MLB Fantasy News 2010

Search

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Summer of Young
Jason Heyward had a pretty good game on Sunday. He went four for four with two home runs and two walks. He also scored four runs and also drove in four runs in a 16-5 Braves rout of the Cubs in Lou Piniella's last game as manager. Fellow Braves rookie Mike Minor pitched a great game, struck out ten batters, and should be owned all leagues, but it is Heyward that will wake up today with the seventeenth- or eighteenth-best on-base percentage in baseball. No-one will even remember his misplayed fly ball in the field because he was so locked in at the plate.

The same kind of locked in that Mike Stanton was just this time last week. In a six-game streak that started on August 10th, Stanton went 15-for-24 with nine extra-base hits and eight RBI. He hit four home runs in a three-game stretch in the middle of his tear. He's pushed his slugging percentage to a height that would rank around twentieth in the league if he qualified for the batting title, and no-one's too worried about his rough strikeout rate just yet.

Those watching the NL East every day are witnessing something pretty special this year. Two young outfielders are ripping it up in their debuts, and it looks like both will be very special players for a long time. If you are tempted to point to their poor batting averages as a negative, just remember that the last under-21 year old debut that looked anything as good as these two debuts was Miguel Cabrera and his 314 at-bats in 2003. His .268/.325/.468 line that year was a great sign for a hitter so young. Get excited about these young men.

In an effort to get a look at the next Heyward or Stanton, I'll be off to the First Pitch conference in Arizona this November, put on by Ron Shandler's Baseball HQ. We'll see some Arizona Fall League games, talk fantasy, and I'll report back for your benefit. If you are going to be there, hit me up on twitter or email (below). I look forward to talking baseball with any of you that make the trek.

* Jaime Garcia joined the rookie parade on Sunday with a complete-game, 89-pitch shutout of his own. His stuff - already strong enough to garner acceptable strikeout rates - is made great by its ability to induce grass-guzzlers. His groundball rate was sixth-best in the major leagues going into the start. Most of the luck stats even look sustainable, so Garcia is just a special young pitcher really.

* The biggest rookie star, though, belongs to Stephen Strasburg. The only reason there is any doubt about his future is nascent battle with injuries. It's hard to see into the black box of the trainer's room, so we don't know if this is the team babying the young pitcher or if these are significant issues that predict worse to come. After leaving Saturday's game in obvious elbow pain, the news this weekend oscillated from season-ending visits to Dr. James Andrew to significant improvement according to different sources. Apparently everyone is waiting on the results of a Sunday MRI, but the chance to really win some trade value for Strasburg in single-year leagues is probably gone, so you're stuck waiting for more news in the meantime.

* A great testament to how it doesn't always work out with top prospects, Cameron Maybin. is back on his way to the major leagues because Cody Ross was claimed-and-won on waivers by the San Francisco Giants. Maybin's success will either depend on making more contact or doing more with the contact he does make, because his past 489 plate appearances have been of the low-powered high-strikeout variety. It's either/or for him in the future, but his outcomes still vary between a slightly-less powerful Grady Sizemore or Mike Cameron, to Carlos Gomez or out of baseball. The scouting pedigree means he's still worth attention in keeper circles, but the league would have to be deep to justify dropping an established player for this high-variance young player.

Ross is now less ownable in a crowded San Francisco outfield than he was in Florida, for what it's worth. He leaves behind a team in turmoil - Ricky Nolasco tore the meniscus his right knee, and even though he'll try to return, his season is most likely over. Fantasy managers in head-to-head leagues may want to drop him if they are in the middle of a tough pennant race, because if he does come back it won't be until into the fantasy playoffs. Andrew Miller comes up to give the majors yet another try, but we'll have to see something to believe it at this point.

* On the other side of the age bell curve, Manny Ramirez (calf) came back from the disabled list, but it might just be in order so his team can pass him through waivers. That the no-power mediocre-defense inefficient Scott Podsednik would start over even a reduced Manny Ramirez on a team trying to make the postseason speaks more of Manny's decline than his actual statistics do. He's still too good to leave on the waiver wire in almost any league, even if the claustrophobia he felt over his rehab stint may act up again.

* Alex Rodriguez may also be entering the oft-injured part of his career. His calf injury sent him to the DL over the weekend, and he's been dealing with on-again off-again nicks and bruises all year. A-Rod was not having a good season, and his isolated slugging percentage has been on the decline for three straight years. It's hard not to think these signs of decline are real.

NL Quick Hits: Aramis Ramirez continued his hot streak with a two-run homer and is still a good buy-low for those of you that can still trade … Mat Latos will have his next start pushed back to Friday, and expect more of these shenanigans as his innings total pushes his ceiling … Carlos Gonzalez only missed a couple games with a bruised knee he got on a nice wall-banging catch …Ryan Howard is back from the DL, huzzah … Fernando Martinez went down the minors and got hurt yet again, and though it may not be serious, it's becoming a frequent issue with the outfielder whose upside has mostly been derived from his young age to date … Young Clayton Kershaw has shown a lot of strikeout ability so far, and the eleven Sunday strikeouts against the Reds in seven innings is just another notch in his belt … Jhoulys Chacin pitched a shutout and is immediately interesting in most leagues because of his strikeout and groundball rates … It looks like Geovany Soto (shoulder) will be back any day … Carlos Gomez (concussion) is back, but young Lorenzo Cain has been playing well enough to stick for now … Tyler Colvin is taking grounders at first, but it only really matters if he beats out Xavier Nady and Micah Hoffpauir for at-bats at the position … Jonathan Broxton is back in the closer role and should stay because he's a very, very good reliever … Jonathon Niese is a good pitcher, but his team is beginning to talk about limiting his innings and possibly shutting him down .. Chris Young (shoulder) threw another simulated game and could be back in early September … Homer Bailey has shown better control in his most recent stint in the major leagues, and is looking like a good spot start in mixed leagues … Jordan Zimmermann (elbow) pitched another five shutout innings and should be ready to contribute in deeper leagues … Colby Rasmus is still dealing with his calf injury … Corey Hart left a game over the weekend with a tight hamstring and will be out until mid-week … Juan Uribe fouled a ball off of his foot but will probably be fine after X-rays came back negative … David Eckstein (calf) is back … Ronny Paulino is out after testing positive.

AL Quick Hits: Don't look now, but Francisco Liriano just had his next start pushed back a couple of days because of a tired arm - hopefully it's nothing … Maicer Izturis (right shoulder) is headed to the DL, meaning Alberto Callaspo and Howie Kendrick can breath a little easier … Messrs Jeff Niemann and Wade Davis both did "extremely well" in simulated games over the weekend and are scheduled to pitch early this week … Ian Kinsler (groin) is taking ground balls in a crouching position as the team plays a delicate game between getting his bat in the lineup and actually getting him healthy … Derek Holland still has great upside but will ply his trade in the minor leagues for now … Matt Thornton has some forearm soreness, and J.J. Putz just blew a save of his own, so Bobby Jenks might be all alone at the end of that pale hose pen … Andrew Bailey is back from the DL and ready to close again … Even though Matt LaPorta has been struggling and missed a game to get his head straight, he represents good power upside on deeper league wires … Joel Piniero is ahead of schedule in his return and might beat his mid-September timetable … Owner of dual-eligibility and now a save, Koji Uehara is slightly interesting in deeper leagues with no 'P' slots … Luke Hochevar (elbow) looked good and might be back after three rehab starts … Sadly, Magglio Ordonez' season is all but officially over after some particulars of his ankle injury have come out … Speedy Michael Brantley (ankle) will be back in the lineup this week … Brett Anderson continued his brilliance since he returned, in case you missed it … Though Kevin Slowey (strained right triceps) was pitching better and looking healthier recently, his most recent trip to the DL just fits the bill in his unlucky season … Peter Bourjos hit his first major league home run, and has considerable upside for speed in deeper leagues … Conor Jackson returned, played sporadically for five days, and is now facing possibly season-ending sports hernia surgery - what a surprise.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
You Wanna Crown Him?
Calling this season the "Year of the Pitcher" has become cliche and isn't exactly truthful given the entire spectrum of past pitching performances in the game of baseball. So let's switch it up, let's begin discussing new angles. There are tight division races in the National League East and Central, and also the American League East and Central.

Then there's the race for the Triple Crown.

We haven't seen a successful Triple Crown in Major League Baseball since Red Sox outfielder Carl Yastrzemski pulled off the feat in 1967. And we haven't seen one in the National League since Cardinals outfielder Joe Medwick did the deed in 1937. This year, another St. Louis Cardinal may join that elite club: Albert Pujols.

Pujols, 30, leads all NL hitters with 33 home runs and 92 RBI, and he trails Reds first baseman Joey Votto by only four points in batting average.

Sure, it's the year 2010 and we have far better statistics that are readily available for consumption like on-base percentage, slugging percentage and things like WAR and VORP. But leading a league in home runs, RBI and batting average still carries plenty of mystique. Pujols has a real shot at history in what many have labeled a "down year" for the slugger, and that partly explains why he's the greatest hitter of our generation. He went 3-for-5 with a homer, two runs scored and three RBI in Monday's 10-2 thrashing of the Pirates.

Before we go overboard on the Triple Crown talk -- it's still August! -- let's hit up some other major stories from around the baseball universe...

* Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista enjoyed his sixth multi-homer game of the season on Monday in a 3-2 defeat of the Yankees while also becoming the first Toronto player to tally 40-plus home runs since Carlos Delgado hit 42 back in 2003. The 29-year-old Bautista has never finished a season with more than 16 homers, and he managed that previous career-high in 2006. To say he's emerged out of nowhere would be an understatement. Bautista, with 95 RBI and a suddenly respectable .970 OPS, has been the story of this fantasy season. It's going to take a few months this winter to digest his 2010 campaign and to project what he might do in 2011.

* Tigers outfielder Johnny Damon was claimed on waivers by the Red Sox this week and is apparently getting pressure from some people to accept a return invitation to Boston. He has full no-trade rights, though, and will ultimately make the decision on his own. The Red Sox have been sapped of a few power hitters due to injuries and could use Damon's bat. He would also get a nice boost in fantasy value with a return to the cozy confines of Fenway Park. But waiver deals can be extremely tricky, as we've seen throughout the month of August, and this one is far from complete.

* The Rangers activated starter Rich Harden from the disabled list on Monday afternoon and threw him back into the fire with a tough matchup against the Twins. We love Harden around these parts because of his propensity for high strikeout totals, but Monday's return outing looked iffy from a fantasy perspective. And he probably should have been left inactive in most fantasy leagues. But he killed it, striking out six batters over 6 2/3 innings and leading the Rangers to a 4-0 victory over Minnesota. Harden was lifted after 111 pitches and didn't get a shot at history. Still, he needs to be started again in all fantasy formats.

* The Nationals have decided to place Stephen Strasburg on the disabled list with a strained flexor tendon in his forearm. It's the right move, and nobody would bat an eye if the Nats simply shut him down for the rest of the season. Now enter Jordan Zimmermann. The right-hander is fully recovered from Tommy John surgery and will be activated from the disabled list on Thursday to make his 2010 debut against the Cardinals. It's not the best fantasy matchup, but the 24-year-old posted a 1.59 ERA in 10 rehab appearances and should finish the season on a strong note. The Nats really do have something going and Zimmermann may the hottest waiver wire pickup this week.

NL Quick Hits: Giants outfielder Andres Torres has an incredible 57 extra-base hits on the year ... Braves rookie Mike Minor will be skipped on his next turn through the starting rotation ... Ricky Nolasco may be ready for his next scheduled start despite a torn meniscus ... Jason Motte is scheduled to begin a quick rehab assignment on Wednesday ... Edinson Volquez was blown up for five runs and didn't make it past the first inning Monday against the Giants ... Cubs catcher Geovany Soto is back from the disabled list ... Reds outfielder Jim Edmonds was pulled from Monday's game with a strained oblique and could be headed for the disabled list ... Colby Rasmus remains day-to-day with a calf injury ... Manny Ramirez is expected to hit waivers this week ... Phillies infielder Placido Polanco was given the day off Monday due to elbow soreness ... Martin Prado went 2-for-4 on Monday and is hitting .393 over his last seven games ... Cubs outfielder Marlon Byrd is day-to-day with a bruised right hand The Brewers are likely to activate Carlos Gomez from the disabled list Tuesday ... Aaron Cook threw five innings of one-run ball Monday in his first rehab start for Double-A Tulsa ... Blake DeWitt is batting .338 (24-for-71) with three home runs and 12 RBI since joining the Cubs via trade in July ... Cardinals starter Kyle Loshe picked up his first win since mid-May on Monday against the Pirates ... Joe Blanton has a 3.63 ERA over nine starts since the All-Star break ... Astros speedster Michael Bourn leads the National League with 42 stolen bases ... Carlos Ruiz hit a solo homer Monday and boasts eight RBI over his last nine games ... Left-handed reliever Randy Flores has cleared waivers ... Troy Glaus was 0-for-2 with two walks Monday in his first minor league rehab game.

AL Quick Hits: Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez expects to return from the disabled list when first eligible next week ... Rays starter James Shields fanned 10 batters Tuesday and now has 154 strikeouts in 164-plus innings on the season ... Scott Kazmir is 1-6 over his last eight starts despite better overall results ... Brandon Morrow struck out 12 Yankees on Monday and has whiffed a total of 54 batters over his last six starts ... B.J. Upton is batting .293 with four homers, nine doubles and seven steals in his last 22 games ... Rehabbing starter Andy Pettitte is scheduled for a bullpen session Friday ... Angels catcher Jeff Mathis has 50 strikeouts and only four walks in 153 at-bats this season ... Hideki Okajima allowed four earned runs and recorded only one out in a Triple-A rehab appearance Monday ... Tigers second baseman Carlos Guillen is still feeling pain in his knee and could be out three more weeks ... J.J. Putz remains day-to-day with left knee inflammation ... Twins reliever Ron Mahay is expected to miss the rest of the season due to a torn right rotator cuff ... Nelson Cruz will head out on a minor league rehab assignment this week ... CC Sabathia, a workhorse, has been bumped up one day in the Yankees' starting rotation ... A's utilityman Conor Jackson has a sports hernia that is likely to require season-ending surgery ... Lance Berkman is aiming to return to the Yankees during the first week of September ... Indians starter Justin Masterson is probably going to finish the 2010 season in the bullpen ... The Orioles are considering dumping Kevin Millwood from their starting rotation ... White Sox setup man Matt Thornton is day-to-day with forearm discomfort.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Bare-Knuckle Brawls & Broxton

The result of the steel-cage death match between your saves-and-steals correspondents both former and current was tragic, but we shall mourn Thor Nystrom well here. More prescient to the saves & steals arrangement going forward is perhaps Thor's ongoing battle with his own education - his scholastic schedule will keep him from s&s service for the time being. In any case, I hope my coverage will be satisfactory. I'm not sure I'd survive another bare-knuckled brawl with a man who shares a name with a Nordic god.

In honor of the violence* that sparked this column change, we'll name the tiers in order of some of the better one-on-one battle movies of all time. Maybe it will all provide the spark you need to destroy your league mates in the final month.

* Just to be completely clear: Thor Nystrom and I did not engage in fisticuffs. That was a joke.


Tier 1: Elite (3) (AKA: The "Enter the Dragon" Tier.)



Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees
Jonathan Papelbon, Boston Red Sox
pos_arrow.gif
Joakim Soria, Kansas City Royals

Joakim Soria has not blown a save since May 6th. May 6th. He hasn't given up a run in August. He has more saves than the other members of this first tier, he strikes out more than a batter per inning, and he only walks about two batters per nine innings. There's just no reason not to finally recognize Soria and his excellence. He may not have the exposure of a Bruce Lee or Chuck Norris, but he has the kung fu to hang with them.


Tier 2: Rock Steady (6) (AKA: The "Five Deadly Venoms" Tier.)



Billy Wagner, Atlanta Braves
Heath Bell, San Diego Padres
Rafael Soriano, Tampa Bay Rays
Carlos Marmol, Chicago Cubs
Brian Wilson, San Francisco Giants
Neftali Feliz, Texas Rangers

Billy Wagner seems pretty set on retiring, so keeper league owners should remember that when making their offseason plans. Carlos Marmol is still walking too many hitters, so fantasy owners should remember that when making their current-season plans. Those walks have led to two blowups in the past couple of weeks, and he's walked a batter in four straight - but the bushels and bushels of strikeouts are still there to prop him up. If his tiger style fails him at all, though, there will be more ugly blow-ups like the three-walk, one-strikeout, three-run blown save last week against the Braves.


Tier 3: OK options (8) (AKA: The "Bloodsport" Tier.)



Jose Valverde, Detroit Tigers
Leo Nunez, Florida Marlins
Ryan Franklin, St. Louis Cardinals
Matt Capps, Minnesota Twins
Huston Street, Colorado Rockies
Brian Fuentes, Los Angeles Angels
David Aardsma, Seattle Mariners
pos_arrow.gif
Andrew Bailey, Oakland Athletics

Comment:
Huston Street has been a little too hittable since his return from the disabled list, and just finished a ten-game stretch in which he gave up twelve hits, six runs and a home run. His strikeout rate hasn't quite returned to his previous levels, which is disconcerting for a reliever coming off of the DL with shoulder issues. Long term, he has many question marks, but short-term he'll be fine. There just isn't another great candidate to close in that Rockies bullpen.

Matt Capps has now blown two saves as a Twin, and only has one strikeout in his past five appearances. Then again, he only has one walk in those five appearances, and strikeouts aren't his game. He's reasonably safe, even with Jon Rauch still behind him in the pen.

Andrew Bailey is back. Michael Wuertz and Craig Breslow were okay while he was gone, but Bailey is a clear upgrade. Even with his reduced strikeout rate this year, Bailey has shown his typical great control and has only blown three saves. Once he shows he's healthy, he'll move up this list like Jean-Claude Van Damme through the list of challengers.


Tier 4: Question marks (6) (AKA: The "Kung Fu Hustle" Tier.)



Brad Lidge, Philadelphia Phillies
pos_arrow.gif
Jonathan Broxton, Los Angeles Dodgers
Kevin Gregg, Toronto Blue Jays
Chris Perez, Cleveland Indians
Bobby Jenks, Chicago White Sox
Francisco Cordero, Cincinnati Reds

Comment:
Jonathan Broxton is already back in the closer role, most probably. He did give up two runs when he pitched in a losing effort the day after he was returned to the role, so he's not without question marks. The thing is, he's the best option at closer in that pen, and provided he gets his control together, he's actually closer to an elite closer.

