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hacheman@therx.com
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Kendrys Returns

Nearly 22 months after infamously shattering his lower left leg jumping onto home plate following a game-winning grand slam on May 29, 2010, Kendrys Morales was finally back in a major league lineup Thursday. And the results were pretty encouraging.

Serving as the Angels' designated hitter against the Royals, Morales went 2-for-3 with a pair of singles and a run scored. The 28-year-old switch-hitter also tested his surgically-repaired ankle on the basepaths by scampering from first to third on a double and sliding into the base.

The current plan calls for Morales to DH again Friday before mapping out a plan for the weekend. The Angels still want to see if he can handle playing a few days in a row without discomfort, so he's not guaranteed to be ready for Opening Day, but there's plenty of cautious optimism going on right now.

It's easy to forget that Morales collected 34 homers, 108 RBI and a .924 OPS back in 2009, so he has a chance to be a major sleeper in mixed leagues if his ankle issues are truly behind him. I'm fully expecting his name to shoot up draft boards in the coming days.

For more rankings and analysis, along with projections, cheat sheets and prospect info, check out Rotoworld's Online Draft Guide.

Mad Dog's Elbow Is Barking

Reds' closer Ryan Madson has yet to make his Cactus League debut due to elbow discomfort. And it doesn't sound like he'll be throwing in a game anytime soon.

Madson was scheduled to pitch in a minor league game Thursday, but his appearance was scrapped after he suffered a setback. The elbow has been an issue for the 31-year-old right-hander since early in camp, though he did make considerable progress in recent days, including throwing around 20 pitches in a simulated game Tuesday without incident.

The Reds aren't saying much about his status moving forward, but it's obvious that Madson is running out of time to be ready for the start of the season. Of course, Opening Day isn't the finish line, so the Reds might be better served to bring him along slowly and have him miss a few weeks rather than rush him back and risk a potential setback.

Assuming Madson isn't available for the start of the season, the Reds are expected to turn to set-up man Sean Marshall to close games. The 29-year-old southpaw has just seven career saves to his name, but owns a 2.45 ERA over the past two seasons and has kept both righty and lefty hitters in check. The Reds would obviously prefer that Madson is ready after adding him on a one-year, $8.5 million contract over the winter, but Marshall is a pretty darn good fallback option.

Two Nats Hurting

Ryan Madson isn't the only closer who is ailing right now. Drew Storen, who was recently shut down for a week due to strep throat, was sent for further tests after feeling renewed discomfort in his biceps and triceps while playing catch Wednesday. The issue originally cropped up after his first two appearances of the spring, but Storen hasn't pitched in a game since March 7.

Nationals manager Davey Johnson downplayed the situation yesterday, but there's obvious reason for concern here, especially after the 24-year-old right-hander logged 75 1/3 innings last season. If Storen is unable to make progress over the next few days, we'll likely see either Brad Lidge or set-up man Tyler Clippard begin the year as the closer.



UPDATE: Mark Zuckerman of CSNWashington.com reports that an MRI showed no ligament or tendon damage, only joint inflammation. Storen will rest for a couple of days before throwing again. Obviously good news, but the Nats may still be without their closer on Opening Day.

Things are looking similarly grim for Storen's teammate Michael Morse. Davey Johnson said Thursday that the 30-year-old slugger recently received a platelet-rich plasma injection for his strained right lat and is unlikely to be ready for Opening Day.

Morse was originally called day-to-day after suffering the injury a little over two weeks ago. He returned to the lineup as the designated hitter on March 12 and 13, but hasn't done any baseball activities since. And while he's expected to serve as the team's starting left fielder this season, he has yet to play the field this spring.

Losing Morse for any length of time is obviously a tremendous blow to the Nationals' offense. They'll likely rely on some combination of Roger Bernadina, Brett Carroll, Mark De Rosa, Jason Michaels and Steve Lombardozzi in left field while Jayson Werth and Wilson Ramos are both considered candidates to fill in at the cleanup spot.

Chipper To Retire After 2012 Season

Less than two weeks after saying that this has been the most physically challenging camp of his career, Chipper Jones announced Thursday that he plans to retire following the season. This news doesn't come as a tremendous surprise, as he turns 40 in April and has battled numerous injuries over the past few seasons. Jones is due to make $13 million this year, but the Braves are now off the hook for his $7 million club option for 2012 which would have vested automatically if he played in at least 123 games this season.

There shouldn't be much debate about Jones' Hall of Fame case. The seven-time All-Star and 1999 NL MVP owns a .304/.402/.533 lifetime batting line to go along with 454 home runs, 1561 RBI and a .935 OPS. As our own Matthew Pouliot mentioned on HardballTalk yesterday, the only third basemen with more homers are Mike Schmidt and Eddie Matthews. The switch-hitter currently trails Schmidt and George Brett in RBI, but he can pass both of them if he drives in just 36 runs this season.

Jones hasn't had a great spring, but has at least shown some signs of life lately by collecting hits in four out of his last six games. I still think he can be useful in NL-only and deeper mixed formats when healthy, but he obviously can't be relied on at this point given his recent knee issues. As for the future, Martin Prado appears to be the likely successor at the hot corner. With Jones' various bumps and bruises, I figure he'll play there often enough this season to keep his eligibility at the position going into 2013.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Dream Team: The 'perfect' draft

By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com


Model Kate Upton might disagree, but the truth is nobody's perfect.
Oh, for one shining day, a baseball player might be: Ask perfect game pitchers Roy Halladay, Dallas Braden or David Wells about that; or Shawn Green, who had a 6-for-6 day with four home runs, a single and a double in 2002.
But even the façade of perfection occasionally presents flaws: Ask Armando Galarraga, he of the "28-out" perfect game; or Jonathan Sanchez, who would have been perfect if not for a Juan Uribe error in a July 10, 2009, no-hitter; or even David Wells, whose May 17, 1998, perfecto is sometimes downplayed because of the poor quality of the opposing Minnesota Twins lineup (for the record, it did include one Hall of Famer, Paul Molitor).
Perfection might be what we all strive to achieve, but all too often, it ends up barely outside our grasp.
Maybe fantasy owners, in general, believe they've achieved it upon the conclusion of draft day. You'll often hear someone say, "I love my team," as he exits the draft room. My theory is we're (mostly) eternal optimists; the truth is that if we really sat down to examine, rather than revel in the excitement that is draft day, we'd realize that even our "perfect" teams have fundamental flaws.
But what if we could have that perfect draft? Surely it exists, no?
This column says "yes."
The following is a team of my choosing, selected under conditions that assure everything falls into place: It is my "Dream Draft."
It's the draft in which I'm slotted precisely where I want, in which the team before me in the order never, ever steals my pick, the team after me always falls into the position-run trap at the spot I just picked, the pizza we ordered has all my favorite toppings and I get the most comfortable seat in the room. I used this phrase last year, and I'll repeat it: It's like everything is coming up chicken parm.
Now, to at least give this exercise a hint of reality, I first examined three things: our ESPN live draft results, which are based upon our standard game -- a 10-team, Rotisserie 5x5 mixed league -- our preseason rankings and our recent mock drafts. I then set some ground rules: No player could be picked more than five spots earlier than his average draft position (ADP) through the first 10 rounds, and no one more than two rounds later than his ADP in the final 15.
I then gave myself, just as last year, the No. 8 draft spot. This is not supposed to be easy. The idea is to give myself a spot that I don't totally loathe, but that presents a challenge in order to provide readers with my specific player insights.
Listed below are my picks, in order, round by round, with players listed at the positions I would initially slot them in my lineup:

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Round 1, Pick 8: OF Justin Upton, ADP: 13.4


If I didn't go off the board at the very beginning, this wouldn't be any fun, would it? Frankly, I see three players I'm targeting with my first pick if I'm not slotted in the top five: Joey Votto and Adrian Gonzalez, plus Upton. In this case, selecting Upton over either first baseman emphasizes his worth as a bona fide first-round pick, and it underscores some of the comments I made about him during our preseason rankings summit.
To recap: Flash forward one year from today, and if Upton is the consensus No. 1 pick in every fantasy format, I won't be at all surprised. Upton is one of only seven players in the history of baseball to manage multiple 20/20 seasons with at least an .800 OPS by the age of 23, yet he is considered by many to be a career disappointment to date. Seriously, this guy has the capability to register a .300 batting average, 40 homers and 20 steals in a season in the not-too-distant future.

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Round 2, Pick 13: SS Hanley Ramirez, ADP: 15.5


As difficult as it is to pass on Evan Longoria, Ramirez stands out as the potential steal of the second round. Every report on him this spring, every game of his that I've watched, plus his spring statistics, has been glowing. The instinct to grant Ramirez a "free pass" for his down 2011 feels right. He's one of the few players in baseball with the capability to fill all five standard Rotisserie categories and fill them well, and he's a shortstop, something most other players with his skills can't claim. I was down on Ramirez two months ago, but every day that has passed since then, he has convinced me that he'll bounce back in a big way.

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Round 3, Pick 28: OF Andrew McCutchen, ADP: 28.3


This is a dream round, with Felix Hernandez and Giancarlo Stanton also perfectly worthy choices in this slot, but a one-two-three punch of players with five-category potential is the kind of dream scenario I prefer to start off my team. McCutchen already has a .286-average season, a 23-homer season, an 89-RBI season and a 33-steal season on his résumé. And he's still just 25. How are we to say he won't match those personal bests in 2012, yet all in the same year?

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Round 4, Pick 33: 2B Dan Uggla, ADP: 41.3


Uggla has big-time power for a middle infielder, and he gets nowhere near the respect he deserves. Uggla has 189 career home runs as a second baseman in six seasons, more than halfway to the all-time record at the position (Jeff Kent, 351). He also holds the record for 30-homer seasons by a second baseman (5), and he already has four homers in what has been a standout spring thus far. I called Uggla's poor 2011 first half a matter of pressing while adapting to his new surroundings. His performance the second half of the year, and this spring, suggests he has fully settled in now.

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Round 5, Pick 48: SP Zack Greinke, ADP: 46.1


I simply can't repeat the key statistics more often: He was the major league leader in both xFIP (2.56) and strikeouts-per-nine innings ratio (10.54) last season. If you'd like to see my thoughts of him in more detail, check out my "Components of ERA" preseason column.

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Round 6, Pick 53: C Carlos Santana, ADP: 56.0


Wait, what?!?! Tristan, you just picked a catcher in the first 10 rounds of your draft … are you feeling all right? My response: Yes. I make exceptions, and Santana is one of them. There isn't a catcher in baseball who possesses his combination of power and selectiveness at the plate, and his prospects at leading the position in homers, RBIs and runs -- while putting forth numbers in those categories that rival a good first baseman, which is his other eligible position -- are excellent. My favorite stat: He has played seven full months at the big league level and has improved his OPS in every single one of them, with the exception of June 2011, when it dropped a mere two points (from .787 in May to .785).

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Round 7, Pick 68: SP Yovani Gallardo, ADP: 63.2


He has made significant advances in terms of command that rival the progress Clayton Kershaw made in 2010, and we all know what Kershaw did for a follow-up. Gallardo has shaved two walks per nine off his number in the past two seasons; he averaged 4.56 in 2009 and 2.56 last season. Accordingly, he has worked deeper into games, averaging 6.43 innings per start after the 2011 All-Star break. It's his time to join the game's elite.

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Round 8, Pick 73: SP Madison Bumgarner, ADP: 82.5


Talk about "joining the game's elite" … if Bumgarner isn't already there, then he certainly will be. If it's not Gallardo who winds up as the 2012 version of Kershaw -- yes, that means a legitimate shot at the Cy Young -- then it'll probably be Bumgarner, who became a bona fide strikeout artist a year ago. It's all about his slider, which is truly nasty: He recorded 85 of his 191 K's with that pitch.

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Round 9, Pick 88: 3B Kevin Youkilis, ADP: 89.8


I agree with Matthew Berry: "Dude, he's Kevin Youkilis!" Berry ranked Youkilis 57th overall; I ranked him 61st. The guy is 33 years old and averaged .308-25-90 numbers from 2008 to 2010 despite missing 103 games during that span. He's an absolute steal at his current (ninth round) ADP.

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Round 10, Pick 93: SP Daniel Hudson, ADP: 94.7


He had a 70.5 left-on-base percentage and .295 BABIP last season, compared to 83.1 and .241 in 2010, yet his xFIP in those two years was almost identical: 3.76 in 2010, 3.79 in 2011. Hudson's "true" value probably resides somewhere in between, but he won 16 games last season with a 3.49 ERA and 1.20 WHIP. If he were to actually improve upon those numbers …

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Round 11, Pick 108: OF Desmond Jennings, ADP: 102.8

Desmond Jennings should not be going outside the top 100 picks overall of a mixed draft. There's batting average risk, yes, but he also knows the strike zone -- his 19.6 percent chase rate last season was 15th best (as in, most disciplined) among hitters with 250 plate appearances in 2011 -- and with additional walks comes additional stolen-base opportunities. I'll take the 30-plus steals, and I figure that with 15-plus homers, he'd more than return my investment.

