies, NL West
 
Check, Your Move -- 2/1/06
Feb 01, 2006 | 1:51PM | report this

Welcome to yet another edition of CYM. So, without further ado, here it is (if you have a comment, post your comment. If you have a trade of your own, email me at pulen527@gmail.com and tell me about it. Include your name please!)

            TEAM                                     GET     
                                       LOSE
SAN DIEGO PADRES                    P Jaret Wright                          1B Walter Young
                                                  
       IF Andy Phillips                          OF Ben Johnson
                                                  
                                                  
           P Scott Cassidy
                                                  
                                                  
           C Pete Laforest
                                                  
                                                  
           IF Bobby Hill

NEW YORK YANKEES                 1B Walter Young                       P Jaret Wright
                                                  
       OF Ben Johnson                      IF Andy Phillips
                                                  
       P Scott Cassidy
                                                  
       C Pete Laforest
                                                  
       IF Bobby Hill

REASONS: Jaret Wright can't do it in New York, end of story. He needs a huge change of scenery. Moving to San Diego and getting a guarenteed starting spot there is a great move. It opens the door in New York for someone else to start every 5th day. Then Andy Phillips, he'll never be a starter in New York, ever. Moving out and competeing for a starting spot in San Diego is a great move. He'll be a backup at first base, and just might start at second everyday. If not, he'll be a backup and wait for his turn.
MORE REASONS: Bobby Hill will never amount to anything, but since he can play 3B, SS and 2B, and the Yankees need a backup, New York looks like Hill's lady. Plus, the Padres have Blum to play the infield, so Hill isn't needed. Laforest, Cassidy and Johnson will all compete for roster spots, but hey, going to New York gives you a better chance of winning it all. Young will replace Phillips as Giambi's backup, not a bad move. He'd be at AAA for the Padres.

 

That's it for this week.

Add a comment   categories: Sunday Shakedown, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres, NL West, AL East
 
Sunday Shakedown
Jan 29, 2006 | 2:09PM | report this

Today on SS, we look at the top ten trades of the offseason. We'll go from worst of the team (10) to the best (1).

10. Larry Bigbie and Aaron Miles (COL) for Ray King (STL)

9. Sean Burroughs (SD) for Dewon Brazelton (TB)

8. Danys Baez and Lance Carter (TB) for Edwin Jackson and Chuck Tiffany (LAD)

7. Sean Casey (CIN) for Dave Williams (PIT)

6. Johnny Estrada (ATL) for Lance Cormier and Oscar Villarreal (AZ)

5. Lyle Overbay and Ty Taubenheim (MIL) for David Bush, Gabe Gross and Zach Jackson (TOR)

4. Troy Glaus and Sergio Santos (AZ) for Miguel Batista and Orlando Hudson (TOR) 

3. Coco Crisp, Josh Bard and David Riske (CLE) for Guillermo Mota, Andy Marte, Kelly Shoppach and a player to be named later or cash (BOS)

2. Javier Vasquez and cash (AZ) for Orlando Hernandez, Chris Young and Luis Vizcaino (CHW)

1. Jim Thome and cash (PHI) for Aaron Rowand, Dan Haigwood and Gio Gonzalez (CHW)

And those are your top ten trades of the offseason. Peace.

3 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Sunday Shakedown, NL Central, NL West, NL East, AL Central, AL West, AL East, Philadelphia Phillies, St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Arizona Diamondbacks, Colorado Rockies, San Diego Padres, Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Toronto Blue Jays, Milwaukee Brewers, Cincinnati Reds, Pittsburgh Pirates
 
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ABOUT ME


Pulen527
I'm 18 and I enjoy baseball, as I'll only write about baseball. I'm a business major at Illinois State and I plan on going into baseball for a career. Hopefully one day, beating Theo Epstein's record as the youngest GM ever. My dream job is being the GM of the St. Louis Cardinals.

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