Broxton's future is totally in the hands of Joe Torre, which is a scary proposition for any reliever. The chance that Torre blows Broxton's arm out by riding him too hard waits for the reliever should he fall back out of the closer's role, so he's got that going for him.

Bobby Jenks has only walked one batter in his last ten appearances - in comparison, Francisco Cordero has walked eight batters in his last ten games. Then again, Jenks has much tougher competition in his pen than Cordero. Jenks 'returning' to his role this week has been more because of Matt Thornton's recent arm woes, and J.J. Putz blowing his last shot at a save, than it has been about Jenks' pitching. Other than his hit rate (and therefore his ERA and WHIP), Jenks has been having a fine 2010. His strikeout and walk rates are both better than his career numbers, and he could easily hang on to the role the rest of the year despite the strong competition in his pen.


Tier 5: Rollercoaster rides (8) (AKA: The "Mortal Kombat: The Movie" Tier.)



Joel Hanrahan, Pittsburgh Pirates
Drew Storen, Washington Nationals
Hisanori Takahashi, New York Mets
Trevor Hoffman/John Axford, Milwaukee Brewers
Alfredo Simon, Baltimore Orioles
pos_arrow.gif
Juan Gutierrez, Arizona Diamondbacks
pos_arrow.gif
Brandon Lyon, Houston Astros

Comment:
Brandon Lyon is the new man to own in the Houston bullpen with Matt Lindstrom on the DL with back spasms. In fact, Lyon was inching his way towards the role with every Lindstrom blowup before the back spasms were blamed/discovered. This reversal in roles goes against the secondary statistics - Lyon's strikeout rate, walk rate and groundball rate are all worse than the rates Lindstrom was showing. This revelation just means the door is open for Lindstrom if he gets healthy. Youngster Wilton Lopez stole a save during unsettled times (and has nice groundball and walk rates), but the youngster doesn't quite have the strikeout punch one would normally look for in a Closer of the Future.

He might just be a stop-gap, but it's looking like Hisanori Takahashi has a reasonable leash in that New York bullpen. His leash is probably because of the paucity of other candidates in the Mets pen beyond the fireballing Bobby Parnell, but Tak-san has a reasonable three-pitch arsenal, good strikeout rates in the pen, and the veteran savvy that managers like Jerry Manuel just love. He's an okay bet to keep his job the rest of the way.

A less-strong bet for the same is Juan Gutierrez. He only missed the minimum with his shoulder inflammation, and has had three scoreless appearances so far since returning, but he still has issues with flyballs, and that's still a pen in turmoil. Right now - as in, right this second - it's Gutierrez accruing saves for the Diamondbacks though.

Joel Hanrahan and Drew Storen seemed to have settled into the closer roles on their respective teams, although it wasn't necessarily a smooth transition for Hanrahan, who gave up five runs in two poor appearances between successful saves.

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>


Injured


Joe Nathan, Minnesota Twins (Out for the season with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow)
Francisco Rodriguez, New York Mets (needs surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb)
Matt Lindstrom, Houston Astros (15-day DL for back spasms)

Comment:
Matt Lindstrom is the newest addition to this group as he hits the schneid with back troubles. It's hard to tell how much of his poor performance can be blamed on the injury since there were some things he was doing so poorly all year.

For example, he's had mediocre strikeout and walk rates all year, but had survived by mostly keeping balls on the ground. In the past two weeks, he's blown two saves and allowed all four of his home runs on the year, which led to him losing the closing role. If getting his back healthy again means that Lindstrom can once again keep the ball on the ground, he may yet get his job back once he's healthy. He's young and under team control for a while yet, so it is in their best interests to give him another shot. Lindstrom will stay off of the Deposed list for now.

The Deposed:
Frank Francisco, Texas Rangers
Jason Frasor, Toronto Blue Jay
Jim Johnson, Baltimore Orioles
Chad Qualls, Tampa Bay Rays
Kerry Wood, New York Yankees
Octavio Dotel, Los Angeles Dodgers
Jon Rauch, Minnesota Twins

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>

The Steals Department

Nyjer Morgan is back in the major leagues and looks healthy. Though it's a little nerve-wracking to depend on steals from a guy that just suffered a leg injury, things may not be as bad as they look for the Nationals outfielder.

For one, the injury was to his hip, and not to his hamstrings or calves, which has to be seen as a slightly positive sign. Second, he's actually been a little unlucky with batted balls for a speedster that keeps the ball on the ground as much as he does. Last, he's actually been pretty good in his past thirty days, sporting a .327 batting average with seven steals. If he's on your waiver wire, and you need steals, he shouldn't be on your waiver wire much longer.

To the chagrin of many a fantasy manager, Peter Bourjos is in the major leagues for his defense right now. His underwhelming .164/.233/.309 line certainly doesn't look ownable. But check out his many highlight real defensive plays, and you'll notice why the team is giving him a reasonably long leash right now.

So for once, this player's defense should be interesting to fantasy managers. His best offensive tool is his speed - Bourjos had 27 stolen bases this year in Triple-A, and has 141 in 465 career minor league games (77% success rate). If he stays in the lineup, he'll begin to steal some bases on an Angel team that doesn't mind taking some chances on the basepaths.

Can he get on base enough to steal those bases? Well, his career minor league walk rate is not exciting (6.5%), but he's improved that some recently. He even got the number up to 9.7% in Double-A last year. Add in the fact that he's been really unlucky with the batted ball this year, and it looks like Bourjos is a reasonable speculative play for steals in deeper leagues.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Veni, Vidi, Votto
In Tuesday's edition of the Daily Dose we took a look at Albert Pujols' quest for the first National League Triple Crown since 1937. Let's update that here in Wednesday's Dose, while also paying due credit to the other two NL hitters that are going to have a say in the race down the stretch.

Reds first baseman Joey Votto has a higher on-base percentage (.421) than Pujols (.414) and currently owns the best batting average in the National League (.323) by exactly one point over Albert (.322). It's the only Triple Crown category that Pujols does not lead.

Votto finished 1-for-4 with a stolen base, a run scored and a strikeout in a loss to the Giants Tuesday. He has managed career-highs in nearly every offensive category in what could very well be his first MVP season. Pujols went 3-for-5 with a double and a run scored in the Cardinals' loss to the Pirates and could grab the lead in all three categories with one more big game. It's a race that should remain tight even as October hits.

But will it matter? Maybe not.

As our own Aaron Gleeman pointed out over at Hardball Talk on Tuesday, Braves infielder Omar Infante must not be counted out of the mix of possible Triple Crown spoilers. He owns a .349 batting average at the moment and can qualify for the batting title if he starts frequently down the stretch and accumulates the required amount of plate appearances. So all this talk of Votto vs. Pujols may be moot anyway.

While we ponder Infante's ability to maintain a .340-plus batting average for the last five weeks of the season, let's hit on some other major fantasy stories from around the baseball planet...

* Dodgers manager Joe Torre trusted a 5-3 save chance to Hong-Chih Kuo instead of Jonathan Broxton in Tuesday night's game against the Brewers. To us at least, it signals that Broxton, who has not pitched since Sunday, might still be in the doghouse in Los Angeles. Kuo has a sparkling 1.37 ERA and 0.85 WHIP in 43 total relief appearances this season with 55 strikeouts and only 15 walks over 46 innings. He might not boast the intimidating presence of Broxton, but Kuo has tallied five saves since June 16 and is most definitely worth keeping an eye on in all fantasy formats. In fact, we'd go ahead and grab him in most leagues and hope that the vulturing continues.

* It's time, yet again, to revisit the Pirates' ninth-inning situation. Joel Hanrahan was named Octavio Dotel's successor when the veteran moved on to the Dodgers at the trade deadline, but a lack of victories (and thus save opportunities) in Pittsburgh has created quite a murky situation. Hanrahan, who hits 97 MPH and 98 MPH regularly with his fastball, was called on in the seventh inning of Tuesday's victory over the Cardinals. Meek, meanwhile, earned his first save since Dotel's departure. Has there been a change in roles? Well, not really. Pirates manager John Russell simply wanted Hanrahan, his best pitcher, to face Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday in a tight spot. Both fire-ballers are worth owning in leagues where roster space is not a problem, but Hanrahan remains the primary guy.

NL Quick Hits: Giants second baseman Freddy Sanchez has tallied back-to-back four-hit games, raising his batting average from .261 to .278 in a two-day span ... Brad Hawpe has cleared waivers and is free to sign with any team ... Marlins rookie Gaby Sanchez has three home runs and 11 RBI over his last five games ... Travis Wood was blown up for seven runs in four innings against the Giants on Tuesday ... Hisanori Takahashi is expected to continue seeing regular save chances down the stretch ... Padres starter Clayton Richard struck out eight batters in a combined shutout of the Diamondbacks on Tuesday ... Rehabbing Astros closer Matt Lindstrom is scheduled to throw a bullpen session Wednesday ... Chad Billingsley had his next start pushed back to Saturday due to a calf injury ... Brandon Phillips homered twice Tuesday in the Reds' loss to the Giants ... Will Venable has six stolen bases in his last 10 games and a healthy 25 on the season ... Carlos Zambrano has temporarily left the Cubs to be with a sick family member in Venezuela ... Angel Pagan finished 4-for-5 with two doubles, three runs scored and a stolen base in a win Tuesday ... Cubs rookie Tyler Colvin has 19 homers in 301 at-bats this season ... Brian Moehler had an injury setback Tuesday during his rehab outing at Triple-A Round Rock ... Jim Edmonds is on the disabled list with a strained oblique ... The Dodgers have yet to place Manny Ramirez on waivers ... Marlon Byrd is day-to-day with a bruised hand ... Marlins ace Josh Johnson, who allowed just 23 runs during the first half of the season, has allowed 22 runs over 49 2/3 innings since the All-Star break.

AL Quick Hits: Rays starter Wade Davis picked up a win in his return from the disabled list Tuesday and hasn't lost a game since June 27 ... Ian Kinsler has been cleared to resume full baseball-related activities ... A's outfielder Coco Crisp is batting .350 with three home runs, 11 RBI, 15 runs scored and nine stolen bases this month ... Scott Kazmir will face the light-hitting Mariners and A's in his next two starts ... The White Sox are expected to place setup man Matt Thornton on the 15-day disabled list this week ... J.J. Putz is also headed for the disabled list with a sore knee ... Luke Hochevar is scheduled to begin a minor league rehab assignment Saturday at Triple-A Omaha ... Adam Jones, dealing with a sore shoulder, is aiming to return to the Orioles' lineup Wednesday ... Rangers slugger hit his 29th home run of the season Tuesday and leads all of baseball with a .356 batting average ... Neftali Feliz collected his 32nd save of the season Tuesday in the Rangers' defeat of the Twins ... Dustin Pedroia is seeking second opinions in his once-fractured foot ... Tigers outfielder Johnny Damon has declined a trade to the Red Sox ... Nelson Cruz is expected to begin a minor league rehab assignment Thursday ... Nick Swisher is day-to-day with a sore left knee ... Gio Gonzalez fired seven shutout innings in the A's defeat of the Indians on Tuesday night ... Mark Teixeira hit his 28th homer of the season in Tuesday's win over the Blue Jays ... Indians starter Fausto Carmona has lost each of his last four starts and has a 5.34 ERA over five August outings.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Manny on Wire
After much anticipation, the Dodgers finally pressed the "Send to waivers" button on Manny Ramirez Wednesday, which could be the long overdue precursor to a change of destination. A report from SI.com's Jon Heyman indicates that Manny may pass through waivers unclaimed, while a Chicago Sun-Times story suggests that the White Sox could be zeroing in on a Ramirez deal.

Manny's detractors may point out that there's no reason to get overly excited about the prospects of a 38-year-old with just eight homers in 195 at-bats this season, but it's worth remembering that a motivated Manny can still be a profoundly effective force.

The last time Ramirez had a new identity (his deal from Boston to L.A. in 2008), he unleashed 17 homers and 53 RBI with a .396/.489/.743 slash line in just 187 at-bats. And with a 920 OPS while distracted and injured in 2010, he's still plenty capable of unleashing another change-of-scenery binge if indeed dealt out of L.A.

* Eric Young (the younger version) had two more hits and a steal (his sixth in his last 11 games) and narrowly missed a game-tying homer as the Rockies came back from a 10-1 deficit to beat the Braves 12-10. Young is locked in as the Rockies' leadoff hitter and can no longer be ignored in mixed leagues based on his speed alone.

* In the latest installment of Dodgers' Closer Jamboree, Joe Torre used Jonathan Broxton in the eighth inning, with Octavio Dotel recording one out to get the save. It continues to be an unpredictable situation right now, but Broxton is still the safest bet to lead the L.A. bullpen in saves down the stretch.

* Speaking of closing situations to monitor, Koji Uehara received – and successfully converted – his second straight save opportunity and looks like the man for the Orioles right now. Uehara (just six percent owned in Yahoo leagues as of early Thursday morning) is worthy of an add in most formats.

* And, while we're at it, Brandon League picked up a 1 2/3-inning save for the Mariners on Wednesday while David Aardsma stayed seated. Aardsma was said to be dealing with sore ribs about a week ago, and hasn't pitched since Aug. 18. That could have something to do with League's recent opportunities, but the latter has two saves in the last nine days and could potentially unseat Aardsma. I would advise adding Uehara before League, but the Seattle situation is worth watching closely.

* From players who throw hard to those who throw toward the seats, Nyjer Morgan has been suspended seven games by MLB for heaving a ball into the stands and hitting a fan in Philly on Saturday night. Morgan has appealed the suspension and remains in the lineup for now, but fantasy owners need to be prepared to be without the stolen base specialist for multiple games in the near future.

NL Quick Hits: Joey Votto went 4-for-7, drilling homers No. 30 and 31 on the season… Stephen Drew went 4-for-4 with a pair of solo homers, giving him six dingers in August… Former Phillie J.A. Happ defeated Roy Halladay as the Astros won their third straight over the Phils… Ryan Dempster picked up his 12th win with seven shutout innings against the Nationals… Moved into the leadoff spot for the Marlins, Cameron Maybin had two hits for a second straight game… Jason Marquis had his best start of the season (7 1/3 innings, one earned run), but fell to 0-7 and should still be avoided in most formats… The Reds are reportedly considering shutting down Mike Leake for the season… Mike Stanton is 2-for-31 in his last nine games… Carlos Gonzalez went 2-for-4 with two RBI Wednesday, but was said to be favoring his recently-injured left knee during the game (on a positive note, he stayed in the game and made a sliding catch for the final out, so hopefully the knee is not a significant concern).

NL Quick Hits, Part 2: In the latest indication that the Pirates' closing situation remains unsettled between Evan Meek and Joel Hanrahan, Meek pitched the eighth inning with Hanrahan pitching the ninth (allowing one run) in a 5-2 win… Brandon Phillips is headed for X-rays on his injured wrist on Thursday… Ricky Nolasco (knee) threw a successful bullpen and appears on course for a Saturday start… Chris Capuano is replacing Manny Parra in the Milwaukee rotation and could warrant consideration in NL-Only leagues… Carlos Silva (heart) is set to begin a minor league rehab assignment on Friday, but may not return to the Cubs' rotation until mid-September… Juan Uribe is 5-for-10 with two home runs in his last two games… Pablo Sandoval went 10-for-16 in the series against the Reds… Todd Helton went 7-for-12 in a three-game sweep of the Braves… Jason Heyward is 11-for-20 in his last five games.

AL Quick Hits: According to Joe McDonald of ESPN Boston, surgery remains a possibility for Dustin Pedroia's foot… Matt Thornton and J.J. Putz both hit the 15-day DL, which is more good news for the resurgent Bobby Jenks… Vladimir Guerrero had three hits and hit his second homer in his last four games… Brian Matusz tossed seven strong innings (three hits, one walk, five K's) in a win over the White Sox, and has allowed one earned run or less in four of his last five starts… Josh Beckett won for the first time in three weeks… Brett Cecil threw eight impressive innings to top the Yankees… Trevor Cahill picked up his 14th win against the Indians… Felix Hernandez notched his 10th win and has now allowed one earned run over his last 30 innings.

AL Quick Hits, Part 2: Nelson Cruz (hamstring) is expected to begin a minor league rehab stint on Thursday… Carlos Carrasco is slated to join the Indians' rotation in September and is worth a look in AL-Only and deeper mixed leagues given his 3.77 ERA, 1.25 WHIP and 127/45 K/BB ratio over 143 1/3 innings at Triple-A this season… Daisuke Matsuzaka was scratched from his Friday start with back trouble… Held out of the lineup the previous two days, Mike Napoli unloaded a grand slam and six RBI against the Rays… In a related story, Jeff Niemann was rocked for 10 runs in 3 1/3 innings in his return from the DL… Howie Kendrick (5-for-6 Wednesday) has 16 hits in his last seven games… Kila Ka'aihue homered for a second consecutive game and should remain on the radar in deeper mixed leagues.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Ra-burn, Baby, Burn
September is just a few short days away, so get ready for some last-minute roster moves as teams prepare their potential postseason rosters. It could make for an interesting deal or two, though outside of Manny Ramirez possibly being traded, we shouldn't expect anything major.

I'm really interested to see which September call-ups will have an impact in fantasy baseball down the stretch. You can usually bet on a few. I included one interesting starting pitcher in my AL-only recommendations this week, but look for a bunch more next week.

While we wait, here's a fresh batch of names widely available on the wire in most formats.

MIXED LEAGUES

Evan Meek RP, Pirates (Yahoo: 21 percent owned, ESPN: 5.9 percent)

It was somewhat of an unspoken thing, but many fantasy owners had assumed that Joel Hanrahan had inherited the ninth-inning gig from Octavio Dotel. Not necessarily, it turns out. Pirates manager John Russell used Hanrahan in the seventh and Evan Meek for the save in Tuesday night's win over the Cardinals. After the game, Russell said that the pitchers would continue to share the role. They should both be owned in most mixed leagues at this point, but keep in mind that the Pirates are just an awful, awful baseball team. There won't be many saves chances to go around.

Carlos Zambrano SP, Cubs (Yahoo: 28 percent owned, ESPN: 16.9 percent)

With a heavy heart, Big Z delivered his best start of the season against the Nationals on Tuesday night, tossing 7 1/3 innings of one-run ball while striking out eight and most importantly, issuing just one walk. While he gave up one run over six innings against the Padres last week, he also walked six. It's time to speculate on progress. Zambrano left the team after Tuesday's game to attend to a sick nephew in Venezuela, but he is scheduled to return for a start against the last-place Pirates next Monday. Give him a try.