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Round 12, Pick 113: DH Billy Butler, ADP: 110.0


At worst, he'll provide this team batting-average stability. At best? Well, one would have to think that, at age 26, some of the 140 doubles he hit the past three years combined would begin clearing the fence, right? In defense of that, check out these numbers, which are the percentages of his balls in play that were hard-contact line drives or fly balls: 19 (2009), 21 (2010), 32 (2011).

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Round 13, Pick 128: SP Jordan Zimmermann, ADP: 120.7


The kid gloves come off this season, and the Washington Nationals, who fancy themselves contenders, should absolutely allow Zimmermann to approach 200 innings now that he's another year removed from Tommy John surgery. Last season, he both posted a professional best in walks-per-nine (1.73) and increased his fastball velocity (average 93.3 mph).

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Round 14, Pick 133: RP Jason Motte, ADP: 141.5


Everything I've ever advised you about ignoring postseason heroics gets tossed out the window when it comes to Motte. He's not a one-pitch pitcher -- that a straight-as-an-arrow fastball -- anymore, having added a cutter to help neutralize left-handers and keep all opposing hitters off-balance. Believe.

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Round 15, Pick 148: OF Cameron Maybin, ADP: 148.7


Maybin finished 81st on our Player Rater last season -- no, that is not a typo -- or 66 spots higher than where his current ADP places him. Excuse me, am I missing something? He batted .264, hit nine home runs and had 40 RBIs. How can anyone possibly expect him to decline from those numbers at age 25? Even a hint of burgeoning power would guarantee him a top-100 finish.

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Round 16, Pick 153: MI Neil Walker, ADP: 153.3


Walker just may be the sneakiest 90-RBI guy in baseball, much less this late in the draft. Oh, and he's a second baseman, filling a challenging position on your lineup card.

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Round 17, Pick 168: OF Logan Morrison, ADP: 164.0


Anyone who tweets as much as "@LoMoMarlins" does is A-OK with me. Oh, and he's a pretty good hitter, too. The one question I have about him, however, is which direction he's headed: Will he return to the .300-hitting, teens-power prospect he appeared to be during his minor league days, or is he trading some batting average for perhaps 25-homer power? Either way, it's a chance I'm happy to take.

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Round 18, Pick 173: RP Joe Nathan, ADP: 185.2


His first season fresh off Tommy John wasn't a pleasant one, but at least it culminated with a second half that included 11 saves, a 3.91 ERA and 1.00 WHIP, plus a slight bump in fastball velocity (92.9 mph average, up from 92.3 mph in the first half). The Texas Rangers were willing to take a chance on him, and so am I, as he's one of the more attractive late-round closers out there.

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Round 19, Pick 188: SP Brandon McCarthy, ADP: 188.0


McCarthy is another good example as to why I'm so willing to wait on pitching, particularly the back end of my staff, in so many leagues this season. Good pitcher, available late. Can't beat that.

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Round 20, Pick 193: Delmon Young (bench), ADP: 197.7


It's time to break out some of Tristan's Twenty. The entire point of that column -- at least the majority of the picks -- was to give you a strong starting point for late-round sleepers in mixed leagues, or to provide you bargain candidates in the middle rounds in singular formats (AL- or NL-only). Here's the other angle with Young: If Morrison indeed attempts to adapt his game to being more of a .260-25 hitter than a .290-15 type, then Young might be a wise mix-and-match partner in that outfield spot.

Round 21, Pick 208: 1B Ike Davis, ADP: 213.9. Though he has struggled recently during Grapefruit League play, perhaps that's helping to suppress his draft stock, creating another buying opportunity. The New York Mets have few stronger alternatives for one of the prime spots in their lineup, so the risk is well worth it … at least for a price like this.
Round 22, Pick 213: CI Lucas Duda, ADP: 209.5. Duda becomes valuable Davis insurance, or a corner infielder with upside if Davis succeeds.
Round 23, Pick 228: SP Derek Holland, ADP: 216.0. This is a pitching staff that will require careful maintenance and meticulous matchups selection, and I'm confident in my ability to do both. Holland is a patently obvious start-on-the-road candidate, and he's a good play at home against weak offenses, too.
Round 24, Pick 233: Vance Worley (bench), ADP: 218.8. He has 18 strikeouts in 16 spring innings, after having 66 in his final 61⅔ innings of last season (postseason included). Take him seriously, folks.
Round 25, Pick 248: Mat Gamel (bench), ADP: 226.2. It's only fitting that my final pick be another of "Tristan's Twenty," and the sixth in a row from that list. It sure helps that Gamel will quickly acquire first- and third-base dual eligibility, and that he's tearing up the Cactus League so far.
Here's how the team would shape up, using only projected statistics accrued by players drafted into active lineup spots. Projections are from ESPN's 2012 Draft Kit, to give you a sense of the team's expected performance.


<style type="text/css">.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</style><table style="margin: 0px; width: 100%;"><thead><tr><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Pos.</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Rd.</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;">Player</th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>AVG</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>HR</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>RBI</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>SB</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>R</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>W</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>SV</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>ERA</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>WHIP</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>K</center></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">C</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Carlos Santana</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.250</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">23</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">83</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">82</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">21</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Ike Davis</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.269</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">19</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">79</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">71</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">4</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Dan Uggla</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.263</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">34</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">90</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">91</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">9</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Kevin Youkilis</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.284</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">21</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">86</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">4</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">84</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SS</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Hanley Ramirez</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.282</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">21</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">85</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">32</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">96</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">CI</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">22</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Lucas Duda</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.274</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">18</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">73</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">60</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">MI</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">16</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Neil Walker</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.285</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">13</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">85</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">9</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">73</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">OF</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Justin Upton</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.285</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">29</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">90</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">22</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">102</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">OF</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Andrew McCutchen</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.285</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">21</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">82</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">28</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">97</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">OF</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">11</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Desmond Jennings</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.256</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">16</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">51</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">37</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">82</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">OF</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">15</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Cameron Maybin</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.260</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">11</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">49</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">33</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">85</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">OF</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">17</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Logan Morrison</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.272</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">19</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">76</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">4</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">69</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">UT</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">12</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Billy Butler</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.298</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">19</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">92</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">76</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">5</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Zack Greinke</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">15</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.39</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.16</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">233</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">7</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Yovani Gallardo</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">16</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.36</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.20</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">234</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">8</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Madison Bumgarner</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">12</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.17</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.17</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">189</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">10</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Daniel Hudson</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">14</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.47</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.20</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">186</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">13</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Jordan Zimmermann</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">11</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.31</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.17</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">175</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">19</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Brandon McCarthy</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">12</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.30</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.19</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">135</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">21</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Derek Holland</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">12</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">4.39</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.37</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">164</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">RP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">14</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Jason Motte</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">5</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">35</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2.86</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.09</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">63</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">RP</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">18</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Joe Nathan</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">4</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">36</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.54</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.18</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">64</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">20</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Delmon Young</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.281</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">17</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">83</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">65</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">24</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Vance Worley</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">10</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">0</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.92</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.30</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">140</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">B</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">25</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Mat Gamel</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.243</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">18</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">63</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">2</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">55</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Active players</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.274</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">264</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1021</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">181</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1068</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">101</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">71</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.46</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.20</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1443</td></tr></tbody></table>


Now, this assumes that every player on the team performs at his projected level and that I agree with every projection -- which I don't. Part of the reason this is a "dream draft" is that these are players I personally consider more valuable than our consensus rankings and projections dictate; that's the entire point of the exercise. To be specific, the projections for Upton, Ramirez and Hudson seem awfully conservative to me, and there is considerable upside potential to picks like Bumgarner, Butler, Maybin, Morrison, Davis, Holland and Gamel, with the odds of these players exceeding our projections better than their falling short.
We've provided a handy reference guide as to the average categorical performance in Rotisserie leagues the past three seasons combined right here, and if I'm to grant my "Dream Team" a number equivalent to the Rotisserie point total that's next-lowest to my projected number -- meaning that a projected 264 home runs would earn six points, because that's greater than 262.2, the average total from a team that earned six in that category -- this is how the team would fare:


<style type="text/css">.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</style><table style="margin: 0px; width: 100%;"><thead><tr><th style="vertical-align: bottom;">Player</th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>AVG</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>HR</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>RBI</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>SB</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>R</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>W</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>SV</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>ERA</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>WHIP</center></th><th style="vertical-align: bottom;"><center>K</center></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Team totals</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">.274</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">264</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1021</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">181</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1068</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">101</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">71</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3.46</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1.20</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">1443</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;">Rotisserie points</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">7</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">6</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">8</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">3</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">8</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">9</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">9</td></tr></tbody></table>



Feel free to criticize a 68-point projected team, if you wish -- I'm not about to hide that that looks like a third-place number -- especially in light of the fact an average winning team in an ESPN standard Rotisserie 5x5 league managed a hair north of 80 points in 2011. It is a "Dream Draft" without a perfect score; those things seem contradictory. But, a few caveats:
• This team features two closers, but it has been well documented how frequently saves can be gotten off the waiver wire. I'm active on the add/drop front and have no fear padding that save total by at least another 30, meaning careful roster management alone should massage that total to at least six. If you think you have to win saves at the draft table, you've got another thing coming.
• These projections fail to account for add/drops of any kind, and besides merely saves, plenty of value can be found on the waiver wire in-season. This is a team, for example, likely to stream starters, and with careful enough management, there's no reason it couldn't lead its league in both wins and K's.
• Again, I think our projections for this group is conservative. Using my own estimates, this would be more like a 74-point team straight out of the draft. And if you can't be confident in your ability to manage a 74-point team into the 80-point range, you're going to be in trouble once the regular season arrives.
Perhaps that's me just waxing poetic about my team at draft's conclusion, just as everyone does. Perhaps. But I'm confident in this squad, and remember, the point is to always strive to get as close to perfection -- however you judge it -- as possible.
Now, Kate, let me in! "Randy Johnson" tells me the lobster is great …
 

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Projecting top young arms

Elite prospects who don't dominate out of the gates can fall off the radar. But there's a learning curve with any young ball player. I call the first year or two of learning in the big leagues Prospect Purgatory. There's a wide range of potential outcomes, and patience is paramount. Utilizing the qualification criteria listed below, this article is aimed at projecting how some of today's young, coveted arms will perform.Qualification Criteria1. Age 23 or younger2. Less than 125 career MLB innings pitched3. Upside is as an above-average MLB starting pitcher4. Has already pitched in the big leagues

Randall Delgado, RHP, ATLAge: 22

I saw first saw Delgado two years ago in minor league camp. I loved his advanced feel for pitching, fastball movement and secondary. He's pitching with more velocity now and looks like a potential No. 2 starter. Pitching with some front-arm funk, he creates some up-front deception but he doesn't hide the ball well. His fastball sat around 93 MPH in the big leagues last year (sample size over 500 fastballs). He has a good feel for a changeup that could be above-average and his curve has progressed to the point of looking like an above-average pitch too. Delgado needs to pitch down with good angle to establish his fastball. It's not live or deceptive enough for him to leave out over the plate much.Prediction: Though he has earned the opportunity to face big-league hitters at a young age, Delgado could have some ugly stretches this season. I like him as a No. 2-3 long-term.

Danny Duffy, LHP, KCAge: 23Quick, how many left-handed starting pitchers have fastballs that sit at 94 MPH or higher? David Price, Clayton Kershaw, Derek Holland and C.C. Sabathia are among the few -- Matt Moore will likely be as well. Last year, Duffy's average fastball was just over 94 MPH (sample size: 1,000+ fastballs). Smooth and coordinated, he also has a curveball that will get swing-throughs and a changeup that could be above-average. He maintains a pretty good tempo and fits within the power pitcher mold stuff-wise.For Adam Foster's Top 100 prospects, plus the best rankings, cheatsheets, projections and much more ... Get Rotoworld's MLB Draft Guide.

Prediction: Don't expect Duffy to be a top-of-the-rotation starter in 2012, but he could reach that plateau within a few years. Just know that he is a fly ball pitcher who will be inconsistent until he sharpens his fastball command.

Matt Moore, LHP, TBAge: 22Moore is the second best pitching prospect I've scouted in the last five years. Only Stephen Strasburg was better. He has a plus, mid-90s fastball and an outstanding breaking ball. His delivery is clean, simple and repeatable. MLB Hitters swung through nearly a quarter of his fastballs last year, which puts him in Gio Gonzalez/Cliff Lee territory (elite). It's not unrealistic to project his fastball to be top three in baseball among starting pitchers over the next three years. His changeup is a pretty good pitch too. If you're looking for a weakness, he doesn't have a lot of deception, relying and velocity and location over a quick tempo.Prediction: Already equipped with the arsenal to attack MLB hitters, Moore could make a smooth transition to the bigs and quickly surface as a top-of-the-rotation starter. It wouldn't surprise me if he pitches like a No. 2 in 2012.