Ryan Raburn 1B/2B/OF, Tigers (Yahoo: 23 percent owned, ESPN: 28.8 percent)

Finally. After being a massive disappointment in fantasy leagues this season, Raburn has finally broken out during the month of August, batting .313 with six home runs, 16 RBI and 17 runs scored. It couldn't have come at a better time, either, since Magglio Ordonez is officially done for the season after needing surgery on his fractured right ankle.. Raburn usually reserves most of his damage for left-handed pitching, but he should provide enough pop to be a palatable option in a MI slot or at second base in deeper mixed leagues.

Gio Gonzalez SP, Athletics (Yahoo: 43 percent owned, ESPN: 46.1 percent)

Just the latest development in his breakthrough season, Gonzalez ranks among the top 10 starting pitchers during the month of August, going 2-2 with a 1.80 ERA, 0.91 WHIP and a 33/12 K/BB ratio over five starts. The 24-year-old left-hander is still second in the American League in walks, however after averaging 4.46 BB/9 during the first half of the season, he has averaged 3.0 BB/9 over his first eight starts since the All-Star break. That is something to get excited about. Gonzalez is a must-own if available, but keep in mind that he could be shut down at some point next month.

Ramon Hernandez C, Reds (Yahoo: 19 percent owned, ESPN: 9.3 percent)

Hello? Anybody realize what this guy is doing right now? Hernandez is batting a ridiculous .354 (18-for-48) with two home runs, three doubles and 12 RBI during the month of August. His recent hot streak has propelled him inside the top 12 most valuable catchers in fantasy this season. Sure, he'll lose some playing time to Ryan Hanigan here and there, but don't let that scare you away too much. The occasional rest is probably beneficial for his surgically-repaired left knee, anyway.

Shopping at the five-and-dime:

(Note: Players included are owned in less than 10 percent of Y! and ESPN leagues)

Jordan Zimmermann SP, Nationals (Yahoo: 4 percent owned, ESPN: 0.2 percent)

I've been hyping up Zimmermann for a couple of months now, so you can imagine my excitement for his return to the major leagues on Thursday. The 24-year-old right-hander has been just brilliant during his rehab from Tommy John surgery, posting a 1.59 ERA and 31/6 K/BB ratio over 10 appearances, including a 0.53 ERA in four starts with Triple-A Syracuse. I'd expect the Nationals to watch his workload, so his upside is somewhat limited in fantasy terms, but remember that he had a very efficient 92/29 K/BB ratio over 91 1/3 innings as a rookie last season.

Koji Uehara RP, Orioles (Yahoo: 6 percent owned, ESPN: 3.2 percent)

New Orioles manager Buck Showalter has maintained that he's not going to name an official closer, but fantasy owners should speculate now that Uehara has been handed the ball in each the last two save situations. Though he has been limited with injuries during his sophomore season in the states, the 35-year-old right-hander has been fantastic out of the pen, posting a 2.00 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and a 31/5 K/BB ratio over 27 innings. He still gives up a few too many flyballs for my liking, so he's not going to stay lucky forever in that regard, but he's truly the best option the O's have going right now.

Bud Norris SP, Astros (Yahoo: 9 percent owned, ESPN: 4.4 percent)

You might be surprised to learn this, but Norris has actually been a pretty darn good pitcher since the start of July, going 4-2 with a 3.66 ERA and a 56/21 K/BB ratio over his last 10 starts. Among pitchers with at least 100 innings pitched this season (Norris has 112 2/3 IP), the 25-year-old right-hander ranks eighth in the majors with 9.27 K/9. Every other pitcher in the top 10 is owned in more than 50 percent of mixed leagues, so what gives? It's time to take advantage.

Chris Denorfia OF, Padres (Yahoo: 7 percent owned, ESPN: 5.1 percent)

Seriously, look at the numbers. Denorfia is batting .317/.390/.615 with seven home runs, 20 RBI, four stolen bases, 22 runs scored and an incredible 1.005 OPS over 104 at-bats since the All-Star break. No, I don't believe he'll be nearly as good moving forward -- his HR/FB rate is out of whack with his batted ball profile and he routinely hits out of the No. 8 spot in the lineup -- but with Tony Gwynn sidelined for the rest of the regular season, he should continue to play in center for as long as he stays hot.

Cameron Maybin OF, Marlins (Yahoo: 4 percent owned, ESPN: 4.5 percent)

I understand the hesitation to invest in Maybin given his struggle to adjust at the major league level over the past two seasons, but now that Cody Ross has been dumped off on the Giants, there's really nobody in his way of regular playing time. The 23-year-old outfielder deserved to return to the majors after batting .338/.407/.508 with four home runs, 23 RBI and five stolen bases with Triple-A New Orleans, including a .354 batting average over 20 games in August. His plate discipline is still a work in progress, but he could have some real value sitting atop Edwin Rodriguez's lineup.


<!--RW-->


AL ONLY:

Carlos Carrasco SP, Indians (Yahoo: 0 percent owned, ESPN: 0 percent)

With the Indians looking towards next season, Carrasco is a virtual lock to join the team when rosters expand in September. The 23-year-old right-hander has been excellent with Triple-A Columbus this season, going 10-6 with a 3.77 ERA and a 127/45 K/BB ratio over 24 starts. He probably would have been with the big league club already if not for a forearm injury in late-July, but he has bounced back just fine in August, posting a 2.73 ERA and 24/2 K/BB ratio over four starts. Invest in the sneak preview.

Ivan Nova SP, Yankees (Yahoo: 2 percent owned, ESPN: 0.7 percent)

Nova was impressive in his first major league start Monday against the powerhouse Blue Jays, allowing two runs over 5 1/3 innings while striking out three and walking one. Initially, it was unclear whether he would get another chance, but Joe Girardi was encouraged enough by the performance to send the struggling Javier Vazquez to the bullpen. It might only be a short-term move, but Nova could really capitalize on the opportunity. The 23-year-old right-hander posted a 2.86 ERA in 23 starts with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre this season, showing promising gains with his strikeout and walk rates.

Austin Kearns OF, Yankees (Yahoo: 5 percent owned, ESPN: 4.6 percent)

Many fantasy owners kicked Kearns to the curb after he was traded to the Yankees, but it's seriously time to reconsider. In addition to Alex Rodriguez and Lance Berkman being on the disabled list, Nick Swisher is dealing with some aches and pains of his own, providing Kearns the chance to play nearly every day. With this lineup, that is very valuable indeed. So far, the 30-year-old outfielder is batting .298 (14-for-47) with two homers, three doubles, six RBI and nine runs scored in his new digs. That should be good enough to be owned in every AL-only league.

Josh Bell 3B, Orioles (Yahoo: 1 percent owned, ESPN: 0.5 percent)

I hope you were able to catch Bell's power display against Cliff Lee and the Rangers on Saturday afternoon. If so, now you understand why people were so high on the 23-year-old switch-hitter as he ascended through the minor leagues. Bell hasn't done much in the majors yet, batting just .225 with a scary 33/2 K/BB ratio over his first 89 at-bats, but the Orioles should give him every chance to succeed (or fail) at the hot corner throughout the month of September. Worth a gamble if you are short on options.

NL ONLY:

Bobby Parnell RP, Mets (Yahoo: 5 percent owned, ESPN: 0.6 percent)

For the past couple of weeks, I've told you that Hisanori Takahashi was the obvious choice for saves in Queens. Mets manager Jerry Manuel has pretty much stayed true to what I thought, however he left the door open for Parnell on Wednesday, stating that he could be used in certain situations down the stretch. Just what I want to hear. Armed by a fastball in the high 90s, the 25-year-old right-hander has been dominant since returning to the majors at the end of June, posting a 3.00 ERA and 28/6 K/BB ratio over 27 innings. He should be on your radar.

Blake DeWitt 2B/3B, Cubs (Yahoo: 3 percent owned, ESPN: 3 percent)

DeWitt is loving life since being acquired by the Cubs last month, batting .303/.364/.456 with three homers and 12 RBI over his first 79 at-bats with the club. He had just one home run in his previous 256 at-bats with the Dodgers this season. Unfortunately, DeWitt doesn't stand out in the power or speed categories, so he's unlikely to have much value in mixed leagues, but he does just fine in NL-only formats. I'm even higher on him if Cubs interim manager Mike Quade continues to use him out of the leadoff spot.

John Lannan SP, Nationals (Yahoo: 2 percent owned, ESPN: 0.6 percent)

Lannan is what he is, but at a time when pitchers are about to be shut down for the season due to innings limits, the soft-tossing left-hander could have some value. While it's true that Lannan was absolutely brutal before being sent to Double-A Harrisburg in June, he is 3-1 with a 3.81 ERA over his first five starts since returning at the start of August, compiling an 18/5 K/BB ratio over 28 1/3 innings. I wouldn't expect his strikeout rate to keep up, but the important thing is that he is throwing strikes and inducing groundballs again. It's his best avenue to success.

Luis Durango OF, Padres (Yahoo: 0 percent owned, ESPN: 0.1 percent)

Here's a bit of a speculative play. I honestly don't expect Durango to get a ton of playing time down the stretch, but he could play an important role on the team now that Tony Gwynn is sidelined for at least the rest of the regular season. Fortunately, the role of pinch-hitter and pinch-runner plays to Durango's strengths. The 24-year-old outfielder possesses elite speed -- as evidenced by his 147 stolen bases over 503 minor league games -- as well as a knack for getting on base. I'd like to see him be more efficient in his stolen base attempts, but he could be a sneaky player to stash for the final month of the season.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Down But Not Out (Not Yet)
Sometimes things sound way worse than they are. For example, you'll hear that people are "done for the season" a lot in the next couple of days. ZOMG! I must run around in circles with as if I were a fowl with my cranium cut from my neck!!one!11!one!

Calm down. There are five weeks left, or only about one-sixth of the season. As with major league teams that can cobble together replacements and still make the postseason, fantasy owners can find something on the wire that will at least approximate what they had before injury struck them down.

Consider Dustin Pedroia, who is looking like he is done for the year now that soreness returned to his foot. A full year of the young-but-balding dude might have given you lots of runs with some power and speed. Injury elsewhere has produced a possible replacement in Omar Infante, who has a little power, a little speed, and is atop an interesting lineup in Atlanta. Or maybe you were a lucky Stephen Strasburg owner, who now looks like he is done for the year with his tricky forearm injury. First, you can count your blessings because he had a great year for a rookie. Second, you can take a look at Gio Gonzalez in Oakland. He pitches in a great home park and has been striking out a batter per inning with a 1.76 ERA in the past month.

Not too terrible a solution in either case. You might still be okay.

* The Great Manny Ramirez Waiver Claim Slash Trade Fiasco is on hold because the Dodgers won a couple of games in a row and are five games back in the wild card race. According to the playoff odds at Baseball Prospectus however, the Dodgers have a 2% chance of making the postseason. That doesn't mean they won't make the playoffs, but it does mean they should probably just sell some pieces this month.

As for Manny's prognosis, he's almost always better off if he leaves Los Angeles. His defense has deteriorated to the point where a poor offensive option - Scott Podsednik - is getting playing time over him since his return. And Manny isn't what you'd call healthy any more; he couldn't play a day game after night game just this week. An American League team like Chicago or Tampa Bay (both rumored in on the fading slugger) could give him at-bats at DH and give him the playing time he needs to be a viable fantasy option. If you scoff at that notion, Manny is still regularly putting up .900+ OPS years in his twilight. He fell out of his cradle with a bat, it seems.

* Ian Kinsler is scheduled to begin a minor league rehab assignment this weekend and should be back with the Rangers as soon as he can manage without risking his health. His power has been a little down this year, but traditionally power takes the longest to stabilize statistically. Just look at his career .282/.355/.469 line for some inspiration while you wait for him to return.

* Jose Reyes is going the other direction. He aggravated his oblique injury Thursday, and with his team falling out of the wild card race, he could get the kid gloves treatment from his team. On the other hand, the Mets seem to be pretty oblivious to their own shortcomings (see: Jeff Francoeur, playing time), so they'll probably rush him back to his detriment. Front-runners with Reyes at shortstop should start looking at the wire for possible replacements.

* It's easy to denigrate Brad Hawpe - his defense is terrible, his power has always been Coors-Field aided, and he's without team right now. On the other hand, this might just be the opportunity he needed to get out of the National League. An American League could give him more at-bats, and if Hawpe ends up in Texas, he could be just as interesting as he once was. Tampa Bay is a little less interesting for a left-handed slugger, but every day at-bats would make him a good pickup in deep leagues either way.

* Two old dudes have been on mini-tears to bring their overall lines back around to career levels. Carlos Lee looked terrible for most of the year, but after a little recent flurry, he could still put up decent overall numbers for a bench spot. Raul Ibanez has also been bad - bad enough to begin rumors about benching him - but after a month that saw him hit .283 with four home runs and 16 RBI, he looks about the same as he always has. These guys weren't good draft picks, but once they hit the waiver wire, they make decent free pickups.

NL Quick Hits: Jonathan Broxton will remain in the setup role for now, but Joe Torre had kind words for him and it won't last long … Albert Pujols looks like he sprained his ankle Thursday night in the 11th inning but stayed in the game and would probably miss a game at most; oh and I think that home run was his 400th or something … Ricky Nolasco will power through the pain for his team and start Saturday despite tearing the meniscus in his right knee; he's still a concern, but kudos for holding on to him and good luck in the future … Ian Kennedy struck out 12 in seven innings and only walked two and allowed one hit; he's exceeded expectations so far, but could keep it up … Aaron Cook (toe) will make one more rehab start before rejoining the rotation and pushing the more fantasy-interesting Esmil Rogers from the rotation … Chris Young (shoulder) the pitcher threw a simulated game and could even push the struggling Kevin Correia from the rotation … Colby Rasmus (calf) will be back sometime this series … Matt Lindstrom (back) had a good bullpen session and should be back next Tuesday, but who knows what role he will get upon returning.

AL Quick Hits: Francisco Liriano had a great start against the Rangers and the dead arm stuff seems behind him … After a little strikeout binge, Chris Perez is almost striking out a batter per inning and the rest of his line looks nice too … Justin Masterson had a nice start, and still has good upside if he can iron out his platoon splits, but might only make one more start before shifting to the bullpen … It might be Chris Tillman joining the Orioles' rotation in September, as groundballer Zach Britton is pushing up on an innings limit … David Aardsma has been out about a week with sore ribs he got from a line drive, but should be ready on today … Adam Jones (shoulder) has been hurting since he was hit by a pitch earlier in the week, but he says he can tolerate it and will be back shortly.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
National Disaster

The entire baseball world took a jolt on Friday morning, when it was learned that the Nationals' young phenom Stephen Strasburg has a torn ligament and will likely require Tommy John surgery. As such, Strasburg obviously is not included in any of this week's categories. His teammate, Jordan Zimmermann, just made his return from the same surgery and will make his second start this week but can hardly be recommended as a streamer at this point after struggling in his first game back. Washington's only two-start pitcher, Jason Marquis, is one of the few among this week's solid crop who I would label a poor play.

Basically, it's just a bad week to be a Nats fan, and a good week to steer clear of Washington players in fantasy.

Going Twice...



American League

Strong Plays

Phil Hughes: OAK (Mazzaro), TOR (Cecil)
Trevor Cahill: @NYY (Moseley), LAA (Santana)
Felix Hernandez: LAA (Bell), CLE (Masterson)
C.J. Wilson: @KC (Davies), @MIN (Duensing)

Decent Plays

Daisuke Matsuzaka: @BAL (Matusz), CWS (Buehrle)
Mark Buehrle: @CLE (Talbot), @BOS (Matsuzaka)
Mitch Talbot: CWS (Buehrle), @SEA (Pauley)
Justin Masterson: CWS (Jackson), @SEA (Hernandez)
Armando Galarraga: @MIN (Duensing), @KC (Davies)
Dan Haren: @SEA (Pauley), @OAK (Mazzaro)
Brian Duensing: DET (Galarraga), TEX (Lee)
Dustin Moseley: OAK (Cahill), TOR (Rzepczynski)
Vin Mazzaro: @NYY (Hughes), LAA (Haren)
David Pauley: LAA (Haren), CLE (Talbot)
Wade Davis: TOR (Cecil), @BAL (Matusz)
Brett Cecil: @TB (Davis), @NYY (Hughes)

At Your Own Risk

Brian Matusz: BOS (Matsuzaka), TB (Davis)
Kyle Davies: TEX (Wilson), DET (Galarraga)

National League

Strong Plays

Mike Minor: NYM (Niese), @FLA (Sanabia)
Travis Wood: MIL (Wolf), @STL (Carpenter)
Hiroki Kuroda: PHI (Halladay), SF (Sanchez)
Jon Niese: @ATL (Minor), @CHC (Zambrano)
Roy Halladay: @LAD (Kuroda), MIL (Bush)
Jonathan Sanchez: COL (De La Rosa), @LAD (Kuroda)

Decent Plays

Jair Jurrjens: NYM (Misch), @FLA (Johnson)
Joe Saunders: SD (LeBlanc), HOU (Happ)
Carlos Zambrano: PIT (Maholm), NYM (Niese)
Jorge De La Rosa: @SF (Sanchez), @SD (Richard)
J.A. Happ: STL (Westbrook), @ARI (Saunders)
Randy Wolf: @CIN (Wood), @PHI (Kendrick)
Kyle Kendrick: @LAD (Monasterios), MIL (Wolf)
Paul Maholm: @CHC (Zambrano), WAS (Marquis)
Wade LeBlanc: @ARI (Saunders), COL (Rogers)
Jake Westbrook: @HOU (Happ), CIN (Wood)
Alejandro Sanabia: WAS (Marquis), ATL (Minor)

At Your Own Risk

Esmil Rogers: @SF (Bumgarner), @SD (LeBlanc)
Jason Marquis: @FLA (Sanabia), @PIT (Marquis)
Pat Misch: @ATL (Jurrjens), @CHC (Coleman)


Streamer City



The following pitchers are generally available in over 50 percent of fantasy leagues and have favorable match-ups this week:

American League

Wednesday, 9/1: Tommy Hunter @ KC
Hunter can be counted on to shut down the Royals, and should get plenty of run support too.