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Jarrod Parker, RHP, OAKAge: 23Parker throws hard, has swing-and-miss stuff and does a good job keeping the ball down in the zone. It's only a matter of time before he gets his chance in the big leagues and shows flashes of dominance. He is smooth and balanced in his delivery, but he doesn't incorporate a lot of lower body, which, in addition to his injury history, doesn't make him the safest bet to have a long, durable career. But the stuff, arsenal depth and velocity are there. Parker missed all of 2010 after having Tommy John surgery in 2009. All things considered, he's risen through the minors very quickly (he was a high school draft pick and has less than 2.5 years of minor league experience). Prediction: A victim of command struggles this spring, Parker has lost some of the shiny upside lore that once made him a household prospect name. That said, he's still plenty talented enough to be one of the best rookies in baseball this year. Don't sleep on him.

Drew Pomeranz, LHP, COLAge: 23Pomeranz slings the ball from a deceptive arm slot. It's not pretty or athletic-looking but it has been effective. Given his big frame and the buzz around him in college, I expected a different kind of pitcher. He's not smooth and easy, though he does have a very good curveball. His fastball gets on hitters quickly and he has shown mid-90s velocity in the past. Depending on the progress of his changeup, he may be a tempting option, ultimately, as a closer.Prediction: Pomeranz was good enough to breeze through the minors, but I haven't seen the command or arsenal depth to feel comfortable projecting him as more than a No. 3 starter at this point.
 

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Going Madson

When the Reds inked Ryan Madson to a one-year, $8.5 million contract in January, they were universally lauded for landing one of the top free agent relievers at a relatively bargain price. As it turns out, though, they’ll get zero pitches for their $8.5 million investment, as Madson needs Tommy John surgery to repair an ulnar collateral ligament that was “torn off the bone,” according to Dr. Tim Kremcheck.



It’s obviously an unfortunate piece of news for the Reds, but they are lucky enough to have a pretty deep bullpen that contains at least a couple candidates to fill Madson’s ninth-inning role. Sean Marshall, who was acquired from the Cubs over the offseason, is the most obvious candidate. The lanky left-hander holds a 2.45 ERA, 1.10 WHIP and 169/42 K/BB ratio in his past 150 1/3 innings of work, and he has had success against both left- and right-handed batters.



Reds general manager Walt Jocketty won’t officially name a new closer yet.



“I think we’ll determine that between (manager) Dusty (Baker), (pitching coach Another option would be Another closer that might not be ready on Opening Day is the Nationals’ The obvious candidate to fill in for Storen is setup man extraordinaire Tyler Clippard, but manager Davey Johnson wants to keep Clippard in his familiar eighth inning role and thus not disrupt the bullpen further. Instead, it will likely be a combination of Brad Lidge and The 18-year veteran, who will turn 40 next month, tore the meniscus in his left knee last Thursday while running in the outfield. He’ll undergo arthroscopic surgery Monday and will obviously begin the season on the disabled list. The good news is that the procedure shouldn’t sideline him long. Chipper had a similar operation on his right knee last season and missed 2 ½ weeks. If all goes well, he could be back for the Braves’ home opener on April 13.



Filling in at third base for Chipper will be
Martin Prado, who will slide in from left field. Prado, of course, has plenty of experience at the position, having played 41 games there last season and over 150 games there during his career. The Braves will likely use Eric Hinske and Giavotella didn’t hit too well at spring training, batting .250/.267/.318 with a 12/1 K/BB ratio over 19 games, but it wasn’t his work at the plate that cost him an everyday job.



“He didn’t hit (in spring training) over the course of 44 at-bats,” manager Ned Yost told the Kansas City Star, “but that’s not a (reliable) sample. Johnny can hit. Johnny was two or three days away from hitting .350. The issue was the defense.”



Giavotella still has a good shot at snatching the big league second base job at some point this season if he can iron out some of his defensive issues at second base, but for now the team will go with a platoon of
Chris Getz and Yuniesky Betancourt. Getz is the one of the two that deserves attention in AL-only formats, as he’ll not only be on the long end of the platoon but has stolen 62 bases over 307 games during his career.



Revere might be bench-bound



Twins manager Ron Gardenhire indicated in January that Ben Revere was the odds-on favorite to break camp with the starting job in left field. Now, it appears that the 23-year-old will start the season on the bench.



After he decided the veteran wasn’t quite comfortable enough in right field, Gardenhire on Sunday named Josh Willingham his everyday left fielder. Most figured that meant Revere, who has batted .325/.357/.375 with three steals this spring, would simply slide over to the other corner spot. But, it appears that he’ll be the fourth outfielder and Trevor Plouffe and Chris Parmelee will battle for the right field job. It’s an obvious blow to those that already drafted Revere hoping for 30+ steals from the youngster.



As far as Plouffe and Parmelee go, the latter has had the better spring, hitting .286/.362/.571 with three longballs. Parmelee also was a sensation last September, batting .355/.443/.592 with four homers over 88 plate appearances. But, the former first-round pick holds a pedestrian .266/.355/.436 batting line over his minor league career and has never hit more than 16 homers in a season. Neither he nor Plouffe would have mixed league appeal.​
 

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Get ready for extra-long 'Week 1'

By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

On tap: The 2012 Major League Baseball season begins with a pair of games in Japan, the Oakland Athletics and Seattle Mariners battling at the Tokyo Dome at 6:10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, March 28, and 5:10 a.m. ET, on Thursday, March 29. From there, it'll be another six days before the next "game that counts": The St. Louis Cardinals and newly renamed Miami Marlins will christen the latter's new stadium, Marlins Ballpark, with a Wednesday, April 4, night game (7 p.m. ET). Baseball's traditional "Opening Day" follows on Thursday, April 5, with 12 teams scheduled for their first games of the season, and on Friday, April 6, the final 14 teams will play their 2012 openers.

Among the fantasy-related highlights of baseball's opening week: Stephen Strasburg was tabbed the Washington Nationals' Opening Day starter, pitching Thursday, April 5, at Chicago's Wrigley Field. Juan Nicasio, whose career was threatened by a head injury suffered when he was struck by a batted ball, will make his return start for the Colorado Rockies on Monday, April 9. And Johan Santana, who missed the entire 2011 season, is scheduled to pitch for the New York Mets at some point during the April 5-8 opening series.


ESPN leagues: Roster settings



In ESPN leagues, "Week 1" extends from the first pitch of the Wednesday, March 28, game in Japan, through the Los Angeles Angels at New York Yankees "Sunday Night Baseball" game on April 15. In head-to-head leagues, those 19 days will represent your first matchups of the 2012 season.


Lineup deadlines differ depending upon whether your league allows daily or weekly transactions. In daily leagues, players will lock at their scheduled game times by day, meaning Athletics and Mariners players, for example, will lock at 6:10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, March 28, then 5:10 a.m. ET on Thursday, March 29, and so on.


In weekly leagues, lineups for the entire "Week 1" will lock beginning with the first pitch of that scheduled period: That's 6:10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, March 28. Lineup changes, even for players not on the Athletics or Mariners, will not take effect again until Monday, April 16, in Week 2. Set your lineups now!


In addition, if your league has not yet drafted, be aware that drafts that occur after the start of either Japan game will lock the drafted starting lineups into place retroactively, meaning that if you draft an injured or minor league player into an active roster spot, that player will remain there either through all of "Week 1" in a weekly league, or until the next eligible roster deadline in a daily league. In other words, if you draft Chase Utley as your starting second baseman in a Sunday, April 1, draft, he will remain in that spot through Sunday, April 15, despite the fact that he will likely spend the entirety of "Week 1" on the disabled list, so make sure you take advantage of the option to draft players to your bench.


Japan games: The ratings



Pitching might well be the storyline at the Tokyo Dome these first two days of the 2012 season; as you can see, each of the four pitchers scheduled to start have ratings of "7" or higher, and both of the Opening Day starters -- Felix Hernandez for the Mariners and Brandon McCarthy for the Athletics -- rate a perfect "10." There's no more obvious reason than this: The Mariners averaged a major league-low 3.43 runs per game with a league-worst .640 OPS last season, while the Athletics ranked 10th- and sixth-worst in those categories with 3.98 and .680 numbers.



<style type="text/css">.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</style><table style="margin: 0px; width: 100%;"><thead><tr><th style="width: 30px; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Team</center></th><th style="width: 25%; vertical-align: bottom;" colSpan="2"><center>Wed 3/28</center></th><th style="width: 25%; vertical-align: bottom;" colSpan="2"><center>Thu 3/29</center></th><th style="width: 30px; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Team</center></th><th style="width: 25%; vertical-align: bottom;" colSpan="2"><center>Wed 3/28</center></th><th style="width: 25%; vertical-align: bottom;" colSpan="2"><center>Thu 3/29</center></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">
oak.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SEA
McCarthy
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">H: 1
L: 1
R: 1
S: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">SEA
Colon
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">H: 5
L: 2
R: 6
S: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">
sea.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">@OAK
Hernandez
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">H: 1
L: 2
R: 1
S: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: middle;" align="center">@OAK
Vargas
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">H: 5
L: 10
R: 1
S: 6</td></tr></tbody></table>Some of the data used to generate this chart is derived from Baseball Musings' Day-by-day database.

P: The starting pitcher's matchup rating, which accounts for past history (three years' worth as well as past 21 days), opponent and ballpark. H: Hitters' matchup rating, which accounts for the opposing starting pitcher's past history (three years' worth as well as past 21 days) as well as ballpark factors. L: Hitters' matchup rating accounting only for left-handed hitters. R: Hitters' matchup rating accounting for only right-handed hitters. S: Base stealing matchup rating, which accounts for the opponent's catchers' ability to gun down opposing base stealers. Ratings range from 1-10, with 10 representing the best possible matchup, statistically speaking, and 1 representing the worst.




Be conservative when selecting individual hitters from either team, even from the Athletics, who finished with better team hitting numbers in 2011. After all, Hernandez is 12-4 with a 2.54 ERA and 1.14 WHIP in his career against the Athletics, limiting them to a .617 combined OPS. Vargas, meanwhile, had a 3.86 ERA and 1.10 WHIP in his five starts versus the Athletics in 2011, limiting them to a .634 OPS as a team. The Mariners, meanwhile, have fantasy choices that border upon the obvious: Ichiro Suzuki, Dustin Ackley and Jesus Montero; with Mike Carp and Justin Smoak their two most notable sleeper choices for the initial two games.


Full Forecaster pitching charts



Unfortunately, with so few teams having declared their season-opening rotations -- remember that 28 teams won't begin play for at least another week -- it's impossible to fully project pitching matchups and rate starting pitchers accordingly. You can find the full schedule grid at column's end, or by clicking here, though any team with uncertain rotation plans will have scheduled starters listed as "TBD."


The Forecaster will, however, get a thorough Week 1 update, on Tuesday, April 3, once the majority of pitching rotations are known.


Winners and losers: The "volume" plays



Often, it's the teams that play the most in a given week that present the greatest advantage, specifically in terms of hitting and relief pitching. (Remember, homers, RBIs, runs and saves are "counting numbers"; you want games, games, games.) Here are the teams with the most games in "Week 1":


11 games: Mariners (3 home)
10 games: Athletics (7 home -- though 2 in Japan), Texas Rangers (7 home), Chicago Cubs (7 home), Cincinnati Reds (6 home), Los Angeles Dodgers (6 home), Marlins (4 home), Milwaukee Brewers (3 home), Cardinals (3 home), San Diego Padres (7 home), Nationals (4 home)


7 home games: Athletics, Rangers, Cubs, Padres. No team plays more than seven home games during "Week 1."


All 30 teams play at least three home games during "Week 1."


Injury concerns



In weekly leagues, it's less advisable to take chances on players who might require a DL stint to begin the regular season. The following players are in greatest danger of missing time at the beginning of "Week 1," those a virtual lock for the DL noted:


A.J. Burnett (eye): Headed for the DL
Chris Carpenter (neck): Headed for the DL
Carl Crawford (wrist)
Stephen Drew (ankle): Headed for the DL
Neftali Feliz (shoulder)
Corey Hart (knee)
Ryan Howard: Headed for the DL
Tim Hudson (back): Headed for the DL
Adam LaRoche (ankle)
Michael Morse (shoulder)
Carlos Quentin (knee): Headed for the DL
Brian Roberts (concussion): On the DL
Drew Storen (elbow)
Chase Utley (knee): Headed for the DL
Ryan Vogelsong (back)


These players, meanwhile, are reportedly healthy enough to make their respective teams' Opening Day rosters: Miguel Cabrera (eye), Allen Craig (knee), Shaun Marcum (shoulder), Logan Morrison (knee), Chris Perez (ribs), Giancarlo Stanton (knee), B.J. Upton (back).