Friday, 9/3: Doug Fister vs. CLE
Fister has dropped off significantly after his great start to the season, but he remains a solid bet in favorable match-ups such as this one.

National League

Wednesday, 9/1: Tom Gorzelanny vs. PIT
The lefty's fantasy value has deteriorated along with his control in recent weeks, but he's completed 6+ innings in each of his past eight starts and should be able to rack up some strikeouts against the Pirates.

Friday, 9/3: Dan Hudson vs. HOU
The right-hander has been quite effective since switching leagues, as he possesses a 1.72 ERA in five starts since coming to Arizona.

Saturday, 9/4: Bud Norris @ ARI
He probably won't match the 14 strikeouts he notched against the Pirates a couple weeks ago, but Norris is going good and could be in whiff mode against the D-Backs.

<!--RW-->


Total Games



American League

6: BAL, BOS, CWS, DET, KC, LAA, MIN, TB, TEX, TOR
7: CLE, NYY, OAK, SEA

National League

6: ARI, CHC, CIN, FLA, HOU, LAD, MIL, PIT, SD, SF, STL, WAS
7: ATL, COL, NYM, PHI


Lefty/Righty Breakdown



American League

BAL: 5 vs. RHP, 1 vs. LHP
BOS: 3 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
CWS: 6 vs. RHP, 0 vs. LHP
CLE: 5 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
DET: 3 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
KC: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
LAA: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
MIN: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
NYY: 3 vs. RHP, 4 vs. LHP
OAK: 5 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
SEA: 7 vs. RHP, 0 vs. LHP
TB: 3 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
TEX: 5 vs. RHP, 1 vs. LHP
TOR: 5 vs. RHP, 1 vs. LHP

National League

ARI: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
ATL: 3 vs. RHP, 4 vs. LHP
CHC: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
CIN: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
COL: 4 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
FLA: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
HOU: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
LAD: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
MIL: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
NYM: 6 vs. RHP, 1 vs. LHP
PHI: 4 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
PIT: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
SD: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP
SF: 3 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
STL: 3 vs. RHP, 3 vs. LHP
WAS: 4 vs. RHP, 2 vs. LHP


The Infirmary



You can get a full listing of injured players at Rotoworld's Injury Page, but here's the latest on a few prominent players who have been out of action:

Joel Pineiro: Out until mid-September
Matt Lindstrom: Returning this week
Conor Jackson: Out for the season
Stephen Strasburg: Out for the season
Nelson Cruz: Returning this week
Matt Thornton: Out until mid-September
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
New Beginnings in Sight
It looks like a couple of sluggers have worn out their welcomes and are on their way to greener pastures. The first temptation is to have visions of re-invigoration and a little excitement about the futures of Manny Ramirez and Brad Hawpe on their new teams. The inner skeptic might then advise caution: there are reasons they were let go and predicting offensive bounce-backs with five weeks of play remaining is even harder than predicting a full season.

But there actually are concrete reasons for hope in these two cases. Both players are terrible at defense, and while that seems uninteresting in fantasy baseball, their problems with the glove had actually devolved to the point that they were losing playing time. The Rockies tried Hawpe at first and didn't like what they saw and let him go once Todd Helton returned, but the Dodgers had no such option with the eminently decent James Loney at the position. Voila, the American League.

Manny will, by most tied-in sources, join the White Sox any day after taking one pitch Sunday, arguing about it, and being thrown out of the game. Perhaps it was the last straw, but his poor defense weakened that camels' back. Manny will enjoy not only a park-driven power boost, but also more playing time in Chicago. At DH, his glove cannot cost the team runs, and he's actually been showing a .900+ OPS these last two 'down' years in Los Angeles. He's still a good hitter.

Brad Hawpe signed a minor league deal with the Rays, and does have Dan Johnson and Willy Aybar to contend with. But he also has a clearer shot at playing time without his leaden glove dragging him down, and early word is that he'll be the DH against right-handers. Both Manny and Hawpe are intriguing pickups for the stretch run, although a shallow leaguer can wait to see how Hawpe does before picking him up. It has been a bad year - but the good news is that in terms of flyballs and groundballs, Hawpe is still taking the sluggers' approach and putting the ball in the air, and he has a full career of power numbers arguing in his favor. He could enjoy Tampa Bay.

* It looks like Koji Uehara is the new Orioles closer. He saved three games over the weekend and four since August 21st, and in three of those games Mike Gonzalez pitched the entire eighth inning. Though Gonzalez gets the dollars that seem to suggest that he will close once again, and he also pitched one ninth-inning out in Sundays one-run victory, managers often prefer right-handed closers and the recent bullpen pattern seems clear. Uehara has closed before in Japan and is a legitimate source of saves from here on out.

Grab Uehara if you missed out on the other newly minted closer in the American League. Brian Fuentes was dealt to the stockpiling Twins and even got a one-out save, but will only garner the occasional save when matchups dictate - Matt Capps is still the closer in Minnesota. Fernando Rodney is the new closer in Los Angeles, but as the Angels fall out of the race, they may want to see if young fireballer Jordan Walden can get the job done. He has a booming fastball and will actually be with the team beyond 2011, when Rodney's contract is up. Giving a youngster like that a chance in the role doesn't seem like the Angels of late, but Walden does have the chance to be special in a short role.

As for the other team in Los Angeles, it's anyone's guess what is going on. Hong-Chih Kuo got a save Friday and Joe Torre claims he will go with matchups going forward. Then again, Torre has to talk about this situation every other game and has said many things. Jonathan Broxton is a strong young pitcher that should be closing, so we'll continue to bet that he'll be fine. In New York, despite giving Bobby Parnell a shot to earn a save Friday, Hisanori Takahashi finished up the job and is probably still the closer.

* Aroldis Chapman will finally join the major leagues on Monday or Tuesday in an effort to make him eligible for the postseason. The lefty hit 105 on the radar gun on Friday and should be a wicked weapon out of the bullpen in October. Unfortunately, his walk rate this year has been terrible (almost five walks per nine innings), and some of the bloom has to come off of this Reds rose. He needs to make strides with his command to become a viable major league starter. As a reliever, he has many established - if mediocre - relievers in his way and he may not be fantasy-relevant this year. On the other hand, Edinson Volquez was just sent to the pen for an undetermined time and the struggling Aaron Harang is supposedly his replacement in the rotation. Anything could happen, really.

* If Chapman does reign it in just a bit, he could end up being a left-handed Brandon Morrow. The Jays pitcher finally got his walk rate under four (it's still five per nine for his career), and the payoff was immediate and intense. Morrow is fifth in the American League in strikeouts and looks reborn with his new team. He still walks a few too many, which will always make him somewhat risky, but he's a good path for Chapman to follow. Unfortunately for Morrow's owners, he'll make only one more start and will then be shut down for the season. Happens with young pitchers all the time, so start watching out when it comes to Mat Latos and Mike Minor and the like. Jaime Garcia, for one, is getting his start skipped this week. Mariners stud Michael Pineda was even shut down completely. Mike Leake hit the DL with shoulder fatigue and might be shut down any time.

* Rookie Ivan Nova will at least make his next start according toe manager Joe Girardi. Nova's ability to keep it on the ground was ahead of his strikeout ability in Triple-A, so expect more games like Nova's first start (two runs, three strikeouts in five-plus innings against the Jays) than his second start (one run, seven strikeouts in five-plus innings against the White Sox) going forward. He's a decent AL-only pickup if only for his wins potential.

* Ricky Nolasco tore his meniscus but pitched through the pain on Saturday. Unfortunately, he was torched for six runs in two innings and looked bad in that start. Nolasco says it wasn't because of the knee and reported no swelling, but his owners should remain skeptical and perhaps leave him on the bench for his Friday start against the same Braves team.

NL Quick Hits: Jay Bruce homered in three straight atbats Friday night and added a fourth over the weekend; he's a great waiver wire pickup for his power upside … Buster Posey missed the weekend with a forearm issue, but his manager is hopeful that he will return today … Troy Tulowitzki left Sunday's game with a tight right groin and has "no clue" if he will play on Monday … Brandon Phillips (wrist) pinch-ran Sunday and should be ready to go this week … Jose Reyes (oblique) took some swings but still feels pain, prognosis unclear … Clint Barmes was on the bereavement list, but fantasy managers should hope that Eric Young, Jr and his excellent wheels stole the second base job while he was gone … He still doesn't walk much, but Carlos Gonzalez has figured everything else out and after a white-hot second half and two homers on Sunday, is only ten stolen bases short of a 30/30 season … Kyle Lohse doesn't have a safe spot in the rotation, and Brad Penny (right lat) got good news and can start throwing soon … Colby Rasmus seems to be in a brewing feud with his manager which may cost him some playing time … Tim Lincecum and Pablo Sandoval both had their managers question their conditioning publicly, which is nice … Stephen Drew has been hot at the plate with nine extra-base hits in his last five games … R.A. Dickey held the Astros down to one run in seven innings on Sunday, and should be owned in all formats … Fellow Met Josh Thole is also very ownable considering he is a catcher and could put up an okay batting average, but he doesn't have much power despite homering Sunday … Jenrry Mejia was promoted to Triple-A, could join the majors in September, and is worth a flier in NL-only leagues … Chris Denorfia was a late scratch Sunday due to his back, which is not out of character for the outfielder, considering he was a late scratch Friday because of his hamstring.

AL Quick Hits: Nelson Cruz (hamstring) finished rehab and should be back today … Teammate Rich Harden followed up a great performance with a poor one and there's no reason to think that will change in the future … Adrian Beltre returned Sunday against the Rays, but obviously favored the hamstring he injured Saturday … Luke French gave up a lone run against the Twins on Sunday but doesn't have the strikeout punch to be a sure start against any opponent … Mike Napoli was claimed by the Red Sox, but before his owners can salivate over the chance to get regular playing time on a different team, a deal does not seem likely … In exhibit number three million of why wins are a poor statistic for evaluation, Jered Weaver struck out 11 Orioles Sunday and got the loss; he's been a much better pitcher than his 11-10 record … Brian Roberts (left hip) is day-to-day … Gio Gonzalez had another excellent start Sunday and shouldn't be on any waiver wires … Frank Francisco has some inflammation in his side and is on the DL… Rick Porcello is getting groundballs and limiting the walks again, but needs to figure something out to really recapture the upside he seemed to have … Ryan Raburn is eligible at second base and is showing nice power, with two against the Jays on Sunday … Matt LaPorta strained the same hip he had surgery on in the offseason, which is not good, but more news will come today … Edwin Encarnacion hit the DL with a wrist sprain that he feels is not as bad as his last one … Chris Carter (thumb) is on the minor league disabled list, news to come.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
And So It Begins...
The White Sox's waiver claim on outfielder and designated hitter Manny Ramirez finally went through late Monday afternoon and the dreadlocked slugger boarded a plane to Cleveland, where he started his career and where the Pale Hose are currently playing a three-game set. Manny didn't make it to Cleveland in time for Monday's game, but he is expected to bat fifth on Tuesday evening in his White Sox debut.

This waiver deal, for now at least, seems like a win-win for both sides. The Dodgers were able to dump the remaining $3.8 million on Manny's contract and direct it toward draft pick signings, while the White Sox just acquired a potentially lethal slugger for their run at the playoffs.

Ramirez is a .338/.448/.601 career hitter in 200-plus plate appearances at Chicago's U.S. Cellular Field and should be able to stay healthy as the club's primary designated hitter. The 38-year-old is capable of monstrous numbers when motivated and he seems excited about joining White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen and Co. as they attempt to catch up to the American League Central-leading Twins. It seems the change of scenery might be good for Manny's overall psyche, and it's certainly good for his fantasy value.

Let's catch up on some other items from around the baseball world...

* Dodgers starter Hiroki Kuroda took a no-hitter into the eighth inning against the Phillies on Monday and came away with his 10th victory of the season. It's been an odd year for the 35-year-old Japan native, with plenty of ups and downs, but he has a 1.19 WHIP and a 3.39 ERA over 26 starts and he's managed to avoid the disabled list. Kuroda was a steal in fantasy drafts this spring, as has been the case for the last two seasons. His three-year, $35M contract is up this winter and he hasn't yet spoken on the future, but we're in the camp that is hoping he decides to remain state-side up until retirement.

* Speaking of hopes and dreams, C.J. Wilson is living one. The converted reliever has done nothing but impress this season in the Rangers' rotation and has turned himself into not only a strong fantasy starter but also a potential Cy Young Award candidate. Wilson fired 7 2/3 shutout innings on Monday night against the Royals, allowing just two singles while striking out six. His 2.88 ERA now ranks fourth-best in the American League and he has a 14-5 record to go along with it. Many have questioned whether he would have the stamina to remain effective down the stretch. Well, so much for that. The 29-year-old left-hander has a 1.27 ERA over his last five starts.

* A's youngster Trevor Cahill has been fantastic this season and is also worthy of Cy Young Award consideration, but he does seem to have one awful start per month. In July, he allowed five earned runs to the lowly Royals. In June, he gave up four earned runs in a 5 2/3-inning start against the Cubs. Just yesterday, Cahill surrendered eight earned runs on nine hits in a loss to the Yankees. He's been sensational all year and still boasts a 2.82 ERA, 1.05 WHIP and a 14-6 record on a bad Oakland team, but here's to hoping he can manage fewer blowups in the future. The 22-year-old is going to be fantasy-relevant for a long, long time.

NL Quick Hits: Nationals third baseman and MVP candidate Ryan Zimmerman hit his 25th homer of the season Monday ... J.A. Happ allowed just two singles in a dominant shutout of the Cardinals on Monday in Houston ... Troy Tulowitzki is day-to-day with a tight left groin ... Hong-Chih Kuo has allowed just two hits in his last 6 1/3 scoreless innings and earned his seventh save of the season Monday ... Astros closer Matt Lindstrom is aiming to return by the end of this week ... The Reds will call up Aroldis Chapman on Tuesday to work in middle relief ... Carlos Zambrano hasn't allowed more than two runs in any of his five starts since returning to the rotation ... Jay Bruce is batting is .533 with five homers and eight RBI over his last four games ... Jason Marquis picked up his first win as a member of the Nationals Monday against the Marlins ... Mark Reynolds has four homers in his last five games and 31 total on the year ... Marlins rookie Mike Stanton broke an 0-for-31 hitless steak Monday with an eighth-inning single ... Aramis Ramirez is batting .293/.333/.537 with 10 home runs since the All-Star break ... D'Backs outfielder Justin Upton is day-to-day with shoulder irritation ... Homer Bailey has allowed nine earned runs in his last two starts ... Jason Heyward has hit safely in eight of his last nine games and six of them have been of the multi-hit variety ... The Rockies placed Ian Stewart on the disabled list with a strain near his rib cage ... Carlos Silva will make his second minor league rehab start Wednesday at Single-A Peoria ... The Cardinals have activated setup man Jason Motte from the disabled list.

AL Quick Hits: White Sox outfielder Alex Rios enjoyed a five-hit night Monday against the Indians, driving in four and scoring three ... Gordon Beckham is day-to-day with a bruised right hand ... Angels right-hander Ervin Santana completed a start without walking a batter Monday for the first time since May 31 ... Mark Teixeira went 3-for-3 with a home run Monday in his return from a bruised right thumb ... Grant Balfour is likely to be activated from the disabled list Wednesday ... Indians righty Mitch Talbot has a 6.68 ERA in seven starts since the All-Star break ... Luke Hochevar is scheduled to return from the disabled list next Wednesday for a start against the Twins ... Carlos Pena homered and collected four total RBI on Monday in the Rays' defeat of the Blue Jays ... Rangers outfielder Nelson Cruz went 1-for-4 with a run scored Monday in his first game back from the disabled list ... Matt LaPorta is day-to-day with left hip soreness ... Javier Vazquez allowed one run over 4 2/3 solid relief innings Monday against the A's ... Rays rookie Wade Davis has won each of his last four decisions ... Derek Holland will move back into the Rangers' starting rotation Friday against the Twins ... Andruw Jones is aiming to play for another five years ... Yankees southpaw Andy Pettitte is aiming to return from the disabled list in about two weeks ... Brett Anderson is expected to make his next scheduled start despite a tweaked knee ... The Tigers are considering moving Phil Coke to the starting rotation next season ... Bobby Abreu, who is slumping badly, has been moved from the leadoff spot.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Newly Minted Closers Abound

Don't lie. You'll probably skip ahead to the bottom to see what closers you might get off the wire. You'll note that Fernando Rodney and Koji Uehara, among others, are newly minted closers. You want what you want and you want it quickly. That's fine. I won't hold it against you.

But it is worth noticing if your current closers are moving in the wrong direction. Say you are a Leo Nunez owner, and you've seen him drop down in the rankings here. Then it's time to check out the Florida Marlins' bullpen depth chart, note that Clay Hensley and Brian Sanches are next in line, and form an opinion about those two players. Then, if you hear from us that Nunez is out of the closers role temporarily or permanently, you'll be more prepared.

See? It should all be helpful. In that vein, we'll rank the tiers in terms of helpful inventions.


Tier 1: Elite (3) (AKA: The "ShamWow" Tier.)



Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees
Jonathan Papelbon, Boston Red Sox
Joakim Soria, Kansas City Royals

It did look bad for Jonathan Papelbon at one point this season, but he's righted the ship for the most part. In his last five appearances, he has nine strikeouts and two walks - rates that any closer would be happy to own - and in July and August, he has 27 strikeouts against 10 walks in 22 and a third innings. That would soak up some spills.


Tier 2: Rock Steady (6) (AKA: The "OxyClean" Tier.)



Billy Wagner, Atlanta Braves
Heath Bell, San Diego Padres
Rafael Soriano, Tampa Bay Rays
Neftali Feliz, Texas Rangers
Carlos Marmol, Chicago Cubs
Brian Wilson, San Francisco Giants

This is a tough tier because all of these pitchers are excellent closers. How do you separate 'excellent' and 'elite' anyway?

If ERA, WHIP, strikeout and walk rates are not enough to make the distinction - and in the case of Carlos Marmol and Brian Wilson, they probably are - what is a saves & steals correspondent to do? One missing ingredient is longevity - or consistency in other words. We like consistency in one season, so consistency across seasons has to count for something.