Projected starting pitchers



The chart below lists each of the 30 MLB teams' schedules and projected starting pitchers, and provides a matchup rating for each day's starter. Pitchers scheduled to start multiple times this week are in gray/beige boxes.



<style type="text/css">.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</style><table style="margin: 0px; width: 100%;"><thead><tr><th style="width: 35px; vertical-align: bottom;"><center> </center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Wed
3/28</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Thu
3/29</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Wed
4/4</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Thu
4/5</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Fri
4/6</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Sat
4/7</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Sun
4/8</center></th></tr></thead><thead><tr><th style="width: 35px; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Team</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Mon
4/9</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Tue
4/10</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Wed
4/11</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Thu
4/12</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Fri
4/13</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Sat
4/14</center></th><th style="width: 14%; vertical-align: bottom;"><center>Sun
4/15</center></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
bal.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIN
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TOR
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TOR
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TOR
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
bos.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@DET
Lester
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@DET
Beckett
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@DET
Buchholz
(RHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TOR
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@TOR
Lester
(LHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TOR
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">TB
Beckett
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">TB
Buchholz
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TB
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
chw.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@TEX
Danks
(LHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CLE
Danks
(LHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">DET
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">DET
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">DET
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
cle.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">TOR
Masterson
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">TOR
Jimenez
(RHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">TOR
Tomlin
(RHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHW
Lowe
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHW
Masterson
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CHW
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@KC
Jimenez
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@KC
Tomlin
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@KC
Lowe
(RHP)
P: 4</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
det.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
Verlander
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TB
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TB
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TB
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHW
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHW
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHW
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
kan.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAA
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@OAK
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@OAK
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@OAK
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CLE
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
laa.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">KC
Weaver
(RHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">KC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">KC
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@MIN
Weaver
(RHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYY
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
min.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BAL
Pavano
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BAL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BAL
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">TEX
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
nyy.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@TB
Sabathia
(LHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TB
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TB
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BAL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BAL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@BAL
Sabathia
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAA
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
oak.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
McCarthy
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
Colon
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">KC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">KC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">KC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SEA
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
sea.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@OAK
Hernandez
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@OAK
Vargas
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@OAK
Hernandez
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@OAK
Vargas
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@TEX
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">OAK
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">OAK
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">OAK
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
tam.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
Shields
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYY
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@DET
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@DET
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@DET
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@BOS
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
tex.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHW
Lewis
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CHW
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">CHW
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SEA
Lewis
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SEA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIN
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
tor.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CLE
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CLE
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BOS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BAL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BAL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">BAL
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
ari.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Kennedy
(RHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Hudson
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Collmnter
(RHP)
P: 7</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@SD
Cahill
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SD
Saunders
(LHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@SD
Kennedy
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Hudson
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Collmnter
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Cahill
(RHP)
P: 4</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
atl.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYM
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYM
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@NYM
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@HOU
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@HOU
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@HOU
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIL
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
chc.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">WAS
Dempster
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">WAS
Garza
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">WAS
Samardzija
(RHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIL
Volstad
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIL
Dempster
(RHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIL
Maholm
(LHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIL
Garza
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@STL
Samardzija
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@STL
Volstad
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@STL
Dempster
(RHP)
P: 4</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
cin.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIA
Cueto
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">MIA
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@WAS
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
col.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@HOU
Guthrie
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@HOU
Chacin
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@HOU
Pomeranz
(LHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Nicasio
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Guthrie
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">SF
Chacin
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">ARI
Pomeranz
(LHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">ARI
Nicasio
(RHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ARI
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
hou.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">COL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">COL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">COL
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIA
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@MIA
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
lad.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SD
Kershaw
(LHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SD
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">PIT
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">PIT
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">PIT
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">SD
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
mia.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
Johnson
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CIN
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CIN
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">HOU
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">HOU
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">HOU
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
mil.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">STL
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@CHC
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@ATL
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
nym.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ATL
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">WAS
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@PHI
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
phi.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@PIT
Halladay
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@PIT
Lee
(LHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@PIT
Worley
(RHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIA
Hamels
(LHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIA
Halladay
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">MIA
Lee
(LHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">NYM
Worley
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">NYM
Hamels
(LHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">NYM
Blanton
(RHP)
P: 4</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
pit.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">PHI
Bedard
(LHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">PHI
Karstens
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">PHI
McDonald
(RHP)
P: 6</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@LAD
Correia
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@LAD
Bedard
(LHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@LAD
Karstens
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@SF
McDonald
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@SF
Morton
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@SF
Correia
(RHP)
P: 5</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
stl.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@MIA
Lohse
(RHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@MIL
Garcia
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@MIL
Wainwright
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@MIL
Lynn
(RHP)
P: 5</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CIN
Westbrook
(RHP)
P: 3</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CIN
Lohse
(RHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CIN
Garcia
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHC
Wainwright
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHC
Lynn
(RHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CHC
Westbrook
(RHP)
P: 5</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
sdg.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">LAD
TBD</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ARI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ARI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">ARI
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAD
TBD</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">@LAD
TBD</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
sfo.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@ARI
Lincecum
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@ARI
Bumgarner
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@ARI
Cain
(RHP)
P: 9</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Zito
(LHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Lincecum
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@COL
Bumgarner
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">PIT
Cain
(RHP)
P: 10</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">PIT
Zito
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center">PIT
Vogelsong
(RHP)
P: 8</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead><tbody><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: middle;" rowSpan="2" align="center">
was.gif
</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CHC
Strasburg
(RHP)
P: 8</td><td style="vertical-align: top;" align="center"> </td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CHC
Gonzalez
(LHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@CHC
Zimmrmnn
(RHP)
P: 5</td></tr><tr class="last"><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@NYM
Jackson
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@NYM
Lannan
(LHP)
P: 4</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">@NYM
Strasburg
(RHP)
P: 9</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CIN
Gonzalez
(LHP)
P: 7</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CIN
Zimmrmnn
(RHP)
P: 6</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CIN
Jackson
(RHP)
P: 5</td><td style="vertical-align: top; background-color: rgb(248, 248, 242);" align="center">CIN
Lannan
(LHP)
P: 5</td></tr><thead><tr><th colSpan="8"></th></tr></thead></table>P: The starting pitcher's matchup rating, which accounts for past history (three years' worth as well as past 21 days), opponent and ballpark. Ratings range from 1-10, with 10 representing the best possible matchup, statistically speaking, and 1 representing the worst.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Bullpen Report: Late-spring update
in.gif


Eric Karabell
By now you're probably aware that veteran right-hander Ryan Madson would make for a poor pick in 2012 fantasy drafts. The man who was signed to what seemed to be a steal of a one-year deal to close for the Cincinnati Reds tore an elbow ligament and will need Tommy John surgery, meaning that he very well might never pitch for the Reds.

<offer>Lefty Sean Marshall, on the other hand, will. (Well, at least he's healthy as of today.) He's expected to close and could be every bit as good at it as we expected Madson to be. I wouldn't select Marshall in the top 10 in Madson's place -- there remains a bit of doubt here -- but he's an accomplished pitcher who was among the top relief pitchers in FanGraphs WAR (Wins Above Replacement) a season ago while setting up Carlos Marmol for the Chicago Cubs, and should thrive again. ESPN Fantasy ranks Marshall 31st among relief pitchers, but for me he's already in Marmol's range, just outside the top 20, along with Brandon League and Joe Nathan, and ahead of Matt Capps and Frank Francisco.</offer>


This is yet another reminder that relief pitchers make for dangerous investments, and that's why I tend to avoid them until the middle rounds. Of course it's about value, too, but just since the last time I blogged about closers -- it was less than a week ago! -- other closers have been in the news, too. Let's look more closely at two situations in some degree of flux, and address a few other notes:Washington Nationals: I think fantasy owners are prematurely panicking about right-hander Drew Storen. Yes, his throwing elbow is sore, but assuming that his problem/result is similar to Madson's is silly. Storen had an MRI, and no structural damage was found. I suspect he starts the season on the disabled list but earns decent value if he falls out of the top 10 closers in drafts. This was fantasy's No. 2 closer on the 2011 Player Rater. I mean, is Brian Wilson safer after his occasionally erratic 2011? Rafael Betancourt has never closed before, and he's 36. And the name J.J. Putz doesn't exactly connote durability.

What's interesting is that Nationals manager Davey Johnson is saying he won't move top setup man Tyler Clippard into the closer role, at least initially. Clippard is arguably fantasy's top non-closer reliever, earning wins, strikeouts and a low ERA, and for those leagues that care, he also gets many holds. Johnson says he "doesn't want to weaken two spots." Sounds like major praise for Brad Lidge and Henry Rodriguez to me! Look, Lidge was, on the surface, effective in his 19 1/3 innings for the Philadelphia Phillies last season, but his velocity was way down (from 91 mph to roughly 88), and he can't seem to stay healthy. Rodriguez, as noted last week, throws exceptionally hard (with the highest fastball velocity among relievers) but lacks control. The 1.50 WHIP tells us more than his 3.56 ERA.
I don't think Storen will miss much time, but if a Madson-like announcement does hit, I'd add Rodriguez. Frankly, he reminds me of Marmol: wild but occasionally dominating. Don't draft either Lidge or H-Rod in 10-team formats yet.Kansas City Royals: Manager Ned Yost claims he hasn't made a decision on his closer, now that Joakim Soria is set to undergo Tommy John surgery, and won't before Opening Day. "If I see a necessity to do it, I'll do it, but right now I don't see a necessity to do it," Yost said. Well, Ned, fantasy owners see the necessity!

What's interesting about the Royals' situation is they have not two, but three candidates to close, in Yost's words. I speculated last week that Aaron Crow was the sleeper here, with Greg Holland being the best option and Jonathan Broxton the likely ninth-inning winner, at least initially, because he has "experience" closing and most managers don't think about anything else when selecting a replacement. But now, with Crow apparently in the picture, I really think the young righty has a shot. Holland led the big leagues in inherited runner percentage last year, allowing only two of 33 runners to score. Perhaps somebody told Yost that and he's strongly considering leaving him for the eighth inning, like Clippard in Washington.
I don't think Broxton is better than Holland or Crow, frankly, and he's coming off his own elbow surgery, so I'll take the (way) under on him pitching 60 innings without issue. If looking for saves in early April, Broxton's the leader to get them, but if you're asking me who finishes with the most saves for the Royals, I still think it's Holland, but Crow is more than a sleeper. He might be the closer in a week. In a standard league, I'd still take 25 relievers over any Royals, but in a deeper format, go Holland, Crow, Broxton, in that order.
AL notes: Baltimore Orioles right-hander Jim Johnson remains iffy for Opening Day with back issues, but he has the closer job. The Orioles are reportedly trying to trade Kevin Gregg. Good luck with that. Don't be surprised if Matt Lindstrom gets some April saves. … Perhaps my most controversial prediction in last week's saves blog entry was that Addison Reed would be the guy for the Chicago White Sox. New manager Robin Ventura has said that lefty Matt Thornton and right-hander Jesse Crain are the top contenders for April, but Crain is dealing with an oblique strain and might not be ready for April. I'd say Thornton closes Opening Day, but I still think Reed gets more saves in 2012. … Cleveland Indians right-hander Chris Perez threw in a minor league game Monday, and is scheduled to do so again later in the week. I think he's closing Opening Day, not replacement Vinnie Pestano.NL notes: Los Angeles Dodgers manager Don Mattingly named capable Javy Guerra his closer three weeks ago. I know we all love Kenley Jansen, but I don't see how a fantasy owner can draft him before Guerra. … Many of us think Miami Marlins right-hander Heath Bell will struggle this season, so it's important that we know who's next in line. Spend that dollar on Edward Mujica in an NL-only format, because the Marlins say he's next. … And finally, crossing back to the beginning of this blog, I don't think firethrowing Cuban lefty Aroldis Chapman is in the closing mix for now in Cincy. I think it's all Marshall. Chapman should be a starter; 200 innings are far more valuable than 70. Not sure whether manager Dusty Baker agrees with that, but so far all indications are it's Marshall's role, and right-hander Nick Masset is setting up. Chapman told reporters he's taking advantage of the opportunity to start, trained hard for it, and wants that role.
 

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On the Wright Track

David Wright has repeatedly said that he didn't think he was at risk for missing Opening Day, even after he revealed nearly two weeks ago that he suffered a tear of the rectus abdominis muscle in his left side. True to his word, he appears to be on the right track. After gradually increasing baseball activities following an anti-inflammatory injection, the 29-year-old third baseman was finally able to make his Grapefruit League debut yesterday against the Cardinals.

It was only one game, but the reviews were pretty positive. Wright went 1-for-2 with a single and even tested his side with a diving stop down the third base to rob Rafael Furcal of a hit. He is back in the lineup on Tuesday, which is a sign that he's feeling pretty good.

Wright was limited to just 102 games last season due to a stress fracture in his lower back and batted just .254/.345/.427 with 14 homers, 61 RBI and a .771 OPS. We keep waiting for the old Wright to return, but it's increasingly clear that it probably won't happen. He has struck out 22.9 percent of the time over the past three seasons while his contact rate checks in at underwhelming 79.3 percent.

Perhaps we should give Wright somewhat of a pass for last year, but I'm still a bit concerned about a guy who is playing through a tear in his abdominal muscle when others (Ryan Zimmerman, Nick Markakis) eventually opted for surgery. His combination of speed and power is still valuable -- and the fences moving in at Citi Field should help his cause -- but I currently have him behind Jose Bautista, Evan Longoria, Rotoworld's Online Draft Guide.

Baker Blasted

After showing diminished velocity in a minor league game last Thursday, Scott Baker was knocked around for seven runs on seven hits (including two homers) over just 2 2/3 innings yesterday against the Rays. He told reporters following the outing that his elbow felt fine, but he mostly sat in the 86-89 mph with his fastball, which is down a few ticks from his 91 mph career average.

The Twins haven't ruled Baker out for the start of the season -- he is currently projected to pitch the home opener against the Angels on April 9 -- but even assuming that he is healthy, there's a chance he won't be fully stretched out in time. It's worth noting that the Twins won't need a fifth starter for the first time until April 15 against the Rangers, so they do have some flexibility with their rotation.

Baker showed flashes of being a frontline starting pitcher last season, posting a 3.14 ERA and 123/32 K/BB ratio over 134 2/3 innings, but he was limited to just 24 innings after the All-Star break due to a strained flexor muscle. The elbow was also a problem for him in 2010 and he later required surgery, so I would let him be somebody else's headache unless the price tag is unusually modest.

Reds Not Settled On Madson Replacement

Most fantasy owners have assumed that Sean Marshall will serve as the Reds' closer now that Ryan Madson needs season-ending Tommy John surgery. He still sounds like the best bet, but the Reds aren't ready to hand him the job just yet.

According to Mark Sheldon of MLB.com, Reds manager Dusty Baker said Monday that he wants to stay away from using Marshall three days in a row and is considering using the dreaded closer-by-committee approach in the short-term.

"It might have to be by committee, which I hate," Baker told Sheldon. "Hopefully, somebody will emerge and then you hate to have to go through it until somebody fails and you have to go to somebody else. That's the thing you don't want to get into. These are valuable games for a starter and for us. Usually, it takes about 30 seconds to mess up two and a half hours of work by everybody."

Marshall has emerged as an elite set-up man over the past two seasons, posting a 2.45 ERA and 169/42 K/BB ratio across 150 1/3 innings. And while he's left-handed, his numbers against right-handed batters are plenty palatable. He should be the easy first choice in fantasy leagues, but Aroldis Chapman, Nick Masset and Bill Bray linger as alternatives for the ninth inning. Chapman has a 1.50 ERA and 12/2 K/BB ratio over 12 innings as a starter this spring, so there's still a chance he beats out Homer Bailey for the final spot in the starting rotation.

Cabrera Vows to Be Ready For Opener

Miguel Cabrera was back in Tigers' camp yesterday after suffering a non-displaced fracture below his right eye on a bad-hop ground ball last Monday. There was still some visible bruising on his face from the cut, but he told reporters that he isn't dealing with any pain and that his vision is fine.

Cabrera still needs to have a follow-up exam with team doctors on Tuesday in order to be cleared for baseball activities. However, he expressed confidence yesterday that he'll be in the starting lineup on Opening Day against the Red Sox on April 5.

Cabrera has quite a challenge ahead of him at third base, but last week's injury looked like a case of bad luck and not necessarily a reflection of his skill. He'll presumably be thrown right back into the mix at the hot corner, so the extra eligibility shouldn't be too far away. With a major-league best 1.038 OPS over the past two seasons, I still wouldn't have an issue picking him No. 1 in standard mixed formats.
 

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Late-spring injury update: Hitters

By Stephania Bell | ESPN.com


Editor's note: In February, Stephania checked in with updates and explanation of the key injuries in her position-by-position preseason roundup; now she's back with late-preseason updates on a handful of those players -- original text in italics -- as well as updates on players who got hurt this spring. Here are the hitter updates; pitchers to follow later this week. You can see the original Feb. injury roundup of each position by clicking on the position headers.

Catchers


Buster Posey, San Francisco Giants. From Feb. 16: The image of Posey getting drilled at the plate with his leg twisted underneath him last year is etched into the minds of those who saw the injury happen (or one of the seemingly infinite replays that followed). In fact, Posey's injury was so dramatic it sparked philosophical discussion throughout the sport about whether catchers should invite or avoid collision as part of their job duties (most fantasy owners would universally scream "Avoid!"). Now imagine having to come back to the scene of the accident, as Posey will have to do, to return to your job. Posey must not think about how his leg and ankle were rearranged last time he was behind the plate, just one component of his lengthy rehabilitation, albeit perhaps one of the most difficult. As far as the physical rehab following his injury, Posey has steadily remained ahead of schedule, impressing the Giants' medical staff along the way. In May, Posey underwent surgery to insert screws and repair ligament damage, then underwent a follow-up procedure in July to remove the hardware. After regaining range of motion and strength in his ankle, along with restoring a normal gait, Posey progressed to light throwing and hitting off a tee by the fall. In January, he added sprints to his conditioning work and is gradually expected to add more baseball-specific components to his regimen.

Still, the ankle has not yet been tested by the demands of the position, something that won't happen until deeper into spring training. While the team is encouraged that Posey will start the season on time, the Giants will also adjust, as necessary, based on how his ankle responds as his workload increases. Extended time crouching behind the plate places a significant load on the ankle, so endurance will be a factor. There will also be more torsion through the ankle when Posey begins swinging a bat against live pitching. Finally, there is that issue of Posey getting comfortable with being in that vulnerable position in the event of a play at the plate. His youth and fitness certainly work in his favor, and so far there is every reason to believe he will make a successful return. He is on track for April, but it is not a lock, and the Giants may opt to use him at first base on a routine basis to offset the rigors of catching.

March 28 update: Posey has continued to make steady gains. He has had no issues behind the plate and has shown he can hit the ball, and although running the bases is not smooth yet, he is indeed able to do it. Also, he has not experienced any major soreness or stiffness the day after playing in games. Posey's teammates held their collective breath when he attempted his first tag-out at the plate this spring, exhaling when it became apparent that it was just a routine play in the game for the unfazed catcher. On March 27, Posey caught in back-to-back games for the first time. He acknowledges that the ankle will continue to be tested as his workload increases during the season, especially when he plays deeper into games and regularly on consecutive days. Posey has not experienced any setbacks thus far, and he remains hopeful that pattern will continue.
First base


Kendrys Morales, Los Angeles Angels. Feb. 16 update: Morales is coming off a second ankle surgery last May, a surgery that became necessary when Morales failed to progress to the point of returning to run this past season. Morales' original injury was in May 2010, the now-infamous celebratory walk-off grand slam that resulted in a severe left ankle fracture when Morales landed awkwardly at home plate.
Angels team physician and noted orthopedist Dr. Lewis Yocum offered this quote in the Los Angeles Times last May when it was announced Morales would have a second surgery: "The doctor will address any of the pathological changes he sees," Yocum said. "This will help him get range of motion as well as diminish the amount of arthritic change in the joint."
The recovery time for the procedure was estimated to be a minimum of six months.
Morales has been progressing with his rehab efforts in Arizona, and in January, he was cleared to begin light baseball activities and running "on his own power," according to MLB.com. Morales has been taking batting practice and certainly appears to be ahead of where he was at the same time last year. That said, there are still hurdles to cross, including running sprints and turning corners, to prove the ankle will endure the load. And there's this other guy the Angels brought in to cover first base, Albert Pujols. But Morales could serve as a DH, presuming he can hit with power (which requires transferring load and torsion through that left ankle, especially when hitting from the right) and navigate the bases without hesitation. How Morales is able to increase his workload through spring training will give a better idea of how the Angels might be able to use him. It looks encouraging at first glance, but the bigger test for the recovering ankle joint will come in the form of repeated work over a period of time.

March 28 update: Morales has now shown that he can do something he could not last year: run. In his first game appearance of the spring on March 22, Morales went 2-for-3. More importantly, he ran from first to third base on a hit, showing he could turn the corners. He has been able to hit from both sides of the plate, another good sign for the ankle, and appears on track to serve as the Angels' DH when the season begins. It's worth noting that there remains some question as to how his ankle will tolerate an increased workload. The Angels likely will ensure that he continues to get intermittent days off to help protect him.

Justin Morneau, Minnesota Twins. Feb. 16 update: Maybe it's something in the air in Minnesota. Like his teammate Joe Mauer, Morneau was plagued by injury issues in 2011. He entered the season somewhat tentatively, returning from a concussion injury that cost him the bulk of 2010. Morneau was on the field on Opening Day and seemed to be on an upward trajectory. By May, however, he was experiencing pain and numbness related to a pinched nerve in his neck. A wrist sprain landed him on the DL in mid-June, and shortly thereafter, Morneau underwent neck surgery. He would follow that up in September with a procedure to remove a bone spur from his right foot and a cyst from his left knee, along with a surgery on his ailing left wrist. Perhaps more importantly, in late August, Morneau dove for a ball while playing first base and his concussion symptoms returned. In December, the St. Paul Pioneer Press reported that Morneau was still experiencing symptoms such as headaches after exertion. While Morneau acknowledged being way ahead of where he was last year at the same time, he knows from experience that this is a day-to-day measure. As of late January, Morneau noted continued improvement, telling MLB.com that he is not sure whether any residual headaches are concussion-related. He continues to progress as far as his wrist and is gradually increasing his baseball-related activities. Morneau seems to be more confident about his health heading into 2011, but given his reduced playing time the past two seasons and the nature of the injuries that have most limited him, his prognosis remains uncertain.
March 28 update: Morneau has indeed progressed throughout the spring as far as his health is concerned, and has not experienced a recurrence of his post-concussion symptoms. His primary challenge thus far has been his hitting, but Morneau has remained calm, reiterating that the positive is that he has been thinking about hitting and timing, not headaches and pain. Perhaps he is starting to turn a corner in that area, too; he hit two homers Saturday. It's too soon to say Morneau is out of the woods, and his overall prognosis remains uncertain, but the positive steps of late are encouraging.
Ryan Howard, Philadelphia Phillies. Feb. 16 update: Howard's season -- and that of his Philly teammates -- ended in dramatic fashion during the National League Division Series when he collapsed to the ground on his way to first base after his leg gave out. The culprit was a ruptured left Achilles tendon, an injury more commonly seen in basketball and football. Howard underwent surgery to repair the tendon in October and has been working his way through the rehab process since. Howard has been jogging in the pool and doing light strengthening.
In January, during an interview on Comcast SportsNet, Phillies assistant general manager Scott Proefrock suggested Howard could be ready sometime in May, but he also noted the team would err on the side of caution. Working in Howard's favor is the fact that he plays a position that does not require the agility of a shortstop or the full-speed running of an outfielder. Perhaps most challenging for Howard will be powering out of the batter's box, pushing off from his left foot (which, as a left-handed batter, he does routinely) and running full speed to first base.

March 28 update: Howard developed a superficial infection in the wound over his surgery site near the start of training camp, which led to a procedure to clean it out and Howard's subsequent return to a walking boot. However, the Phillies indicated Howard's surgeon found no issues with the repaired tendon itself. His activity was scaled back to allow the wound to heal, but he has since been able to shed the boot, and is starting to resume light workouts. It's not clear how much this process impacts his overall timetable for return, and there are many more markers to reach before Howard can return. The Phillies had originally hoped he could be ready by the end of May, but it wouldn't surprise me if his return gets pushed back to June or even July.
Ike Davis, New York Mets: Feb. 16 update: Davis injured his left ankle on May 10 last year, when he collided with teammate David Wright. Initially thought to be a fairly minor incident, the injury ultimately ended Davis' season. The final diagnosis was a bone bruise and an ankle sprain. Davis opted to forego surgery, and, as of early January, he had resumed full baseball workouts, according to Newsday. Davis says he is ready to play and emphasizes the injury is in his past. Naturally, it will be important to see Davis going all out at spring training to see how his ankle is responding, but so far his outlook appears promising.
March 28 update: It wasn't the ankle that caused a stir regarding Davis early in spring training; it was the discovery that the Mets feared Davis had contracted Valley Fever. An observation during a physical indicated the presence of a lung infection, and more tests followed. Alarm bells sounded as many thought of Conor Jackson, who endured a protracted battle with Valley Fever while with the Arizona Diamondbacks, causing him to miss extensive playing time. Davis insisted he was asymptomatic, and while no definitive diagnosis was made, the team said they would err on the side of caution and monitor him as if he had the disease. As a result, Davis, who was told to avoid excessive fatigue, has played on a somewhat limited basis this spring. The good news is that his ankle has been a non-factor. The unknown is whether this lung infection and any associated symptoms are truly behind Davis or whether this will present a problem going forward.