When predicting the success of pitchers who pitch in such short increments, you have to use all the information at your disposal. Billy Wagner is a great pitcher - but he's been badly injured recently and wants to retire next year, so there's some risk there. Neftali Feliz is a great pitcher - but he hasn't done it as long as Jonathan Papelbon or Mariano Rivera. On the upper reaches of the rankings, these slight differences are all we have to create tiers. Just like it's hard to pick between the stain-fighting power of OxyClean and the spill-cleaning power of ShamWow, it's hard to decide between Heath Bell and Jonathan Papelbon.


Tier 3: OK options (7) (AKA: The "Flowbee" Tier.)



Andrew Bailey, Oakland Athletics
Ryan Franklin, St. Louis Cardinals
Matt Capps, Minnesota Twins
Jose Valverde, Detroit Tigers
Huston Street, Colorado Rockies
David Aardsma, Seattle Mariners
pos_arrow.gif
Chris Perez, Cleveland Indians

Comment:
Early in the season, Jose Valverde didn't have the strikeout rate he'd shown earlier in his career, but was sporting a new groundball rate that seemed to be the result of using his splitter more often. Well, he's still using that splitfinger more than ever before, and now his strikeout rate has returned to normal, but the rest of his profile has fallen apart. He's got the second-worst walk rate of his career, and those base runners are turning into runs. With 12 runs and a one-to-one strikeout to walk ratio in his last ten appearances, he really needs to get back on track to sniff the upper tiers any time soon.

Chris Perez is dealing. The young Cleveland closer has 14 strikeouts and only one walk in his last ten appearances - numbers which bode well for his ability to hold on to the role for a while. It would be nice to see him continue to rack up the Ks so that he pushes his seasons strikeout rate over the important one strikeout per inning hump, but his fastball/slider combo is working right now at least.

Andrew Bailey move up a little despite not having a save situation since returning. Bad teams can still offer save opportunities, so don't think this will necessarily continue, but it will keep Bailey from jumping tiers for now. If only he could cut his own hair without even looking, then he'd really move up the rankings.


Tier 4: Question marks (6) (AKA: The "Snuggie" Tier.)



Bobby Jenks, Chicago White Sox
Brad Lidge, Philadelphia Phillies
Kevin Gregg, Toronto Blue Jays
neg_arrow.gif
Leo Nunez, Florida Marlins
Francisco Cordero, Cincinnati Reds
pos_arrow.gif
Fernando Rodney, Los Angeles Angels

Comment:
Fernando Rodney has poor strikeout and walk ratios and isn't a great pitcher. On the other hand, he did amass 37 saves last year and managers tend to like that sort of thing. There also isn't an obvious competitor in his bullpen, and he's signed for next year. Sure, Jordan Walden is young, owns a blazing fastball, and would be interesting for a truly rebuilding team trying to identify a long-term closer - but does that really describe the Los Angeles Angels? It seems more likely that they'll look to compete in 2011 with Rodney as the favorite for saves.

Both Brad Lidge and Kevin Gregg blew saves recently, but they weren't disastrous (both one-run innings). These guys seem safe, and are pitching right on career norms - that is to say, occasionally missing the strike zone as if they were wearing blankets with armholes. Despite the occasional blow-ups, they are still valuable.

Francisco Cordero is still a terrible pitcher by most metrics. To his benefit, though, he's on a contender, hasn't been as obvious in his suckitude recently, and doesn't have competition in that pen other than the young and untested Nick Masset. Of course Aroldis Chapman, newly a reliever, will be with the team today, and a 105 MPH fastball might just get his manager's notice. Especially if the next Cordero blown save is right around the corner.


Tier 5: Rollercoaster rides (8) (AKA: The "Indoor Sundial" Tier.)



pos_arrow.gif
Koji Uehara, Baltimore Orioles
Joel Hanrahan, Pittsburgh Pirates
Drew Storen, Washington Nationals
Hisanori Takahashi, New York Mets
Trevor Hoffman/John Axford, Milwaukee Brewers
Juan Gutierrez, Arizona Diamondbacks
pos_arrow.gif
Hong-Chih Kuo, Los Angeles
Brandon Lyon, Houston Astros

Comment:
It looks like Koji Uehara is the closer in Baltimore for the forseeable future. Though Mike Gonzalez has the more impressive contract, he's been pitching fairly regularly in the eighth inning over the past week. He is still a lefty, and managers sometimes prefer right-handed closers because they often don't have platoon issues to the same extent as lefties. In any case, Uehara was a closer in Japan, and is showing all the requisite skills to be a good closer here in America. If Gonzalez gets the job back, it might just be in 2011.

Drew Storen did not have a great weekend. He gave up five runs and a home run in two appearances - but he still got a save in Sunday's game. And he's also pumped up the strikeout rate with seven strikeouts in his last five innings. That kind of upside is tangible with his three-pitch mix, and there's a strong chance that he holds on to that job for years.

Ah, Los Angeles. The updates out of Dodger skipper Joe Torre are as frequent as they are cryptic. He likes what Hong-Chih Kuo is doing, and then he also thinks Jonathan Broxton is doing well. At one point, he said that the Dodgers were only going to win with Broxton pitching like he is - in the closer's role. It may be time to ignore what he says and wait for his actions. Until we see consecutive saves next to Broxton's name, it's looking like we'll have to keep calling Kuo the closer. He's not a bad pitcher despite being injury-prone and left-handed, and the possibility that he holds on to the role all year (though not probable) does exist.

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>


Injured


Joe Nathan, Minnesota Twins (Out for the season with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow)
Francisco Rodriguez, New York Mets (needs surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb)
Matt Lindstrom, Houston Astros (15-day DL for back spasms)

Comment:
Matt Lindstrom is still hurting. Further back spasms pushed his bullpen session from Saturday to Sunday, and though he felt okay, he is waiting to see how he feels when he wakes up before planning his rehab stint. If he feels fine today, he may just join Double-A Corpus Christi and make it back to the Astros in early September. He's eligible to return on September second, and Brandon Lyon's value may just be short-lived.

The Deposed:
Frank Francisco, Texas Rangers
Jason Frasor, Toronto Blue Jay
Jim Johnson, Baltimore Orioles
Chad Qualls, Tampa Bay Rays
Kerry Wood, New York Yankees
Octavio Dotel, Los Angeles Dodgers
Jon Rauch, Minnesota Twins

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>

The Steals Department

Jose Tabata doesn't own a gaudy steals total (only 14 so far), but he's only been in the majors for 300 at-bats, and he definitely has the potential to add more. The nice thing about his game is that he doesn't strike out much, which means he puts the ball in play and depends on his speed to get on base. It's not that his walk rate is terrible - it's just that despite a below-average walk rate, he makes enough contact and has enough speed to make the entire package work.

Since the All-Star break, Tabata has been on fire. His .362 average is a big part of his .883 OPS, but he's got a little power too. The downside of owning Tabata is that he's only accrued six steals in the last two months - he's not a volume guy - but if you are in a league that counts OPS, he can give you those steals without hurting you in that category. That can be useful, and not like a screen door on a submarine is useful.

Lorenzo Cain does have Carlos Gomez lurking and healthy, but it looks like the Brewers are going to give him the lion's share of the playing time to see if he can be the better option than the former Twin. The one thing that Cain has shown he can do better than Gomez - at least in the minor leagues - is take a walk. Cain had a .409 on base percentage in Triple-A this year, and a career minor league walk rate around nine percent. Gomez had a career-high OBP of .355 in the minor leagues and sports a major league walk rate of 5.1%.

Because he mostly only owns an empty batting average right now, it might be hard to tell that Cain has better offensive upside than Gomez, but he's already showing a better strikeout-to-walk ratio, and has five steals in his first 21 games. As he continues to get comfortable in the bigs, he might just start stealing bases in bunches. And judging by his highlight-reel catch Monday night, his defense doesn't look so bad either.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Dancing In September
Welp, like it or not the calendar now reads September 1 and summer is quickly winding down. School is back in session, baseball teams are being mathematically eliminated by the day, pools are closing and fruity cocktail drinks can no longer be chalked up to the old "hey, it's summer!" adage.

Of course, it's not all bad.

The weather tends to be pretty nice in most parts of North America, one of the all-time great songs can be bumped loud and celebrated, and we get a taste of some top prospects who are wrapping up their minor league seasons and headed to the big leagues via roster expansion.

These "September call-ups," as they're often termed, bear very little fantasy value, but that doesn't make their arrival any less interesting. Speedy outfield prospect Desmond Jennings may get a look with the Rays. Power-hitting Freddie Freeman, only 20, is on his way to Atlanta. Aroldis Chapman made his debut for the Reds on Tuesday night, hitting 103 MPH on a big-league gun and retiring all three batters that he faced. The new kids are on the block.

While our hearts ring and we chase the clouds away, let's hit up some other stories from around the baseball planet...

* Nationals right-hander Jordan Zimmermann was hammered for five earned runs in a four-inning debut last week against the Cardinals and kind of deflated the hype surrounding his re-arrival in the big leagues. It's time to get back on the hype train. Zimmermann, a recent Tommy John surgery recoveree, struck out six batters and allowed only one hit over six shutout innings Tuesday in the Nationals' 1-0 defeat of the Marlins. He looked nasty all night and should be a highly valuable fantasy starter down the stretch.

* In an exchange of spare parts Tuesday, the Mets acquired infielder Joaquin Arias from the Rangers for outfielder and on-base percentage opponent Jeff Francoeur. It was one of the few waiver deals and the only significant one made at Tuesday's deadline. Unless you want to count the Rockies' acquisition of middle reliever Manny Delcarmen. Arias, 25, was hitting just .276/.290/.347 in 101 plate appearances with the Rangers but should see more playing time in New York. Francoeur, 26, is probably loving life now that he is back in a playoff race and will serve as outfield depth for the Rangers down the stretch while Josh Hamilton nurses a potentially serious knee injury. Neither should be considered fantasy-relevant this year.

* It's time to check in on our Triple Crown Watch. Joey Votto hit two doubles and collected a walk and three RBI Tuesday in the Reds' victory over the Brewers. He now leads two categories with 97 RBI and a .327 batting average, and he's only three homers back of National League-leader Albert Pujols, who has 35. Pujols went 0-for-3 with a walk Tuesday in Houston and the Cardinals fell seven games back of the Reds in the NL Central. With one month to play, there's still time for all sorts of movement, but Votto and his Reds appear to be cruising toward the division crown.

NL Quick Hits: Reds slugger Jay Bruce tweaked a muscle in his side during batting practice and is considered day-to-day ... Anibal Sanchez has a gorgeous 2.21 ERA and 55/19 K/BB ratio over nine starts since the All-Star break ... Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki is likely to return to the starting lineup Wednesday ... Rafael Furcal could be back with the Dodgers by this weekend ... Juan Gutierrez picked up his fifth save of the season Tuesday in the D'Backs' defeat of the Padres ... Astros left-hander Wandy Rodriguez finally seems to be pulling it together with a 0.97 ERA over his last eight starts ... Ryan Howard is hitting just .111/.158/.111 in the month of August but did manage his 24th home run of the season on Tuesday ... Andres Torres has 11 homers and 38 RBI since the beginning of July ... Miguel Montero is batting a healthy 263/.328/.544 on the year but has not yet homered at hitting-friendly Chase Field ... The Mets have called up 20-year-old Jenrry Mejia ... Ryan Dempster was lit up for seven runs over three innings Tuesday against the light-hitting Pirates ... Brandon Lyon picked up his 10th save of the season Tuesday in his continued fill-in role as the Astros' closer ... Mike Minor is 3-0 with a 3.91 ERA over his first four starts in the majors ... Arizona outfielder Justin Upton is day-to-day with left shoulder irritation ... Vicente Padilla was hit with a comebacker in a minor league start Tuesday ... Nats phenom Stephen Strasburg is scheduled to undergo Tommy John surgery on Friday in Los Angeles ... Angel Pagan is day-to-day with wrist tendinitis.

AL Quick Hits: Mariners ace Felix Hernandez notched his 200th strikeout of the season Tuesday in a dominant start against the Angels ... Jose Bautista is up to a major league-leading 43 home runs on the year ... The Rangers are expected to activate infielder Cristian Guzman from the disabled list on Wednesday ... Joakim Soria allowed no runs in the month of August and now has 36 saves on the year to go with a 1.77 ERA ... Twins setup man Brian Fuentes is day-to-day with tightness in his back ... The Rays called up Brad Hawpe to provide outfield depth and a strong bench bat down the stretch ... Rangers second baseman Ian Kinsler will return from the disabled list Wednesday ... Mark Teixeira leads the American League with 100 runs scored and is on pace for a career high in that category ... Rangers slugger Josh Hamilton was given a lubricant injection Tuesday in his ailing right knee ... Koji Uehara collected his fifth save of the year Tuesday with an impressive five-out performance ... Scott Feldman is scheduled to begin a rehab assignment Wednesday ... Jason Kubel is day-to-day after being hit in the left wrist by a pitch ... Lance Berkman is expected to rejoin the Yankees on Wednesday ... The Red Sox released outfielder Jeremy Hermida ... Matt Capps earned his seventh save as a Twin on Tuesday ... Justin Morneau has been scratched from a scheduled workout Friday due to ongoing post-concussion symptoms ... New White Sox slugger Manny Ramirez is expected to make his first start for his new club Wednesday ... The Indians will add prospect Carlos Carrasco to their starting rotation for the duration of September.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Paging Dr. Linceum
Tim Lincecum looked nothing like the two-time reigning Cy Young winner while posting a 7.82 ERA and 1.82 WHIP in August, but he much more closely resembled his vintage self en route to eight innings of one-run ball (five hits, one walk, nine K's and one outdueling of Ubaldo Jimenez) in a win over the Rockies on Wednesday.

The only blemish for Lincecum was solo homer No. 30 on the season for Carlos Gonzalez, which is really nothing to be ashamed of given that CarGo has drilled 18 homers since the start of July and has posted better than an 1.100 OPS each of the last two months. We've seen Lincecum break out of earlier slumps this season only to regress again, but hopefully he's set to make September one of his better months in a disappointing 2010 campaign.

* These are not fun times to have Nyjer Morgan on your fantasy team. Already appealing a seven-game suspension for throwing a ball at a Phillies fan, Morgan was ejected from Wednesday's game (a wild 16-10 Florida win) for starting a benches-clearing brawl with the Marlins. Morgan will undoubtedly see an additional suspension, and Wednesday's incited melee can't do anything to help his prior suspension appeal.

* Finally sensing that it's not a good idea to have one of your starters throwing on one fully functional knee, the Marlins have shut down Ricky Nolasco (torn meniscus, right knee), who will undergo surgery next week. Nolasco should once again be a useful mixed league asset in 2011 after posting a 14-9 record, 4.51 ERA and 1.28 WHIP with 147 strikeouts in 2010.

* Speaking of starting pitchers dealing with ailments, Cliff Lee is currently bothered by lower back stiffness and has been sent back to Texas to get a pain-killing injection. The hope is that he'll be ready to take the mound on Tuesday against Toronto if the medicine does its job. Lee's ERA with Texas is up to 4.69 after posting a 9.00 ERA in his last four starts.

* Aroldis Chapman recorded his first big league win with a perfect seventh inning and a fastball that ripped 103.9 mph on Wednesday. That's the good news. The bad news for fantasy owners is that Chapman's role as a setup man restricts his value mostly to NL-Only leagues, keeper formats and wildly entertaining highlights.

* Speedster prospect Desmond Jennings made his MLB debut on Wednesday, finishing 0-for-3 with a strikeout. Jennings should be on AL-Only radars after stealing 37 bases in the minors this season, but his lack of power (three homers, 756 OPS at Triple-A) and lack of regular at-bats mean he should remain on waivers in most mixed leagues.

NL Quick Hits: Freddie Freeman made his major league debut, but will mostly be a backup to Derrek Lee down the stretch… September call-up Brandon Allen hit a grand slam and made an outstanding catch in left field after hitting .261/.405/.528 with 25 homers, 86 RBI and a 933 OPS at Triple-A, but his value is likely limited to NL-Only and keeper formats… Tommy Hanson allowed just one hit in seven scoreless innings against the Mets, picking up his first win since July 3… Mat Latos struck out 10 in six innings, but took a no-decision… Chris Narveson has a 3.55 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and 26/9 K/BB ratio in 33 innings since the beginning of August, making him a reliable option in NL-Only leagues… Carlos Silva (heart) allowed five runs on six hits Wednesday in his second rehab start at Single-A and does not appear to be on the fast track back to the big leagues at the moment… Derek Lowe (elbow soreness) will be skipped in the rotation this week, replaced by Kenshin Kawakami… Angel Pagan (wrist) is expected to return on Thursday… Jason Heyward had his third career four-hit game, with all three coming in his last 10 games.

NL Quick Hits, Part 2: The slumping Mike Stanton homered for the first time since Aug. 13… Roy Oswalt took a no-hitter into the sixth and is now 4-0 with a 1.30 ERA in six starts since the beginning of August… Clayton Kershaw allowed two runs in six innings with 11 K's, but took a loss… The slumping Jimmy Rollins hit a leadoff homer and stole his 16th base… Tom Gorzelanny will have a CT scan on the top of his pinkie after being hit with a line drive Wednesday… Neil Walker homered for the fourth time in his last five games… Hunter Pence homered and stole his 17th base on Wednesday and is hitting.331 with nine homers and 35 RBI in 43 games since the All-Star break… Matt Lindstrom returned from the DL and got a hold, but Brandon Lyon remained the closer for now, picking up his 11th save… Brandon Phillips (wrist) is hoping to return on Friday… Jay Bruce (ribs) is expected to be out for a few more games… The Nationals recalled Danny Espinosa (22 homers, 25 steals in the minors this season), who's worth a look in NL leagues.

AL Quick Hits: Manny Ramirez went 1-for-3 as the DH in his White Sox debut… The Rangers activated Ian Kinsler (groin) from the DL… Max Scherzer (nine innings, one run, nine K's) and Francisco Liriano (seven shutout innings) both threw gems, but ended up with no-decisions… Adrian Beltre hit his 24th homer of the season… David Price picked up his franchise-record 16th win… The scuffling A.J. Burnett beat the A's with six solid innings on Wednesday… Andy Pettitte reported feeling "good" after a 55-pitch bullpen session, and is less than two weeks from returning to the rotation… Josh Hamilton didn't play Wednesday and may need to DH for the rest of the week after taking a lubricant injection in his troublesome right knee… Alex Rodriguez (calf) took BP and is still aiming to return on Sunday… Orlando Hudson had an MRI on his right ankle and is considered day-to-day… Jason Kubel (wrist) is expected to miss a few games.