Second base


Chase Utley, Phillies. Feb. 16 update: Utley's 2011 season didn't begin until June. Even then, it was uncertain whether he would last the season. Impressively, Utley held up for the remainder of the year, leading many to think he was "over" the knee injury which delayed his start.
Not quite.
Utley has degenerative changes in his patellofemoral joint and those changes are not reversible. During the time Utley was not able to play last spring, he dedicated himself to a rehabilitation program designed to offload that area under the kneecap as much as possible. He was eventually able to return to running the bases and playing defense (swinging the bat was never an issue), but at times he appeared slightly uncomfortable and he certainly wasn't snagging any extra bases.


One key to Utley staying healthy will be ensuring that he gets enough rest during the season. The trick with this condition is avoiding an inflammatory episode that could trigger debilitating pain and again bring Utley's play to a halt. Utley has such a strong work ethic that there is no doubt he will remain vigilant about his exercises, but will he pull back to avoid a flare-up? The other issue will be what to expect from Utley offensively. His power was noticeably down last year, a not unexpected side effect of his knee condition. As Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. told the Philadelphia Daily News, Utley was not able to train his legs the traditional way, which affected his power. But those strengthening restrictions likely still remain in place, which leads to the question of whether Utley can reasonably be expected to regain that power, a concern that Amaro openly acknowledges. We know Utley will work exceptionally hard. We don't know if his body will fully cooperate.


March 28 update: It already has been announced that Utley won't be ready for Opening Day. Beyond that, nothing is certain. Utley left camp to seek consultation from an outside physical therapist after his rehabilitation efforts hit a "plateau," according to general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. Utley did speak with reporters recently to update his status and indicated that he believes he will play, but cannot say when that will be. He also said that the pain is not as severe as last year and that it's his right knee that is causing him trouble, not the left knee that bothered him last year. He believes the exercise regimen he is undertaking will help him to the point where he can return, and he is not considering surgery. The only real news here is that it's his right knee currently causing him the most difficulty, not his left. Utley's condition remains one of management versus cure, and only time will tell how much he can contribute.Third base


Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tigers: Cabrera suffered a facial laceration and small fracture under his right eye when a ground ball he was attempting to field in a spring game bounced up and hit the edge of his sunglasses. It looked frightening, and could have resulted in an injury that would have cost Cabrera weeks, if not months. Fortunately, that was not the case; after just more than a week away from baseball activity, Cabrera was cleared to return. He expects to be ready for Opening Day.
David Wright, Mets: Wright sustained a partial tear of his rectus abdominis muscle (the six-pack abs), which has sidelined him for the bulk of spring training. The location of the injury was relatively high in the muscle and slightly to the left, not in the lower part of the muscular attachment often associated with sports hernias. In fact, the location of Wright's discomfort initially hinted at an oblique injury, and ultimately, the recovery could turn out to be very similar. The Mets took the cautious approach with Wright, primarily to guard against any setback that could threaten his regular-season status. Given Wright's history of a stress fracture in his back, abdominal function and strength is particularly critical. After ramping up his baseball drill work, Wright made his spring debut Monday. Presuming no lingering soreness, he will continue to get game play under his belt with an Opening Day start on the horizon.

Outfielders


Carl Crawford, Boston Red Sox. Feb. 16 update: It came as a bit of a surprise in January when the Red Sox announced Crawford had undergone surgery on his left wrist. The procedure was described as an arthroscopic debridement (a "cleanup" type procedure done via a scope), and while no specific timetable for his recovery was given, general manager Ben Cherington said he expected Crawford to play the "bulk" of the season.
But wrist injuries in power hitters certainly generate concern given how much torque is generated as the bat is twisted at speeds exceeding 70 miles per hour. It is that torque which likely played a role in Crawford's injury in the first place. As ESPNBoston.com's Gordon Edes noted, Crawford's surgery was on his TFCC or triangular fibrocartilage complex, a cartilage structure (and its supporting ligaments) within the wrist. It is sometimes referred to as the meniscus of the wrist since it has a similar role in both load transmission and providing stability within the joint. A tear can lead to a catching of the tissue within the joint that causes pain and prevents normal motion. It was that pain when trying to swing the bat that led Crawford to the surgery. Surgical debridement procedures of TFCC tears smooth out the damaged tissue and generally lead to a good outcome. Crawford certainly seems to be moving in the right direction.

When spring training started, manager Bobby Valentine indicated he did not expect Crawford to be ready by Opening Day. Crawford, however, has made Opening Day a goal and has been taking part in virtually all baseball activities, including fielding, throwing and running the bases. Recently he was cleared to start swinging the bat and, as of this writing, he has had several days of taking aggressive swings in the cage. According to ESPNBoston.com's Joe McDonald, Crawford says his wrist feels good. His status remains day-to-day as the medical staff monitors his wrist to see how it responds to the increasing workload. While it is too soon to say whether he will meet his target of Opening Day, Crawford does appear to be progressing at a solid pace. In the absence of any setbacks, his availability in early April is looking like a possibility.

March 28 update: Crawford's aggressive swings early this spring didn't go as well as Crawford had hoped, and inflammation in his surgically repaired wrist forced him to scale back his activity. After a couple weeks of no swings, Crawford was allowed to resume a monitored program, and so far he has been progressing well. He will not be ready by Opening Day, however. He instead will stay in Florida for extended work with the medical staff, likely accompanied by a progression into minor league game action. There has been no timetable issued for his return, and naturally it will depend on how he responds to each level of increased activity.
Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins: Stanton took a pitch off his left wrist on March 11 -- fortunately the injury was a bruise, not a break -- but that's not why he has not played since. Stanton also has been dealing with pain and inflammation in his knee, which prevented him from being able to run. After evaluation did not turn up anything significant, Stanton was given a week of rest. He has since been cleared to resume baseball activity and has played in minor league games. As long as there are no further setbacks, Stanton appears to be on track for Opening Day.
Corey Hart, Milwaukee Brewers: Hart underwent meniscus surgery on his right knee in early March and was projected to miss about a month. He has been doing well in his recovery, but might not quite be ready for Opening Day. According to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Hart should see minor league game action during the last week of spring training. The decision as to whether he will be ready for Opening Day may come down to the wire, but there is no reason to rush Hart, given the length of the season. Even a delayed start would not likely mean extensive missed time. Better to ensure there are no complications down the road.
 

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Feliz Feels Fine

Happy Opening Day! Well, sort of.

The big news in the baseball world yesterday had nothing to do with anything that happened on the actual field. A little after 11 p.m. ET last night, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reported that a group led by Magic Johnson and former Braves and Nationals president Stan Kasten has agreed to purchase the Dodgers. The Wall Street Journal reports that the price tag checks in at the stunning sum of $2.15 billion, which shatters the previous record for a professional sports franchise.

This is wonderful news for the Dodgers and their fans, as the most popular sports figure in Los Angeles will be involved in the ownership group. Of course, this also means that outgoing owner Frank McCourt stands to make hundreds of millions in profits even after paying a divorce settlement to his wife. What a world.

While one wonders if the Dodgers will make a play for Matt Cain or Cole Hamels this winter, here are some more noteworthy items from around the big leagues.

Feliz Feels Fine

Neftali Feliz put quite a scare in the Rangers after being pulled from a start against the Cubs last week due to shoulder soreness, but he declared himself good to go for the regular season after throwing 68 pitches over four innings Tuesday night against the Royals' Double-A team.

Feliz gave up three runs (one earned) while striking out three and walking just one. His velocity wasn't an issue, as he topped out at 96 mph with his fastball. The Rangers will likely keep the 23-year-old right-hander on the minor league side until they are absolutely sure he'll be ready for the season. This way, they could backdate a potential stint on the disabled list. But things are looking good at the moment.

Feliz is making the transition from the bullpen to the starting rotation this spring, so there's an unknown quantity factor here, but he's a hard-thrower with plenty of strikeout potential. He should be useful in mixed leagues this season, even with a projected innings-limit.

For more rankings and analysis, along with projections, cheat sheets and prospect information, check out Rotoworld's Online Draft Guide.

Niemann Wins Rotation Battle, Davis To Bullpen

As expected, Rays manager Joe Maddon announced yesterday that Jeff Niemann has won the fifth spot in the starting rotation and Wade Davis will move to the bullpen.

Niemann was the favorite entering Grapefruit League play, as he had a 4.06 ERA and a 105/37 K/BB ratio over 135 1/3 innings last season to go along with a career-high 46 percent ground ball rate. Meanwhile, Davis had a mediocre 4.45 ERA and 105/63 K/BB ratio over 184 innings in 2011 and has seen his strikeout and swinging strike rates decline significantly since breaking in as a rookie in 2009.

Davis has a chance to be a legitimate weapon out of the bullpen, but the pressure will be on Niemann if he gets off to a slow start. He had some back issues last year, but his strong second half (3.75 ERA and 72/23 K/BB ratio over 81 2/3 innings) is enough for me to target him in AL-only and deeper mixed formats.

Aviles Wins BoSox Shortstop Job

We heard some rumblings over the weekend that Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine was lobbying for Jose Iglesias to win the starting shortstop job, but the slick fielding youngster was sent to the minors yesterday, which effectively anointed Mike Aviles as the starter. I'm not sure why it was ever really a debate.

Iglesias batted just .235/.285/.269 with a .554 OPS last season with Triple-A Pawtucket, so he likely would have been the weakest hitting regular in the majors. Bobby V has a history with all-glove, no-hit shortstops, but it's best for all involved that he gets more seasoning in the minors.

Aviles is a .288 career hitter and has a little bit of speed and pop so he's worth a flier in AL-only and deeper mixed leagues in this lineup. Valentine has discussed the possibility of using him out of the leadoff spot, but that would probably be a mistake, at least against right-handers. The 31-year-old owns a lousy .318 on-base percentage in the big leagues.

Indians Option Chisenhall to Minors

Our final big roster decision of the day had Lonnie Chisenhall being sent down to Triple-A Columbus and Jack Hannahan winning the starting third base job. It appeared that Chisenhall would get the chance to sink-or-swim up until a few weeks ago, but it appears that the Indians value Hannahan's glove with their ground ball-heavy staff in the short-term.

It's probably the right move, as Chisenhall was likely rushed to the majors last season. While he had 20 extra-base hits (seven home runs) in 223 plate appearances, his 49/8 K/BB ratio shows that his plate discipline is a work in progress. However, I'd still target him in AL-only leagues with a midseason promotion in mind. Hannahan batted .250/.331/.388 with eight homers, 40 RBI and a .719 OPS over 366 plate appearances last season, but he doesn't offer much upside for fantasy owners.

Lind Sidelined With Bad Back

Adam Lind was scratched from Tuesday's lineup against the Yankees due to tightness in his lower back. This is a bit of a concern, as it's the same issue that sent him to the disabled list for nearly a month during the first half last year. Blue Jays manager John Farrell admitted that it's a situation that will need to be monitored throughout the year, so I'm hardly optimistic about him getting back to the elite potential he showed in 2009.

The current plan calls for Lind to be shut down for the next three days, so it's unclear whether he'll be ready for Opening Day. David Cooper, who was recently sent down to Triple-A Las Vegas, could return to the major league side if he requires a stint on the disabled list.
 

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Saves for the Season
Wait.

Just wait. Wait as long as you can.

Let closers fly bly -- practice restraint, hold it in, think about baseball stats, take a sip of water, jog around the room, change the channel, dreamcast your infield, do whatever it takes. But wait.

Because closers lose their job to injury or poor play about a third of the time. And, in 70 innings, despite their good work in ERA and WHIP, their impact is muted. How much would you pay for a starter that you were sure was going to be on the DL for 2/3 of the season?

So wait. And use these tiers to help you wait. It still makes sense to get a couple closers that are less likely to lose their job than others, so target a closer or two from the top two tiers. As the players disappear from the tiers, move the remaining closers up on your draft queue. Once you only see a couple left in a group, that's your time to strike.

You'll still like your bullpen, promise.
Tier 1: Elite (5) (AKA: The "Put them in the lineup and forget about them" Tier.)


Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees
Jonathan Papelbon, Philadelphia Phillies
Craig Kimbrel, Atlanta Braves
John Axford, Milwaukee Brewers
This is exactly the same tier that ended the 2011 season on top.
Why should any of them change position? Even if it is Mariano Rivera's last season, he could probably throw that cutter into his sixties. Craig Kimbrel and John Axford strike out double-digit batters per nine -- and last season they both added a new wrinkle when they improved their control to about league average. Strike out more than four batters per walk and you're doing well.
FanGraphs.com, we can see it in graph form:
Tier 2: Rock Steady (6) (AKA: The "Still smiling" Tier.)


Joel Hanrahan, Pittsburgh Pirates
Heath Bell, Miami Marlins
Jordan Walden, Anaheim Angels
Jose Valverde, Detroit Tigers
J.J. Putz, Arizona Diamondbacks
Andrew Bailey, Boston Red Sox

You're still smiling when you select the pitchers in this group, but that doesn't mean that these closers are unassailable.
Joel Hanrahan has been an elite tier closer before, and he could be again. But, even as he showed great control -- he walked only two batters per nine last season, best in his career by far -- his strikeout rate fell precipitously. He didn't strike out a batter per inning for the first time since he moved to the pen for good. He focussed almost exclusively on his fastball -- which he threw at a career-high 97 MPH speed -- which might work for his real-life game, but does hurt his fantasy appeal. Then again, he still got above-average swinging strikes, so a strikeout boost could be coming this year. He's falling in drafts, and can absolutely play the role of your first closer, though, so call him a 'sleeper.'
Heath Bell? He put up career worsts in strikeout rate, swinging strike rate, and ground-ball rate, and now he's headed to to a park of undetermined nature. Jordan Walden? He's a young pup with a crazy jump-step delivery and a history of control problems in the minor leagues (albeit as a starter). Jose Valverde? He's 34 and coming off the worst strikeout rate (and second-worst swinging strike rate) of his career, and has always had below-average control. That's not to say that these guys aren't valuable, it's just to say that they aren't probably elite.
The last two guys are elite… when they are in the game. Health is the bogeyman to J.J. Putz and Andrew Bailey, so (especially in deeper leagues) think about keeping David Hernandez and Tier 3: OK options (7) (AKA: The "Should keep their jobs all year, right?" Tier.

Sergio Santos, Toronto Blue Jays
Jason Motte, St. Louis Cardinals
Rafael Betancourt, Colorado Rockies
Brian Wilson, San Francisco Giants
Huston Street, San Diego Padres
Brandon League, Seattle Mariners

Now we're hoping that the closer we pick here just keeps the job all year. If they do, you'll have come out a winner. If not, just make sure you're aware of the next guy in the pen.
There's a lot of upside in this tier. Each one of these pitchers could be a second-tier closer by the end of the year, and Brian Wilson, Sergio Santos and Rafael Betancourt have the peripheral stats to make them possible elite tier members with a healthy, successful work in the closer's role.
So why are they down here? They've got louder questions surrounding them than those in tier two.
The top trio just need to prove that they can do it again. All three of Sergio Santos, Jason Motte and Rafael Betancourt have excellent peripherals, great stuff, and the closer's role in hand… for now. If they prove to their organizations that they are fine, they will easily leap tiers by the end of the season. This is particularly true of Santos, who's the youngest of the crew and has the best strikeout rate.
Brian Wilson and Huston Street are healthy right now. But Wilson's already had some hiccups and Street hasn't managed 65 innings more than once in the past five years. Was Wilson's career-low velocity last year a harbinger of doom? Street had his second-worst velocity, too.
Brandon League is a good pitcher. He's on a bad team, though, and could get traded at any minute. Then you add in the lack of strikeouts, and he's like a slightly better Tier 4: Question marks (7) (AKA: The "Should at least start the season as his team's unquestioned closer" Tier.)

Joe Nathan, Texas Rangers
Carlos Marmol, Chicago Cubs
Frank Francisco, New York Mets
Jim Johnson, Baltimore Orioles
Brett Myers, Houston Astros
Kyle Farnsworth, Tampa Bay Rays
Matt Capps, Minnesota Twins
Day one, these closers will look just fine on your roster. Day 162? Who knows. If the last group included closers that had just one question, these closers have multiple questions.
Joe Nathan might even have three questions. One is his health -- will his gradually recovering velocity stand up in the new season? Related to that velocity question is one of performance -- can he be the old Joe Nathan without the old Joe Nathan's velocity? Third, if Neftali Feliz ends up back in the pen again (and his shoulder pushed him to a Minor League exhibition start this week), will Nathan lose the role to him?
Carlos Marmol and Frank Francisco both gave us both looks last year -- they were both dominant for portions of the season and they both lost their jobs at one point. Jim Johnson and Brett Myers have been closers before, but neither has managed it for more than a season, and both were starters at some point last year. Consistency and success will count a lot for these players, but it's also important that their teams are rebuilding, and if they do find success, they might find their way out of town on a trade. This is especially true for Marmol, who might have the most trade value.
Kyle Farnsworth and Matt Capps are decent pitchers. Glen Perkins and Joel Peralta sit behind them and aren't really knocking the door down for the first chair. So why are they down here? Well, Farnsworth had a below-average strikeout rate last year, but it's more about control with him -- can he keep putting up such a great walk rate after he spent a whole career with a below-average walk rate? And Tier 5: Rollercoaster rides (5) (AKA: The "Handcuff or hope you picked right" Tier.)
Drew Storen (first chair), Tyler Clippard (second chair), Brad Lidge (third chair), Henry Rodriguez (fourth chair), Washington Nationals
Chris Perez (first chair), Vinnie Pestano (second chair), Cleveland Indians
Sean Marshall (first chair), Nick Massett (second chair), Cincinnati Reds
Greg Holland (first chair), Jonathan Broxton (second chair), Los Angeles Dodgers
Matt Thornton (first chair), Addison Reed (second chair), Hector Santiago (third chair), Chicago White Sox
Grant Balfour (first chair), Brian Fuentes (second chair), Joey Devine (third chair), Oakland Athletics
Javy Guerra (first chair), Kenley Jansen (second chair), Los Angeles Dodgers
Drew Storen is already hurt, and may miss opening day. Its a mess behind him, though, and he could still make the team on Opening Day. Tyler Clippard is the second-best pitcher in that pen, but Nationals manager Davey Johnson is talking about keeping him in the setup role and going to Brad Lidge or Hendry Rodriguez. Oh Henry! has gas, but no idea where the ball is going, while Lidge has veteran guile, a strong slider, and a fastball with less and less gas every year. It's pretty much a pick's.
Chris Perez seems safe-ish, but he's already hurt. And, among the thirty top relievers by saves last year, he was ranked 25th-30th in strikeout rate, walk rate, and ground-ball rate. That's bad, y'all. Pestano was lights-out with one dominant pitch, and will be ready to do that in the closer role once given the chance.
Dusty Baker says a lot of things. He says that Sean Marshall is the closer, but that he's not comfortable using him many days in a role. He says that he's going to use a committee. He says he doesn't like committees. With the team still trying Aroldis Chapman in the rotation -- and paying him like a starter -- the best bet is that Marshall takes the role and runs with it all season. He has the peripherals to stand up to the task.
Joakim Soria went down and left the door open. Greg Holland is the youngster with the wipeout slider and the vicious strikeout numbers. Jonathan Broxton is the veteran with Closer Experience. A rebuilding team would probably be best served going with the guy that they have under control past this season, but you never know with the Royals. Still, until Broxton proves he's Broxton again, Holland is the front-runner.
The White Sox solved this situation last year with Sergio Santos, and then they jumped right back into this situation. Seems about right for a rebuilding team, actually. They've got Addison Reed on the way up, and Addison Reed absolutely destroyed every level that was presented to him last year. He's probably the Closer of the Future. But right now, Matt Thornton is ready to go, and they might be inclined to pump up his value by having him close now and then trading him later. And lefty Hector Santiago has been cooking with gas since he moved to the pen, so he might factor in later. If Robin Ventura is anything like Ozzie Guillen in bullpen management, they could all get saves this year. Good luck hunting.
Brian Fuentes probably wasn't going to close after all of his comments last year, so Balfour being named closer probably wasn't such a surprise. But it is worth noting that his strikeout rate (and swinging strike rate) are in the midst of a four-year decline. While his walk rate has finally gotten better than average, it's not elite, and his ground-ball rate is poor. He can probably get the job done. But there's a crack in the door thanks to those declining peripherals, and someone like Joey Devine or Fautino De Los Santos can maybe slither through that crack.
Javy Guerra has only given up one run this spring and is the unquestioned closer going into the season! Job's done. Nope. Look closer. He's walked four against five strikeouts in fewer than seven innings. And this is a guy that had a walk rate over five per nine innings before last year. He also managed a sub-par strikeout rate with a sub-par walk rate and an average ground-ball rate. Oh, and Injured

We'll wait on official word from the clubs before populating this list. Do watch out for Drew Storen and The Steals Department

If there was a Juan Pierre Jr. out there, his name would be Ben Revere. Like Pierre before him, Revere has absolutely no power. He hit one home run in 2011 and one in 2010. He might also not be a center fielder, despite his wheels, so he has that in common with his predecessor. But Pierre Redux does have wheels. He stole 34 bases in only 481 plate appearances last year and could easily get 600 this season. That puts him on pace for 40-plus stolen bags. That'll do.

Dude is pretty small, but he's got wheels, and a regular job. That's right, the 5'7" (generously listed), 170-pound Jose Altuve is the Astros second baseman for sure. He probably won't give you a ton of runs in that lineup, and his power upside is no better than league average, but he did steal 31 bases across three levels last year, and 42 in 2010. He's also showed an ability to make enough contact to threaten a .300 batting average. That makes for late-draft sleeper material in deeper leagues.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Messages
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You (Mis-)heard me!

By Matthew Berry | ESPN.com

The problem is, I wrote it wrong.


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That's not actually true.


The problem is, people read it wrong.


Well, that's not entirely accurate, either.


So last week I put out the 2012 MLB preseason version of "100 Facts you need to know" and, as always, I threw in some personal tidbits about myself. Among the things I wrote were some thoughts about my dog, Macy.


It was a 4,000-word column that had probably 85 or so tidbits about fantasy baseball and yet, almost all the feedback I got was about my dog. On Twitter, on Facebook, in texts and emails from friends, via the podcast and the commentary section here at ESPN.com. Tons of reaction. Reaction that made me realize either I hadn't written it correctly or people weren't understanding what I intended.


Now, not all of the reactions had a thought-out plan of attack like Mark from L.A. did.


Mark (Los Angeles, Calif.): Keep the dog, show the wife the door, flip for the kids. In the long run you'll get a lot more affection from the dog and the wife is going to end up leaving you anyway, so ..."


But all the feedback shared the same sentiment: Whatever you do, keep the dog. The dog, if you've read me for any amount of time, is Macy. I've had her since the year 2000. She's a rescue dog and no one is sure how old she is. Or even what breed she is. I just know that I love her.

She was actually a one-year anniversary present for the ex-Mrs. Roto, who had always wanted a dog. But in those days, she worked at an office all day and I was at home, working as a screenwriter, so Macy spent most of her time with me. When my ex and I split up, we didn't know what to do. I was in negotiations with ESPN at the time and it looked like I would be moving from L.A. to Connecticut, so my ex, a wonderful woman, said: "You should keep her. She's closest to you anyways and you're moving to a new city. Be good to have a friend when you move there." So that was that. And Macy flew across the country with me.


She's been with me through a lot, my dog. Good, bad, two wives, a cross-country move, a new job, three different homes … a lot. She is a 14-pound girl dog who is not anywhere close to a "manly" dog. Could not love her more.


She loves my new wife. More than she loves me, frankly. (In fairness, everyone likes my wife more than me). Always following her around. The kids love Macy, too. We all love Macy, despite her flaws. There are behavioral issues. She has tried to bite each of the kids before when they've wanted to play with her. Maybe they were too rough, maybe she didn't want to play (she is older), I don't know. She's a princess, my dog, and very set in her ways. She doesn't like other dogs, ignoring them when they bark or want to play and sniff her. She likes only humans, and not all of them at that. She's a particular sort.


She's also not 100 percent reliable when it comes to house training. I don't know if it's behavioral (because she's angry) or because she is at least 13 years old at this point, but she is not reliable when it comes to taking care of her business. We've had accidents. She's thrown up, she sneezes all over … she's an old dog, you know?


So when the twins were born, there were some discussions about where she should sleep. My wife, understandably, is super-concerned about the twins, especially as they roll around on the floor, and wanted Macy outside at all times. I fought this. Became a real issue with us but, of course, I understand where she is coming from. Anyways, we ended up compromising. She sleeps in the garage (we've built a whole dog house, fake grass, heated pad area for her) and she spends her days outside in our yard. When I come home at night and on the weekends, she's inside with me, where I can keep an eye on her.


Recently, she had to stay at a local kennel (where she often stays when we go out of town) and the groomer, a very nice woman, offered to take her. She loves Macy, she's single, she can bring Macy to work with her every day, where Macy just hangs out with her while she works on other dogs. (Macy is such a charmer. Every time we leave her at a kennel, they always end up letting her out to follow around the people who work there, because Macy could care less about the other dogs there and she cutes her way into getting special treatment. Happens every place we take her. Nothing short of amazing.) Anyways, she makes the offer.