AL Quick Hits, Part 2: Chris Sale recorded his first major league save, but it's worth noting that Bobby Jenks had worked three consecutive days… The Rays recalled Jeremy Hellickson, but he'll work out of the bullpen down the stretch… Also rejoining the Rays (for the first time since 2008) is Rocco Baldelli, but he's unlikely to see significant playing time… Javier Vazquez will remain in the Yankees' rotation and face the Rangers on Saturday… Carlos Carrasco yielded three runs in 7 1/3 innings against the White Sox and should be owned in AL-Only leagues… The Blue Jays recalled J.P. Arencibia, but he'll have to share time with John Buck and Jose Molina… Gordon Beckham (hand) and Matt Thornton (forearm) are expected to return on Friday… Third base prospect Mike Moustakas is not expected to get a September call-up from the Royals.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Walk(er) the Plank
I guess I wouldn't be doing my job if I didn't mention Aroldis Chapman. Dominant is too tame of a word to describe his first two appearances, as he touched 102.7 mph in his major league debut Tuesday and topped out at 103.9 mph while earning his first major league win Wednesday. Oh yeah, and his slider is pretty nasty, too. Basically, he's like a video game pitcher come to life.

The Reds are now cruising towards the postseason, where Chapman is poised to have a similar impact to what Francisco Rodriguez provided for the Angels during their World Series run in 2002. As for his immediate fantasy impact, I wouldn't get too carried away just yet. The strikeouts are impressive, but unless you are in a holds league, I can't see him having tremendous initial value in shallower mixed formats. He's already essentially a no-brainer in NL-only and keeper leagues, anyway. We're going to see a sneak preview of the fireballer out of the bullpen this month, but his true fantasy impact won't be felt until he is a starting pitcher.

The same goes for top prospect outfielder Desmond Jennings, who was called up by the Rays on Wednesday and went 0-for-3 with a strikeout in his major league debut against the Blue Jays. The Rays are almost certainly headed to the postseason, but because they'll likely be battling the Yankees until the bitter end for the division crown, I just don't see him getting tons of playing time. He's immediately relevant in AL-only leagues, but he should be owned there already. Next season will be his time to shine in mixed formats.

This week, I'm mostly focused on the here and now. Look towards my AL-only and NL-only recommendations for my thoughts on some of the early September call-ups.

MIXED LEAGUES:

Fernando Rodney RP, Angels (Yahoo: 44 percent owned, ESPN: 47.3 percent)

First, some words of warning. Rodney isn't a good pitcher. He has an underwhelming 40/28 K/BB ratio over 54 2/3 innings this season. Despite that, he has two very significant numbers working in his favor: 37 and 11. More specifically, the 37 games he saved with Tigers last season and the two-year, $11 million contract he signed with the Angels over the winter. If the Angels were silly enough to give him that contract, you'd better believe that he'll have a pretty long leash as the closer now that Brian Fuentes is in Minnesota. He's a must-add in all formats.

Jorge De La Rosa SP, Rockies (Yahoo: 45 percent owned, ESPN: 47.2 percent)

Inexplicably, De La Rosa's ownership has actually went down over the past two months. Meanwhile, the southpaw has posted a 3.14 ERA over his last eight starts, including 50 strikeouts over 51 2/3 innings. He hasn't allowed more than three runs in a start since July 17. Even better, he has went at least seven innings while allowing two runs or less in each of his last three starts. While I acknowledge that he could be a drag on your WHIP, I'm encouraged that he has somehow managed to induce more groundballs than ever before.

Drew Stubbs OF, Reds (Yahoo: 26 percent owned, ESPN: 33.5 percent)

Is Stubbs going to match my 20-20 prediction from earlier this season? Probably not, but he can still be plenty useful down the stretch. The 25-year-old outfielder just finished off a fantastic month of August, batting .296/.363/.507 with two home runs, seven doubles, one triple, 10 RBI, six stolen bases and 18 runs scored. The recent injuries to Jim Edmonds, Orlando Cabrera and Brandon Phillips have certainly helped him, but he may have done enough to keep the leadoff spot until the end of the season.

Matt Lindstrom RP, Astros (Yahoo: 45 percent owned, ESPN: 49 percent)

Lindstrom pitched a scoreless inning Wednesday against the Cardinals in his first appearance back from the disabled list. The hard-throwing right-hander hasn't had a great season on paper, posting a 4.15 ERA and 1.64 WHIP, but remember that he did go 10 straight appearances from the end of June to the first week of August without allowing a run. He's worth stashing if available, but look for Brad Mills to ease him back into the closer role, especially with Brandon Lyon doing just fine during his absence.

Neil Walker 2B/3B, Pirates (Yahoo: 25 percent owned, ESPN: 41.5 percent)

Looks like many fantasy owners still have a hard time believing that Walker is for real, as his ownership level has only increased modestly since I first mentioned him a month ago. It's fine to be skeptical, but it's getting pretty difficult to justify keeping him on the wire. Walker is batting a ridiculous .425 (17-for-40) over his last nine games, including four home runs over his last five games. Some will say that his .310 batting average is a byproduct of a high batting average on balls in play -- and that may be true -- but Walker currently has a very healthy line drive rate of 24.2 percent. It's not a complete fluke.

Brian Matusz SP, Orioles (Yahoo: 15 percent owned, ESPN: 34.8 percent)

There hasn't been much reason to pay attention to Matusz in mixed leagues this season, but he was one of the most valuable fantasy starters during the month of August, going 4-1 with a 2.43 ERA and 26/7 K/BB over six starts. It would be one thing if he was pitching against the Indians and Mariners, but he beat the Rangers, White Sox, Red Sox and Angels along the way. The Orioles are going to a six-man rotation in September, so there shouldn't be any reason to worry that he'll be shut down. Go with him.

Marcus Thames OF, Yankees (Yahoo: 10 percent owned, ESPN: 16.4 percent)

We've come to know Thames for his ability to crush left-handed pitching and hit home runs in bunches. True to form, he is batting .344 with four home runs, 11 RBI and a 945 OPS in 90 at-bats against southpaws this season. Thames also recently slugged six home runs in the span of six starts. I can't guarantee that another epic home run binge is imminent, however Yankees manager Joe Girardi should find a way to get him into the lineup against nearly all southpaws, whether as the designated hitter or in the outfield. He's at least worth a look in leagues that start five outfielders.

Shopping at the five-and-dime:

(Note: Players included are owned in less than 10 percent of Y! and ESPN leagues)

Daric Barton 1B, Athletics (Yahoo: 9 percent owned, ESPN: 6.9 percent)

Say hello to one of the most productive players in fantasy over the past three weeks. It's true. In addition to batting .417 with three home runs, four doubles, eight RBI and 13 runs scored over his last 15 games, Barton has an insane .567 on-base percentage. His propensity to draw walks won't do much for many fantasy owners outside of runs scored and the occasional stolen base, but he has extra value in leagues that use on-base percentage and/or OPS. We don't see this kind of power display from him often, but he's well worth tying in a CI spot right now.

Juan Gutierrez RP, Diamondbacks (Yahoo: 6 percent owned, ESPN: 4.7 percent)

Gutierrez has successfully converted each of his team's last three save opportunities, so it appears that Diamondbacks interim manager Kirk Gibson has finally settled on a closer. It's only natural to be concerned by Gutierrez's sudden increase in flyballs and home runs allowed this season, but his batted ball profile in August began to resemble the impressive numbers he posted last season. Let's hope it continues. Chase Field isn't the most forgiving environment for a flyball pitcher.

Clay Hensley RP, Marlins (Yahoo: 4 percent owned, ESPN: 0.2 percent)

Something very curious happened during Wednesday's win over the Nationals. Leo Nunez and Brian Sanches were used in the eighth and ninth innings respectively, despite the team holding a six-run lead at the time. Hmmmm... With Nunez coming off an awful August, methinks it's time to speculate on Hensley for the next save opportunity. The 31-year-old right-hander has flown under the radar only to post a 2.67 ERA to go along with an impressive 66/23 K/BB ratio over 60 2/3 innings this season. He's a nice speculative play if you are chasing saves in deeper mixed formats.


<!--RW-->


AL ONLY

Chris Sale RP, White Sox (Yahoo: 2 percent owned, ESPN: 0.5 percent)

Sale recorded his first major league save in Wednesday's win over the Indians. Trying to figure out White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen is a hopeless exercise, so there's no promise that he'll get another one, especially with Matt Thornton and J.J. Putz expected to return from the disabled list in short order, but it wouldn't hurt to stash the fast-rising 2010 first-round pick, anyway. The 21-year-old left-hander has a 0.90 ERA and 16 strikeouts over his first 10 innings in the big leagues.

Nolan Reimold OF, Orioles (Yahoo: 15 percent owned, ESPN: 24.8 percent)

Ignore those ownership numbers. Keep in mind that the vast majority of the people who still own Reimold probably stopped paying attention to their fantasy baseball team months ago. I mean, Mark DeRosa is still owned in 20 percent of Y! leagues and he hasn't played since May 8. Understood? Good. Yes, Reimold was a tremendous fantasy bust earlier in the season, but I'm almost willing to give him an injury mulligan because of his surgically-repaired Achilles. The 26-year-old outfielder was hitting well at the time of his promotion and should see time at designated hitter and/or share playing time with Felix Pie in left field in September.

Andy Oliver SP, Tigers (Yahoo: 0 percent owned, ESPN: 0 percent)

This is a bit of a speculative play, but there's still a chance that Oliver could be called up in September. Of course, the 22-year-old left-hander failed to impress in his first taste of the big leagues earlier in the year, going 0-4 with a 7.36 ERA over five starts, but he does have a 3.40 ERA and 115/45 K/BB ratio over 22 starts with Double-A Erie and Triple-A Toledo. Oliver is already at 146 1/3 innings in his first professional season, so the organization may eventually feel the need to shut him down. Even if they do, he should be on your radar for next season.

J.P. Arencibia C, Blue Jays (Yahoo: 2 percent owned, ESPN: 1.5 percent)

Arencibia sent the fantasy baseball world on fire when he went 4-for-5 with two home runs and three RBI in his major league debut last month, however he was sent back to the minors after he managed just one hit over next 15 at-bats. We probably got a little too excited there. The 24-year-old catcher is back for the month of September, but he's likely looking at a timeshare with John Buck behind the plate. He isn't worth a look in mixed formats right now, but his power potential is worth a roster spot in AL-only leagues, even in a part-time role. Buck is a free agent after the season, so the starting gig should be his in 2011.

NL ONLY:

Jenrry Mejia SP, Mets (Yahoo: 1 percent owned, ESPN: 0.1 percent)

For some reason, the Mets thought it was a good idea to carry Mejia as a low-leverage reliever to begin the season. We all know how that worked out. They eventually sent him back to the minors in mid-June and after he missed some time with a rotator cuff injury, the 20-year-old returned to post a fantastic 1.28 ERA and 45/16 K/BB in 42 1/3 innings over nine minor league starts. Fresh off eight innings of one-run ball in his Triple-A debut this week, he is now on track to make his first major league start against the Cubs on Saturday. The talented young right-hander is worth an automatic flier.

Brandon Allen 1B, Diamondbacks (Yahoo: 1 percent owned, ESPN: 0.3 percent)

I told you about Allen a couple of weeks back in anticipation that Adam LaRoche could be traded before the waiver deadline. It didn't happen, but that doesn't mean that Allen won't have value in September. The D-Backs called up the 24-year-old on Wednesday and he went 2-for-3 with a grand slam as the starting left fielder. With plus power and surprising speed, any reasonable NL-only owner should be all over this already. Sure, Gerardo Parra is terrific in the outfield, but there's just more upside with Allen. Look for him to get semi-regular playing time moving forward.

Freddie Freeman 1B, Braves (Yahoo: N/A, ESPN: 0.1 percent)

If all goes according to plan, Derrek Lee will be the starting first baseman and Freeman will only see limited at-bats down the stretch. That's great and all, but Lee hasn't exactly been the second coming of Fred McGriff since joining the Braves last month, batting just .237 over 38 at-bats. And we know he's not completely healthy, either. If we've learned anything about the Braves' resurgence in the National League East this season, it's that their success has largely been built on youth. Freeman is worth grabbing on potential alone.

Danny Espinosa SS/2B, Nationals (Yahoo: N/A, ESPN: 0 percent)

I was pleasantly surprised to see Espinosa join the Nats as a September call-up, only because he was just promoted to Triple-A Syracuse last month, but he did hit .295/.349/.463 while he was there. In fact, the 23-year-old infielder batted .268/.337/.464 with 22 homers, 69 RBI and 25 stolen bases between Double-A and Triple-A this season. Espinosa began the transition to second base during his time at Syracuse and made his major league debut there Wednesday. Let's hope he takes some playing time away from Adam Kennedy down the stretch.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
September Callups Part II
September Call Ups – Part 2
By Bobby Colton

Writing part one prior to the first of the month I went 9 for 13 as the first wave of prospects got the call up. Here's the second half of my September call up predictions/analysis based on who has already come up and who will come up after the end of the AAA season.

Chin Lung Hu (SS) – "Hu's at Short?" Ok, so that's not exactly the line, but Chin Lung Hu is still one of my favorite names in baseball. Hu could be a viable option at short down the stretch if the Dodgers fall out of contention and don't want to push Rafael Furcal while he's coming back from the DL. Hu has hit .303 this year in AAA and, although he's 0 for 2 this year with the Dodgers, he could be a useful player this month. As of now he's not up but he could be.

Xavier Paul (OF) – With Manny out of Dodger Blue and now creating problems for the ChiSox, there is a possible opening in the outfield for the Dodgers. Right now Scott Podsednik is patrolling left, but is hitting .281 and is little more than a lead off guy. With Furcal on his way back, the leadoff spot will be re-occupied by its rightful owner and Pods could be out of a job. For now Paul is on the DL in AAA, but if the Dodgers think he can come back strong and he can hit more like his .325 AAA average than his .231 Major League average, Paul could be looking at a lot of playing time.

JP Arencibia (C) – JP had a ridiculous start to his major league career with that 4/5 2HR performance, but had just 1 hit over his next 5 major league games, including September 1st. With John Buck a free agent at the end of the year and seemingly be too expensive for the Jays to retain, there is no reason Arencibia shouldn't play every day. JP's .301 average and 32 jacks in AAA are phenomenal. JP is currently on the Jays' roster.

Brad Mills (P) – Mills' AAA numbers aren't awe inspiring, yet are still much better than Rzepczynski's numbers, both at AAA and in the Majors. Mills got roughed up by both Boston and Tampa in his last two major league starts, but deserves a shot over Rzepczynski based on his superior numbers. Mills could get starts down the stretch, but you should have better options. For now Mills is toiling in AAA.

Allen Craig (OF/3B) – Craig was actually a September send down. Craig's gaudy .322 AAA average didn't translate to Major League success in St. Louis, to the point that Pedro Feliz and Felipe Lopez are garnering AB's over him. Craig hit just .188 in the majors, but should be better in his next stint with the big club. Craig will be back soon.

PJ Walters (P) – Walters has logged 19 innings with the Cards this season, pitching to a 7.71 ERA comprised of two drastically different starts (5 IP 0 ER; 4 IP 7 ER). The bottom line for the Cardinals is very simple: if you can't pitch, you can't make the playoffs. Jaime Garcia is going to get skipped a couple of times this month and neither Jeff Suppan nor Kyle Lohse are anything special as far as starters go. Given that Walters has one strong start in the Majors to his credit, there is no reason not to turn to Walters should they feel a need to change things up to go to the playoffs. Walters should be up soon.

Mat Gamel (3B) – Given Gamel's status as a premiere Major League ready prospect, I feel obliged to write a blurb about him. However, Gamel will be hard pressed to find AB's over Casey McGehee at third. Gamel played 4 games in right, 1 in left, and 2 at first this season in AAA, though getting playing time over Ryan Braun, Corey Hart, and Price Fielder is just not going to happen. If you feel like Gamel is going to produce for you in September, think again (unless of course you need a true pinch-hitter for your squad). Gamel is currently up with the Brewers.

Mike Lamb (CI) – Mike Lamb, Chad Tracy, and Wes Helms are all more or less the same player. Therefore, Lamb could very well be in line for playing time at third over Helms or Tracy this last month. Lamb struggled in the Majors as a bench bat for the Fish early on, but has hit a sterling .318 in AAA. Lamb isn't a great option, so I hope you find a better option. Lamb is still in AAA right now.

Tom Koehler (P) – Koehler is far from a household name, but has been absolutely brilliant for AA Jacksonville this year. Koehler is only on this list because Ricky Nolasco is rightly being shut down for the rest of the season and it only makes too much sense to give the rotation spot to a youngster like the 24 year old Koehler rather than a vet like 34 year old Brian Lawrence. Koehler was good in A+ last year, and has a 2.71 ERA and is 16-2 this year in AA. Koehler could be a very stealthy pickup in NL only leagues this year, just make sure the Marlins are smart enough to call the 24 year old up. Koehler is still in AA right now. Update: With suspensions to Chris Volstad and Alex Sanabia the Fish will need spot starters for at least one of the two.

Chris Davis (1B) – Davis just can't hit Major League hitting. However, Davis is going to be a heavily sought after commodity this offseason as Mitch Moreland looks ready to be the regular first baseman next year. Davis has played third, first, and left this year in AAA and could spell any and all of Moreland, Young, and Hamilton as they get sporadic days off down the stretch to get ready for the playoffs. It might be worth it for the Rangers to showcase their Quad-A prospect. Davis is currently in AAA but will be back soon.

Omar Beltre (P) – Beltre struggled in his two Major League starts this year, but has been fantastic in AAA, posting a 2.65 ERA. With Cliff Lee ailing both physically and on the mound, the Rangers might want to give him some time off before the playoffs. If Beltre does get called up, I wouldn't hesitate to give him a shot in AL Only leagues. Update: Beltre injured his ankle on Wednesday in AAA and was recalled and placed on the 60 Day DL. I'm counting that as a call up, but you shouldn't.

Lucas May (C) – May was the return for Scott Podsednik, and he hasn't disappointed the Royals at all hitting .291 and smacking 16 homers. With Jason Kendall out for the year and questionable for next year, this is May's big shot at not only playing time this year, but also to be the regular catcher next year. Buy into May for this year. May has already gotten the call.

San Diego Outfielders – Let's be honest, the Friars are on a 7 game losing streak and have found themselves unable to hit at all behind Adrian Gonzalez. All of Wily Mo Pena, Jody Gerut, and Luis Durango can be improvements over Chris Denorfia and Will Venable. The three Minor League OF's have hit .333, .324, and .299 respectively, with Pena hitting 8 jacks and Durango getting 35 steals. If/when any/all of these outfielders are called up, all three could be valuable for NL Only leaguers.

Cory Luebke (P) – Luebke has impressed enough in AAA to get the nod to the Padres this month. It's unclear where Luebke will be used, but given the excessively young Padre rotation and the excessive mediocrity of Kevin Correia, Luebke's 2.97 ERA over 9 AAA starts could win him a rotation spot for September. If he starts, Luebke could be valuable.

Brandon Allen (OF/1B) – Allen's AAA stats weren't all too exciting this year, hitting .261 with 25 HR and 65 RBI. However, Allen is both an upgrade over Gerardo Parra and the heir-apparent to Adam Laroche at first. Allen's Big League debut was good enough to earn him regular playing time from here on out so invest in all leagues.

Chris Carter (OF/1B) – Carter's season has gone much like Brandon Allen's, posting low average AAA numbers but a lot of power (.258/31HR/94 RBI). Carter's MLB debut wasn't as good as Allen's however, as he went 0 for 19 in 6 games. As Carter is now on the DL in AAA, his promotion will have to wait until he's healthy, but once up he should have no problem taking playing time from any current A's outfielder.

Dustin Ackley (2B) – The M's have yet to decide whether to give Ackley the call, but his .277 average in AAA makes it seem to me that he is ready for at least a shot in the Majors. Since neither Jose Lopez nor Chone Figgins are having good years for the Mariners, there should be nothing stopping Ackley from playing every day when he comes up. Ackley is more than worth a pickup in AL Only leagues seeing as he is one of the top prospects in the league.

And finally, Schultz says: "It's been a while since the Marlins have made noise in the post-season or even threatened to crash MLB's October lawn party. That doesn't mean that they've been worth ignoring in the late months of the season. For most of the year, highly touted youngsters like Mike Stanton and Logan Morrison have attracted the lion's share of the attention from those who are on the constant lookout for the next big thing. More yeoman-like in his approach, Gaby Sanchez has been provided decent numbers for the Marlins (and his roto-owners) all season. It appears all it took to rescue him from anonymity may have been his WWE-quality clothesline decapitation of Nyjer Morgan. In his first full season, Sanchez appears poised to clear 20 HR, 90 RBI and fall just shy of hitting .300. These may not be the gaudy numbers you would like to see from your first baseman. However, winning roto-ball is about maximizing return of your investment and the cost to acquire Sanchez is infinitely cheaper than some of his other more-publicized brethren. At least until Vince McMahon signs him.

Anyone searching for cheap saves at this time of the year usually has slim pickings to choose from. Not so in 2010, there seems to be a bumper crop of newly minted closers to choose from. The unexpected trade of Brian Fuentes to Minnesota sent Fernando Rodney's value skyrocketing on the other end of the seesaw that saw Fuentes' value plummet. On other struggling teams, Juan Gutierrez emerges as the one-eyed man in Arizona's blind bullpen and Brandon Lyon outlasted the perpetually fragile Matt Lindstrom in Houston. You could also do worse than to speculate over Clay Hensley's value in Florida. At this point in the season, saves are saves, so take what you can get and don't question the source.

Since putting on a show at the 2010 All-Star game, Corey Hart has suffered a power outage of epic proportions, hitting only two home runs since the break. Following in the footsteps of other Home Run Derby heroes like Bobby Abreu, David Wright and Josh Hamilton, Hart's misfortunes are giving credence to a jinx on the level of those associated with Sports Illustrated and the John Madden video football thing. Maybe this is something to keep in mind in 2011?
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Known Unknowns in the Dugout
For those of us without access into the clubhouse, disputes between managers and their players can be confusing. It's hard to tell what the truth is, and we try to use what we think of the player - which is really only decided by a few in-game decisions and an image they project - and what we think of the manager - which is really decided by random in-game decisions and post-game press conferences. We're almost in the dark.

This weekend, more news came out about the growing feud between Colby Rasmus and Tony La Russa. La Russa has talked openly with the press about his thoughts about the shortcomings in his game - he's mentioned going the other way as well as nebulous things like 'playing the game right' - which doesn't seem like the best way to train a young player. He also told the media that Rasmus had requested a trade this year as well as last year, but Rasmus disputes the notion.

So we are left with an exciting young center fielder that has played up-and-down defense but also has shown great power and some good plate discipline, rubbing up against one of the most established managers in the game. La Russa has had these kinds of conflicts with players before, and yet we don't really know how much Rasmus needs this kind of guidance.

What we know is that Rasmus has only started 98 of the Cardinal's 134 games to date, and that LA Russa is screwing with this young man's fantasy value. This dispute may need to be resolved this coming summer - with a trade or a firing - and that should be good news for the young center fielder with power and speed. Remember him in next year's drafts and in this offseason's keeper trading period, even if some of his 2010 counting stats will have been supressed by his (former?) manager.

* There's also something going on in Los Angeles, it seems. We know Joe Torre is… what you call "demanding" of his relievers. We know he likes to run them out there every day, future Tommy John surgeries to be durned. Now he's got a reliever that was once elite - and Jonathan Broxton was an elite pitcher coming into the year - and that reliever has suffered a velocity drop and is having late-season troubles.

Then again, Broxton still has a 95 MPH fastball and is still striking out more batters than innings in this 'down season.' Maybe this is all overblown. Maybe this is in the head of the manager. But Joe Torre spoke up again and said that they won't be using Broxton in the ninth inning going forward, if just to give him a better taste in his mouth going into the offseason. Again, we're not in that locker-room, but it seems like the big guy is getting jobbed by a few bad appearances with some badly bouncing balls. More security for Hong-Chih Kuo means he should be owned, but maybe Broxton shouldn't be dropped just yet.

* Super-rook Mike Minor had a tough start on Sunday, giving up six runs in four innings in a Braves loss to the Marlins. The result wasn't what he'd like, but he did strike out five and didn't walk a man. His added velocity has come with him to the major leagues, but it doesn't quite make it to the later innings. Add the fact that he might face an innings limit, and he makes a risky play in re-draft leagues. He's still nice in keeper leagues despite some early struggles.

* Super super-rook Danny Espinosa has been playing semi-regularly for the Nationals since the first. He doesn't have the best plate discipline, but Espinosa has shown some power and some speed and was playing shortstop in the minor leagues. All that's standing in his way is Adam Kennedy, right?

* Josh Hamilton bruised his ribs, missed some time over the weekend, and will miss more in the future. Already tough enough to attain, the triple crown seems out of reach if he misses the week that he just might miss considering how tough rib injuries can be. Still, he's been healthy enough - and great enough - to make his owners happy all year. Even when he's a little less lucky next year, the power is legitimate and he's a first-round keeper in any format.

* Alex Rodriguez was activated from the disabled list and in the lineup on Sunday with a couple of hits, but he's still in his decline phase, as his power numbers have dropped three straight years. Best case scenario for those that own him in keeper leagues is that he has a tear of a final month, gets close to thirty home runs, and builds his off-season trade value. He'll be worth shopping either way, considering the trajectory he's on.

NL Quick Hits: Ricky Nolasco (knee) is finally done for the season … Mark Reynolds left Sunday's game with a recurring injury to his right hand and might miss a couple games … Juan Gutierrez got like a million saves over the late week and weekend and looks suddenly solid … Clay Hensley is taking save pops for the Marlins right now, but Leo Nunez should get the job back any minute … Nyjer Morgan is playing while he appeals his eight-game suspension … Aramis Ramirez left Sunday's game with right quad soreness, and is seemingly always day-to-day … J.A. Happ had a great start against the Diamondbacks on Sunday, but though he struck out seven in seven, he doesn't really have the strikeout rate to support his current ERA … Dillon Gee will start on Thursday for the Mets, but is only interesting in the deepest of leagues for now … Johan Santana (pec) will miss his start Tuesday, the rest of his return TBD … Met Jose Reyes (oblique) has been shut down for a lil bit but is still supposed to return this season… Ike Davis hit his 17th home run, but needs just a little more power, or a little more contact, to be mixed-league ready next year … Chris Young (shoulder) made a rehab start in Triple-A on Sunday, results and future plan TBD … Jay Bruce (ribs) is feeling better, but no return planned just yet … Derek Lowe (shoulder) should make his start Wednesday … Fellow sinkerballer Carlos Silva (heart) is back on Wednesday as well, but with a pitch count … Adam Jones (shoulder) is still hurting, getting cortisone shots, and missing games … Justin Upton (shoulder) missed the weekend, return uncertain … Corey Hart had four hits over the weekend, with two home runs on Saturday, continuing a resurgent season and mentioning specifically that he could hit .270 with '20 to 25' home runs most seasons … Yuniesky Maya, a 28-year-old rookie from Cuba, makes his debut Tuesday for the Nationals … Scott Olsen is no longer a starter … Jesus Flores (shoulder) won't play in the majors this year … Logan Morrison has had a sweet four-game stretch and because he's flashing some power, he is suddenly interesting for head-to-head players in leagues of any size if they are looking to catch some offensive lightning in a bottle.

AL Quick Hits: Felix Hernandez had another great outing and should really be the AL Cy Young in a just world that didn't look at wins totals first … Cliff Lee (back) couldn't make his bullpen session Saturday, so he won't make his start Tuesday and looks like a sit in weekly leagues … C.J. Wilson has groundballs on his side, but on Sunday, those groundballs found the outfield and he had a poor start … Though the MRI showed no structural problems, Nick Swisher might miss some time with knee pain anyways, given his team is doing fine … He's been up and down since his offseason surgery, but Kevin Slowey is due back today … Teammate Scott Baker had a cortisone shot and should miss a couple starts … Alex Gordon hit his seventh home run, but despite his incremental steps forwards, he still needs to do more of everything to be interesting in mixed leagues … Chris Tillman came up and had a meh start against the Rays, and still needs to prove his fastball isn't too straight and he can rack up good strikeout rates in the major leagues … Jason Kubel (wrist) was back in the lineup on Sunday … Ian Kinsler returned to the lineup and hit a home run over the weekend … Javy Vazquez had a poor outing against the Blue Jays on Saturday that undid any work he did in the bullpen; his velocity is still down … Mike Lowell has been playing through a fractured rib, but the guess is that the Sawx run him out there while they are still in contention … Joel Piniero (oblique) could be activated this week … Gio Gonzalez had another good start against the Angels and must be owned in every league now … Derek Holland might be the next lefty to show his stuff in the AL, with a nice start against the Twins; he should be owned in deeper leagues, tracked in mixed leagues.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Stache these Saves

Your faithful saves and steals correspondent has but one flaw - he cannot grow facial hair to save his life. Sure, a few patches here or there, but nothing that represents the class and intelligence that we'd like to think would reside behind a worthy protrusion of pelt.

So it is with some jealousy that we regard even the straggliest of whiskers. In that honor, we'll rank this weeks' tiers in order of the more prominent manes in major league baseball.


Tier 1: Elite (3) (AKA: The "John Axford and Carl Pavano" Tier.)



Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees
Joakim Soria, Kansas City Royals
pos_arrow.gif
Heath Bell, San Diego Padres

It is time to recognize Heath Bell and his excellence. He's showing his career-best strikeout rate - the result of three years of incremental change - and in all likelihood his second straight year with 40+ saves. He even has a decent groundball rate for a closer. The only reason he's been a little slow to climb is a walk rate that is actually below-average by definition, but that walk rate is neither out of character for Bell, nor is it Marmol-ian. Plus, the goatee is pretty solid.


Tier 2: Rock Steady (6) (AKA: The "Al Hrabosky and Jason LaRue" Tier.)



Billy Wagner, Atlanta Braves
Rafael Soriano, Tampa Bay Rays
neg_arrow.gif
Jonathan Papelbon, Boston Red Sox
Neftali Feliz, Texas Rangers
Carlos Marmol, Chicago Cubs
Brian Wilson, San Francisco Giants

It just had to happen. Not only is Jonathan Papelbon showing the worst walk rate of his career, but it's the result of two straight years of decline in the category. In August, he had seven walks in 12 and 1/3 innings, so it's only gotten worse as the season has unfolded. He isn't showing the double-digit strikeout rates of an elite pitcher, either. The injury rumors have mostly gone away, but Papelbon is not pitching like an elite closer right now.

Carlos Marmol just keeps racking up saves despite walking the lineup. Guess all those strikeouts can undo some wildness. In one game last week, Marmol faced seven batters. He walked three and struck out three and got the save. He threatens to break the ranking system - a pitcher with a walk rate over six should not be this high - but props must be given for his major-league leading strikeout rate. He's almost whiffing two per inning!

Though his ERA and WHIP look elite, this isn't the best season of Rafael Soriano's carer. He's not striking out a batter per inning this year, and in Atlanta he was striking out a batter and a third. It's nice to thee the second-best walk rate of his career, but it would be even nicer if he paired it with even his career strikeout rate. This new approach hasn't come with more groundballs, for example, so hopefully Soriano will regain some his ability to induce swinging strikes.


Tier 3: OK options (7) (AKA: The "Jayson Werth and Jason Motte" Tier.)



Andrew Bailey, Oakland Athletics
Chris Perez, Cleveland Indians
Jose Valverde, Detroit Tigers
Matt Capps, Minnesota Twins
Huston Street, Colorado Rockies
David Aardsma, Seattle Mariners
Ryan Franklin, St. Louis Cardinals

Comment:
Not only are strikeouts one of the best single-stat predictors of future success, but they are also a fantasy category. Unfortunately for Ryan Franklin owners, they aren't getting any help in that cat from their closer. He's got a strikeout rate that is well below average for all pitchers, and it just gets worse when you narrow the pool to relievers. He's been a little better getting whiffs recently - nine in 13 and 2/3 August and September innings - but even in those months he still was no average closer in that regard. Add in the fact that his groundball rate is not great, his walk rate is a third of last year's total and half of his career number, the fact that he's given up nine earned runs since August began, and Franklin is living on the edge. Keeper league owners should take the chance to cash in this offseason - try talking up that monstrosity coming off of his chin.

Matt Capps is another closer without the normal strikeout punch, but he's got a better groundball rate, and does whiff batters at around an average rate. He's been a little hittable in Minnesota - he has allowed 19 hits in 18 innings - but he's only blown two saves and is seemingly reliable.

Andrew Bailey looks healthy, and finally racked up his first save since returning from the disabled list, but still hasn't pitched in back-to-backs. His strikeout rate has been better in the second half this season, though, so there's reason to think that his lower rate this year was just a random blip.


Tier 4: Question marks (6) (AKA: The "Kevin Youkilis and Fernando Rodney" Tier.)



Brad Lidge, Philadelphia Phillies
Bobby Jenks, Chicago White Sox
pos_arrow.gif
Koji Uehara, Baltimore Orioles
Kevin Gregg, Toronto Blue Jays
Francisco Cordero, Cincinnati Reds
Fernando Rodney, Los Angeles Angels

Comment:
Uh-oh, Bobby Jenks owners, Matt Thornton got his first save since returning from the disabled list over the weekend. Then again, that save opportunity was probably only afforded him because Jenks saved both halves of a double-header the day before. By secondary statistics, Jenks is pitching better than last year, but his ERA and WHIP show the ravages of poor luck. He's about as safe as a closer with a 4+ ERA (and some sort of hair explosion on his chin) can be.

September has been kind to Brad Lidge - six strikeouts and two walks in four innings even does a good job of describing him as a pitcher. He's always a meltdown risk, but the conventional wisdom in Philadelphia still says Ryan Madson is no closer, so he'll probably keep his job all year.

Francisco Cordero is still a pretty terrible closer. He used to have the benefit of being in a middling pen without an obvious replacement candidate, but now not only is Nick Masset out-pitching him (14 strikeouts and no walks in his last ten appearances), but there's some guy flashing triple-digits with his fastball lurking in the pen as well. Aroldis Chapman may just steal a few saves in tight games.

Koji Uehara moves up the list because he put together a couple of saves over the weekend. With his job seemingly secure, we can focus on this pinpoint control - he's walked fewer than two batters per nine innings in his major league career, aka less than half the batters Francisco Cordero is walking per nine. Uehara's strikeout abilities have played up with his return to the pen, which is a normal state of affairs for that sort of move. He looks very comfortable in the closer role he fulfilled in Japan, and there's suddenly very little reason to reach for lefty Mike Gonzalez despite the disparity in paychecks.


Tier 5: Rollercoaster rides (8) (AKA: The "Bobby Jenks and Ryan Franklin" Tier.)



Joel Hanrahan, Pittsburgh Pirates
Drew Storen, Washington Nationals
Hisanori Takahashi, New York Mets
pos_arrow.gif
John Axford, Milwaukee Brewers
neg_arrow.gif
Clay Hensley / Leo Nunez, Florida Marlins
Juan Gutierrez, Arizona Diamondbacks
Hong-Chih Kuo, Los Angeles
Brandon Lyon, Houston Astros

Comment:
John Axford 'moves up' because we're going to drop Trevor Hoffman from the co-closer label. It's not that Hoffman has been terrible - we'd call his recent contributions more mediocre - but the Hoff is one save away from 600 on his career. There's not really a reason to reach for the aged one over the young mustachioed closer once that milestone is attained.

Leo Nunez continues his freefall, and by many accounts he could be off the list. Giving up six runs in your last six appearances will do that to you. Nunez has lost the plate a little bit - he's walked seven in his last 11 and 2/3 innings - but he's still had a good year overall and has the peripherals of an excellent closer.

Current closer Clay Hensley also owns a strong strikeout rate paired with average control and a nice groundball rate, but he's been a little luckier and his ERA shows it. Hensley also has 324 innings of history in the major leagues with much worse rates. He was a starter before, like Nunez, and maybe this is the year the transition has stuck for him. Anything could happen in Florida, but the bet here is that Nunez gets the job back - even the Marlins' manager admitted as much.

Hong-Chih Kuo is a great pitcher when healthy. His outer-worldly rates this year are even right in his career norms. But he's still a lefty, and as most lefties do, Kuo owns slightly more terrestrial numbers against right-handed hitters. Jonathan Broxton, on the other hand, is a terror against right-handed hitters. There are more right-handed hitters than left-handed hitters in baseball. Even the mythical reliever-eating Joe Torre monster should be able to figure this one out.

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>


Injured


Joe Nathan, Minnesota Twins (Out for the season with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow)
Francisco Rodriguez, New York Mets (needs surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right thumb)

Comment:
Matt Lindstrom got healthy and up off of this list. He hasn't been used in saves chances since, though, and also told the Houston Chronicle that re-attaining the closer's role this year was not a goal of his. He's right - everyone in Houston should be looking to next year. Lindstrom may still notch some saves this year, though, if the Astros want to decide on next year's closer this year.

The Deposed:
Frank Francisco, Texas Rangers
Jason Frasor, Toronto Blue Jay
Jim Johnson, Baltimore Orioles
Chad Qualls, Tampa Bay Rays
Kerry Wood, New York Yankees
Octavio Dotel, Los Angeles Dodgers
Jon Rauch, Minnesota Twins
Alfredo Simon, Baltimore Orioles

<CENTER>* * * * * * * * * *</CENTER>

The Steals Department

He's been touted for deep leagues, but if you are looking for steals and steals alone, it's starting to look like Eric Young, JR could be your man even in mixed leagues. He doesn't have power, and his batting average is almost wholly dependent on how his balls in play bounce, but he does have wheels. His nine stolen bases in the past 30 days are tied for fourth-best in the majors, and that could play pretty well at second base. Even with Clint Barmes' return, Young has been playing regularly and notching those steals - Barmes has started only one game in September and looks to be headed for the super-utility role.

Bad teams breed fantasy opportunity, so it's no surprise that the Washington Nationals have produced yet another deep-league pickup in Danny Espinosa. His position of the future is undetermined, but he's eligible at second base in most leagues and may just be a better defender than Ian Desmond long term. Either way, he only has Adam Kennedy standing in his way, and since Espinosa has equalled Kennedy's home run output for the year in his fist five games, here's thinking the young man has a chance at some serious playing time.

What will he do with that time? Well, his minor league statistics tell the story of a man that strikes out a little too much, walks a good amount, and has power and speed. It looks like that power will translate to the big leagues, but he hasn't flashed the wheels just yet. Sometimes it takes a little bit for a base-stealer to get accustomed to major league moves, but Espinosa should steal some bags soon. He stole 54 in his last 256 games, and his 70% success rate - though not elite - is probably good enough to garner him a green light.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Friars Figure It Out
It's over! Es mas! E'finita!

Despite losing starter and staff ace Mat Latos just before game time due to a stomach virus, the Padres snapped their 10-game losing streak on Monday night with a 4-2 victory over the Dodgers. Tim Stauffer filled in for Latos, who has been pushed to Tuesday, and limited Los Angeles to one run on four hits over the first four innings. A solid showing by the bullpen kept Matt Kemp and Co. at bay, and Heath Bell racked up his 38th save of the season with a flawless ninth frame.

The Friars maintained their one-game lead over the Giants in the National League West standings. Will they hold it through September and into October? Let's hit up some other news items from around the baseball world while we ponder those odds...

* A 28-year-old from the Dominican Republic, right-hander Adalberto Mendez finally got his first crack at the major leagues Monday after eight long seasons toiling away in the minors. He seized the opportunity and pitched brilliantly, shutting down a dangerous Phillies lineup over six strong innings. Mendez allowed just one hit and struck out six batters while throwing 55 of his 86 pitches for strikes. He had to leave the game after collecting his first major league hit in the seventh inning and injuring his quad while chugging down the first base line. But the Marlins are calling his injury a "cramp," and he should be ready by the weekend.

* Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez has reached yet another milestone. The third baseman drove in his 100th RBI of the season on Monday in the Yanks' loss to the Orioles, becoming the first player to collect 100 or more RBI in 14 major league seasons. Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Jimmie Foxx all did it 13 times. A-Rod may be having a down year from a power perspective, but he has a .295/.363/.552 batting line with runners on base this season and a .291/.355/.512 batting line when those runners are in scoring position. All is well in Yankee Universe.

* It's not often that a September call-up has a major impact on a big-league club, but don't tell that to Danny Espinosa. The Nationals youngster was called up from Triple-A Syracuse last week after posting 22 home runs and an .801 OPS in 481 at-bats down on the farm. He's off to a roaring start in the bigs and finished 4-for-5 on Monday with two homers and six RBI. The 23-year-old is now 9-for-16 since joinign up with the Nats with three dingers and 10 runs batted in. We're hoping that he opens the 2011 season as Washington's starting second baseman.

NL Quick Hits: Marlins shortstop Hanley Ramirez has a .372 batting average, eight home runs and 20 RBI over 118 at-bats since the beginning of August ... Ian Stewart is aiming to return from the disabled list on Friday ... Giants rookie Madison Bumgarner struck out seven batters over 7 1/3 scoreless innings Monday against Arizona ... Aroldis Chapman allowed the first three hits of his career in Monday's loss to the Rockies ... Nate Schierholtz collected his first RBI since July 19 on Monday against the Diamondbacks ... Roy Oswalt has a 2.30 ERA since joining the Phillies and has won five straight decisions ... Phillies closer Brad Lidge owns 21 saves, a 3.38 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and a 10.8 K/9 rate on the year ... Edinson Volquez struck out 10 batters in a six-inning start Monday at Single-A Dayton and is likely to return to the Reds' rotation this weekend ... Ian Kennedy allowed only two hits over eight scoreless innings Monday but was left with a no-decision ... Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki has three homers, two doubles and nine RBI in his last five games ... Yadier Molina crushed his second grand slam of the season Monday in the Cardinals' victory over the Brewers ... Jayson Werth is likely to sign on with super agent Scott Boras before reaching free agency this offseason ... Corey Hart is 7-for-12 with four homers and two walks over the last three days ... The Reds' Jim Edmonds said Monday that his oblique injury actually involves a torn muscle ... Chris Young could return to the Padres' rotation next week ... Wilson Ramos will begin splitting time behind the plate in D.C. with Ivan Rodriguez.

AL Quick Hits: The Rays' Jeff Niemann has allowed an alarming 23 runs over his first three starts since coming off the disabled list ... Torii Hunter has tallied at least 20 home runs in each of the last 10 seasons ... Andy Pettitte is scheduled to make a rehab start on Thursday at Double-A Trenton ... The A's optioned slumping starter Vin Mazzaro to Triple-A Sacramento ... Paul Konerko remains sidelined with tightness in his lower back ... Red Sox ace Jon Lester has 196 strikeouts in 182 innings this season ... Brett Anderson surrendered just one run and four hits in 7 2/3 innings Monday against the Mariners ... Twins setup man Brian Fuentes is just about over his back injury ... The incredible Jim Thome hit another tape-measure shot on Monday and has 21 homers and 51 RBI in just 240 at-bats this season ... Brian Roberts has seven hits over his last three games and has raised his batting average from .259 to .280 over that short span ... A's third baseman Kevin Kouzmanoff could miss several days due to back spasms ... Jason Varitek is back from the disabled list ... Chris Sale earned his first big-league victory on Monday after retiring all eight batters that he faced ... The Red Sox have promoted first base prospect Lars Anderson ... Fred Lewis remains sidelined with an elbow strain ... Orioles outfielder Adam Jones has missed 10 of the last 12 games due to shoulder soreness ... John Danks will start Wednesday against the Twins on three days' rest ... The Tigers' Carlos Guillen is in danger of missing the rest of the season due to an ongoing knee issue.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
Flip, Flip, Flipadelphia
They're back...

Last year's National League champions, the Philadelphia Phillies, got homers from Ryan Howard, Raul Ibanez and Shane Victorino to top the Marlins 8-7 on Tuesday night and recapture first place in the NL East for the first time since May 30. The Braves lost 5-0 to the Pirates and are now a half-game back in the division but one game up over the Giants in the race for the NL Wild Card.

We're going to see a ferocious finish in most of baseball's divisions and it is past crunch time in fantasy leagues. Let's hit on some news items from around MLB...

* The save became an official baseball statistic in 1969 and has been used to define the success of ninth-inning pitchers ever since. We can think of a boatload of ways to get a better read on closers and what makes them successful, but the save is a major part of fantasy baseball, at least in its most common forms, and there's certainly some merit to it.

Trevor Hoffman became the first pitcher in baseball history to reach the 600-save plateau on Tuesday when he shut down the Cardinals in the ninth inning at Milwaukee's Miller Park. "Hell's Bells" rang through the rafters afterward and Hoffman's three boys came out to hug him just to the right of the mound in a cool but understated ceremony. The 42-year-old gave way to new and future Brewers closer John Axford earlier this season but has still managed to rack up nine saves. He is expected to retire once this year is through.

* While one major league career is wrapping up, another is just beginning. Yunesky Maya, a 29-year-old defector from Cuba, inked a major league contract with the Nationals in late July and shot quickly through their farm system, allowing only one earned run in two starts once he arrived at Triple-A Syracuse. He was called up to the big leagues on Tuesday and penciled in for a major league debut against the Mets. Things didn't run completely smoothly -- he surrendered four runs in five innings while walking two -- but let's remind ourselves that this was his first taste of big league action. Maya should do well with the Nats and is most definitely worth a look in keeper leagues.

* The Padres were forced to scratch starter Mat Latos on Monday due to a "violent" stomach virus and it would have been perfectly understandable if he struggled a bit when taking the mound Tuesday. But he didn't struggle. Not at all. Latos, 22, fired seven innings of one-run ball against the Dodgers while striking out 10. The kid is now 14-5 on the year with a 2.21 ERA and 0.96 WHIP in 26 starts. He has racked up 170 strikeouts in a little over 162 innings and he has walked only 43. Latos will be a major fantasy starter in 2011.

NL Quick Hits: Marlins starter Josh Johnson has been scratched from his Friday start due to back and shoulder pain ... Dodgers lefty Clayton Kershaw is 0-3 over his last four starts despite allowing just eight runs in that span ... Brade Lidge will be unavailable until at least Friday due to a sore elbow ... Tim Lincecum racked up 11 strikeouts Tuesday against the Diamondbacks, reaching a double-digit strikeout total for the first time since July 7 ... The Mets are working on a plan to get starter Jon Niese more rest down the stretch ... Ian Stewart suffered a setback Tuesday in his rehab from a rib injury and has been shut down for a couple of days ... Jose Reyes is aiming to return to the Mets' lineup Friday ... Astros speedster Michael Bourn went 3-for-4 with a double, a triple and three RBI on Tuesday night while also collecting his 47th stolen base of the year ... Carlos Silva allowed a disappointing six runs over five innings Tuesday in his return from the disabled list ... David Wright is day-to-day with a bruised left ring finger ... An MRI on Justin Upton's sore shoulder Tuesday revealed no structural damage ... Brett Wallace hit his first major league home run Tuesday for the Astros ... Brandon Webb is scheduled for a third simulated game Wednesday ... Marlins rookie Mike Stanton has three homers in his last two games and 18 on the year ... Pirates starter James McDonald tossed seven innings of shutout ball Tuesday against a tough Braves lineup ... Chris Young could rejoin the Padres after one more rehab start ... The Nationals' Chien-Ming Wang has been ruled out for a possible return due to ongoing shoulder trouble ... D'Backs starter Kris Benson has been ruled out for the rest of the 2010 season ... Matt Lindstrom is content with staying in a setup role while Brandon Lyon continues to roll ... Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina is likely to sit out Wednesday.

AL Quick Hits: Rays outfielder Carl Crawford finished 4-for-4 with three doubles on Tuesday against the Red Sox ... Gordon Beckham is out indefinitely with pain and discomfort in his right hand ... Miguel Cabrera was pulled from Tuesday's game with lingering biceps soreness and is considered day-to-day ... Justin Masterson has turned in three straight quality starts and lowered his ERA from 5.40 to 4.88 in the past month ... Coco Crisp is day-to-day with a sore knee ... A's starter Dallas Braden was hammered for six runs in five innings Tuesday by the league-worst Mariners offense ... Scot Shields is out indefinitely with tightness in his throwing elbow ... Twins starter Francisco Liriano has now turned in three consecutive starts with one walk or less ... Billy Butler is day-to-day with a bruised right hand ... Freddy Garcia was lifted from his start against the Tigers on Tuesday due to a stiff lower back ... Jim Thome has four home runs in his last three games ... Daisuke Matsuzaka has allowed four or more runs in five straight starts ... Yankees DH Lance Berkman is 8-for-16 since returning from the disabled list ... Manny Ramirez, plunked by two pitches Tuesday, is day-to-day with a bruised left wrist ... Marco Scutaro is expected to play second base for the rest of the season due to tearing in his right shoulder ... Tigers second baseman Carlos Guillen is likely done for the year ... Shin-Soo Choo will participate in the Asian Games this November, hoping to receive an exemption from the South Korean military ... Paul Konerko remains day-to-day with a lower back issue ... Rays outfielder Gabe Kapler is expected to miss at least another week ... David Ortiz is telling reporters that he expects to return to Boston for the 2011 season.
 

hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
Jan 2, 2002
Messages
139,222
Tokens
So Long, Ace?
In undoubtedly the most unsettling injury news of the day, a report surfaced on MLB.com that Josh Johnson "may be done for the season" due to back and shoulder problems. Johnson underwent an MRI that showed that showed right shoulder inflammation and a mid-back strain on Wednesday. None of that sounds particularly terrifying, but with the Marlins 10 games back in the NL East, it remains possible that the ace right-hander is done for 2010.

In the short term, all we know is that the Marlins have scratched him from his Friday start, and beyond that, his timetable is uncertain. Mixed leaguers should remain patient for now, but don't be surprised if we've seen the last of Johnson this season. If the Marlins do opt to shut him down, hopefully this will prove to be a fully precautionary shutdown, as opposed to one of those precautionary shutdowns that ends with a surgical procedure.

* While younger brother Justin Upton remains day-to-day with a shoulder injury, B.J. Upton continues his impressive late-season surge. Bossman Junior hit his third homer in his last four games on Wednesday, giving him eight homers and 11 steals since the beginning of August and 16 homers and 39 steals on the season. The .237 batting average remains a significant disappointment, but Upton has otherwise salvaged solid mixed league value.

* Who said partially torn rotator cuffs were problematic? Marco Scutaro was originally out of Boston's lineup on Wednesday, then talked his way back in and recorded his first two-homer game of the season. There are no guarantees he'll be able to stay in there the rest of the way, but fantasy owners should obviously stick with him as long as he's fighting through it.

* Juan Gutierrez was absolutely atrocious earlier in the year (he had a 15.75 ERA and 2.63 WHIP in May), but the right-hander has suddenly become a very reliable ninth-inning option for Arizona. Gutierrez recorded his eighth save on Wednesday and has allowed just one run in 11 1/3 innings since the beginning of last month. He's still owned in just 12 percent of Yahoo leagues, so shallow mixed league owners fighting for saves should take a look and see if he's somehow still out there.

* Brian Duensing is far from the most exciting name to find relevance on the pitching waiver wire during the second half, but the lefty is well worth a starting spot in most formats at the moment. Duensing threw eight innings of one-run ball to beat the Royals on Wednesday (with a season-high seven K's) and has allowed one run or fewer in four of his last five starts.

NL Quick Hits: Ryan Howard went 3-for-5 with a homer and six RBI… Cory Luebke shut out the Dodgers for six innings with seven K's and is worth an add in NL-Only leagues… Daniel Hudson moved to 5-1 with a 1.91 ERA and 0.94 WHIP for the D'Backs after holding the Giants to one run in seven innings… Troy Tulowitzki (two homers Wednesday) has five homers in his last six games and 13 RBI in his last eight games… Brett Myers beat the Cubs with seven shutout innings… Ryan Braun hit homer No. 20 of a disappointing but still productive campaign… Albert Pujols hit his 36th… Derek Lowe beat the Nats with six innings of one-run ball, but is still a shaky consideration in mixed leagues… Aaron Cook is likely done for the year with a non-displaced right fibula fracture… Chris Capuano held the Cardinals to one run in seven innings in his longest outing since 2007.

NL Quick Hits, Part 2: Cole Hamels won his 10th game of the season with seven shutout innings against Florida… Jay Bruce (ribs) took BP and is hoping to return on Friday… Jimmy Rollins may miss time with a tight right hamstring… Already having undergone right ankle surgery, David Freese underwent a left ankle procedure as well… Mark Reynolds (hand) returned to action on Wednesday… Ricky Nolasco underwent season-ending surgery on his torn right meniscus and is expected to be ready for spring training… Wilson Ramos hit his first big league homer… Hanley Ramirez sat out due to a sore back… Aramis Ramirez (quad) was out of the starting lineup for a third straight day, but is hoping to return on Friday… Johan Santana (pectoral muscle) is not expected to pick up a baseball until Friday, but could still take his next turn early next week… David Wright (finger) returned to the lineup on Wednesday.

AL Quick Hits: Josh Hamilton (ribs) played a light game of catch on Wednesday, but is expected to be out until at least this weekend… Justin Morneau (concussion) said on Wednesday that he's still optimistic about returning this season, but it doesn't look like anything is imminent… An MRI on Brian Fuentes' back showed no significant damage… Derek Holland may have earned another start after striking out eight in five scoreless innings against Toronto… Nelson Cruz hit his first homer since coming off the DL 10 days ago… Ian Kinsler had a leadoff homer and his 11th steal in Wednesday's win… Jeremy Bonderman threw eight innings of one-run, three-hit ball in his longest outing since June 1… Adam Rosales is done for the season with a stress fracture in his right ankle… Jorge Posada (head) has been cleared to play… The Yankees have pushed back Phil Hughes' next start to next Wednesday, giving him nine days in between starts.

AL Quick Hits, Part 2: Victor Martinez reportedly wants more than the two-year extension the Red Sox have offered… Nick Swisher hit a walkoff two-run dinger to give the Yankees a 3-2 win and hand Koji Uehara his first blown save… Derek Jeter's OPS dropped below 700 for the season with an 0-for-4 against the O's (for frame of reference, Jeter's career-low OPS was a 771 mark in 2008)… Freddy Garcia is iffy for his Sunday start due to lingering lower back trouble… Gordon Beckham (hand) didn't play Wednesday, but X-rays came back negative and it doesn't sound like he'll be out too long… Manny Ramirez (wrist) returned to the starting lineup… Miguel Cabrera (shoulder) was out of the lineup on Wednesday and could miss multiple days with the Tigers out of contention.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,120,412
Messages
13,581,427
Members
100,980
Latest member
greetingshouse.co.uk
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com