Which brings me to my dilemma, which I wrote about and generated such a response. Do I give her to this woman? Make no mistake: I do not want to. I love her. But is sleeping in a garage, staying outside in a yard by yourself most days, getting human contact only a few hours a day and, if the babies are out, having to be blocked off by a fence from rest of the family, is that life better for Macy than one in which she's the sole focus of attention for a very nice lady who can be with her almost all the time?


I don't know. Am I being selfish by hanging on to her? Should I do what's worse for me but potentially better for her and give her to this woman? She's 13 years old. Who knows how long she has left. Is she better off this way? I don't know. That's what I struggle with. I would do anything for this dog, I just don't know what the right thing to do is.


I have no idea what to predict for the future of Macy and myself. But I think about it a lot. Just like I think about the upcoming baseball season. But I do have some predictions for that.


This preseason, you have read, watched and listened to lots of analysis. You may not agree with all of it, but you can rest assured it is thoughtful, reasoned and there is legitimate data to suggest that what is being discussed is likely to happen on some level. Not guaranteed, but likely. That's what I shoot for.


Except in this case. This is my bold predictions piece. For a prediction to be bold, of course, it is not likely to happen. Saying that Albert Pujols will hit 40 home runs is not bold. That's fairly likely to happen. Saying he struggles in the new park and league, gets injured and has a horrific year like Hanley Ramirez did last year? Now that's bold.


But, as we saw with HanRam, Alex Gordon and many others last year, unlikely doesn't equal impossible. So my goal in this column is to find things that are unlikely to happen but are still possible. I call it "You Heard Me."


Imagine we had a conversation where I said despite not being a 15-year-old girl or in the theater industry, I really like the show "Smash."

you would be all shocked and say "What?!!?"


And then I'd say "You heard me! It's fun, juicy, over-the-top and, lord help me, but I've got the McPheever. Totally a guilty pleasure."


Anyway, last year in this piece, I predicted Jordan Walden overtaking Fernando Rodney and leading the Angels in saves, that Joe Mauer would not be the No. 1 catcher (he was being drafted as such, way ahead of others) and that Michael Morse would hit at least 25 home runs.


I also predicted 40 home runs for Tyler Colvin, that Felix Pie would go 15/15 and that Dan Johnson and Sean Rodriguez would combine for 40 home runs, among other misses. Yeah. This is high-risk, high-reward territory we're entering, and most of these predictions will not come to pass.


Here's how I suggest you use this article, other than to make yourself feel better about your own predictions ("at least mine aren't as bad as this guy's").
The point is not so much to nail impossible predictions, but rather to illuminate some players I have strong feelings about one way or the other. For example, last year, I predicted 12 wins and a sub-4.00 ERA for Bartolo Colon, who had been out of baseball and was trying just to make the Yankees' roster, let alone secure a rotation spot. Technically, I ended up getting that one wrong; He who is Big and Fat ended up with an ERA of exactly 4.00 and only eight wins, but I doubt anyone was upset. He wasn't drafted in any mixed leagues and was barely a reserve pick in deep AL-only drafts, but a 1.29 WHIP and 135 strikeouts later, he returned much more value than it cost to acquire him.
So here they are. I did one for each team and threw a few fun ones in there, as well. (Among the fun ones last year? That I'd get married and that the NFL would still have a 16-game season). And away we go.


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Brian Matusz is a top-30 pitcher on the Player Rater this year. Last year's No. 31 pitcher was Ervin Santana, with a 3.38 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, 178 strikeouts and 11 wins in just more than 228 innings, so I'm expecting slightly better than that. I'm thinking: Formerly a top prospect, Matusz has been terrific this spring, with 18 strikeouts to just two walks, and seems to have his fastball velocity back. If he wins a rotation spot, he's got a shot at becoming a post-hype sleeper.
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Adrian Gonzalez hits 50 home runs and is the best fantasy player in baseball. You heard me. He's healthy now. A lock for 30-plus home runs for his final four years in Petco, he's actually been adjusting his swing the past two seasons due to a shoulder injury, as he told Stephania Bell and me on the podcast. I wrote about this in "Love/Hate," but if he is true to his word and is swinging more through the ball this year, he's got a shot to add even more power. More importantly, with Miguel Cabrera dealing with a new position and Albert Pujols dealing with a new league and division, I could see both having slightly down years while A-Gonz goes nuts, making him the best at a position where the competition is pretty stiff. I thought about Kevin Youkilis staying healthy for 150 games and Mike Aviles going 20/20, by the way.
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Curtis Granderson, currently going among the top 25 players in baseball, finishes outside the top 50 on the Player Rater. I'm already nervous about this elbow injury that's cropped up (played 136 games in 2010, 141 in '08), and Granderson's home run-to-fly ball rate last season was 20.5 percent (career 13.9 and 14.5 in his first year in Yankee Stadium, league average is just more than 9 percent) and while I acknowledge the change in approach, I also think he's had only one other year of 30 home runs or more. As Mark Simon of ESPN Stats & Information pointed out to me, last year Curtis Granderson pulled nine home runs off of outside pitches against lefties. Nine. No one else in baseball had more than four. So either it's a fluke, or in one season, Kevin Long has transformed Granderson into the best lefty-hitting outfielder in baseball. I'm going fluke.
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A combined 80 home runs from Matt Joyce, Luke Scott and Sean Rodriguez. The power is legit for all three guys, they've just never had the opportunity; none of them has ever had 500 at-bats in a season. Now they all have full-time jobs.
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Edwin Encarnacion doubles his home run output to 34. What am I thinking, aside from the fact I can't quit him and I've been burned on Brandon Morrow too many times to keep playing with that particular book of matches? Playing DH this year keeps Edwin off the DL, he's just 29 and he hasn't had 500 at-bats in a season since 2008, when he hit 26 home runs for the Reds.
Remember the Brett Favre and Tiger Woods scandals? Another one happens with a future Hall of Famer that will make those two look like harmless high school dramas by comparison.
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Adam Dunn hits 40 home runs. It'll be just like if last year never happened. In spring training last season, Dunn had just 11 walks and 27 strikeouts with three home runs in 67 at-bats. So far this spring, he has 13 walks against just four strikeouts and four home runs in just 39 at-bats. One year. How many times do I gotta talk about proven players coming off bad seasons?
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Chris Perez -- or as my friend Jeff Erickson called him at Tout Wars last weekend, Sabermetric Pariah Chris Perez -- not only doesn't lose his job to Vinnie Pestano but in fact is top five in baseball in saves, which last year would have meant 44 of them. He was 36-of-40 last year in converting save chances, while all his skills were going south. It was such a significant drop in strikeouts-per-9 rate that maybe he was hiding an injury, but given that it has never been worse than 8.71 prior to last year's 5.88, I'm saying it's just one year and there's gonna be a lot of close games in Cleveland this year.
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Thirty home runs for Brennan Boesch. He hit 28 home runs in 2008 in Double-A and every underlying number you want is trending upward. He's just 27, he's gonna have a bunch of good bats around him and he's a friend of the podcast.
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Fifty steals for Jason Bourgeois. Already has five steals in spring training, stole 31 last year in just 238 at-bats, Lorenzo Cain is not yet proven and Bourgeois can also play second, where it's not like Chris Getz and Yuniesky Betancourt have a Jeter-like grip on that job, either.
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Francisco Liriano is a top-10 fantasy pitcher this year. You heard me. As my friend Ron Shandler likes to say, once you display a skill, you own it. He's pitched like it before. And he has struck out 26 while walking only four this spring in 22 innings, without giving up a homer.
Robert Griffin III leads my beloved Redskins to the Super Bowl in his rookie year. You heard me.
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Mark Trumbo ends the year as a top-10 fantasy third baseman. We know he can hit for power, it's just that he can't get into the lineup. They've been playing him at third base a lot this spring and the Los Angeles Times quoted Mike Scioscia as saying that "He looks real comfortable there." My guess is he will qualify at third base within the first month and end up with 30 home runs and an average you can live with.
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Ten wins, 150 strikeouts and an ERA under 3.75 for Big Fat Bartolo Colon. Having escaped the AL East, I love him in Oakland's stadium, pitching against the AL West. A strikeout-to-walk ratio of 3.4 and xFIPs of 4.01 and 3.93 in the months of August and September last year shows he didn't fade down the stretch, he just got a little unlucky. By the way, I wrote this before he threw those eight innings against the Mariners.
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Thirty home runs for Mike Carp. It's damn tough to come up with something bold for Seattle that might have a chance of happening. Carp did hit 12 home runs in limited time last year, and in 660 at-bats at Triple-A (between 2010 and 2011) he did 50 home runs. And yes, I know he was just placed on the DL. I'm sticking by Carp.
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Neftali Feliz finishes at least 10 spots higher than Yu Darvish on the Player Rater. I've seen Feliz succeed in Major League baseball. I haven't seen Darvish do it yet and the list of hyped guys from overseas failing is much longer than the list of those coming in and crushing it Year 1.
Kim Kardashian does nothing to generate headlines. She dates someone normal, she continues to work on her business, she keeps to herself and doesn't allow TV cameras or photographers into her personal life.
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Brandon Beachy rings up 230 strikeouts. That would have been top-five in baseball last year. Have you seen his K/9 rate? He just needs to stay healthy.
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Double-digit wins and 175 strikeouts for Carlos Zambrano. That's right, you heard me. New team, fresh start, finally has a manager crazier than he is and he's struck out 18 in 17&frac23; innings pitched this spring.
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Johan Santana, R.A. Dickey and Jonathon Niese all finish as top-40 starting pitchers on the Player Rater, with Santana in the top 30. They can all pitch and have looked good this spring. Although he wasn't "Johan Santana" anymore before he got hurt, Santana was still very effective and has looked good this spring. Dickey is always underrated (22 quality starts last season, same as CC Sabathia) and Niese had an xFIP of 3.28. Not worried about fences moving in; all three are draft-day bargains this year.
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Vance Worley finishes the season ahead of one of his "three aces" teammates on the Player Rater. Obviously, Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels are all studs, but one of them falters slightly this year (Hamels worries too much about his contract? Halladay's innings catch up to him?) while Worley masters the cutter and takes the next step.
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Ryan Zimmerman is not a top-10 third baseman at the end of the season. You know how often guys who just got paid big hustle back from the DL? Not very often.
I not only keep Macy, I end up rescuing another dog. Hope this one isn't all that bold.
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Alfonso Soriano goes 35/100. It took me a long time to come up with one for the Cubs that I can at least somewhat believe in. This is not a good team. Anyways, while no one was looking, Soriano had a 26/88 season, so these numbers aren't crazy. Soriano is crushing in spring training (six home runs, 15 RBIs, hitting .341) and while I don't believe the average will be there, if he can get at least 500 at-bats this year, he'll produce.
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Chris Heisey hits 35 home runs. He just needs the at-bats and his only competition is Ryan Ludwick. His career major league at-bat-to-home run ratio of 18.5 speaks to the power.
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Bud Norris has double-digit wins, 225 strikeouts, an ERA under 3.50, a WHIP of 1.20 and is a top-20 fantasy pitcher this year. My thinking: The wins are a crapshoot, but Bud's walk rate keeps improving, you know the strikeouts are there and at age 27, he's finally ready to take the step to the next level.
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Aramis Ramirez is not a top-15 fantasy third baseman, finishing out of the top 150 on our Player Rater. My thinking: Read "Love/Hate" for all the reasons I am down on Aramis. Ugh.
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Erik Bedard wins the NL Cy Young. That's right. You heard me. I'm a slave to tradition, and Bedard is my fantasy kryptonite. Seriously, though, it's always health, not talent, with Bedard, and he's landed in a good spot for him.
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Adam Wainwright is a top-five pitcher and in the top 15 overall on our Player Rater. It's not the talent, it's the health. Seeing his spring training performance, I'm ready to say that he's back.
I appear on an episode of "Storage Wars" and outbid Barry for a locker, and inside, find a priceless, long-lost, historically-significant treasure.
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Sixty home runs combined for Jason Kubel and Paul Goldschmidt. Kubel needs to stay healthy but has hit 28 before (and 21 in 2010) and he's landed in a nice place in Arizona. Goldschmidt has serious power, and with a full season in the majors he can easily hit 30. A lot would have to go right for them to combine for this number, but it's one of the calls I feel strongest about being right on.
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Dexter Fowler, Marco Scutaro, Michael Cuddyer, Tyler Colvin, Eric Young Jr., Jhoulys Chacin, Juan Nicasio and Rex Brothers all exceed their average draft position by at least three rounds: I love a lot of the Rockies, who are mostly going undervalued for some reason. It's a bit of a convoluted prediction, but this was the best way I could think of to highlight this many.
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Javy Guerra keeps his closer job all year and winds up with 40 saves. Everyone loves Kenley Jansen and rightfully so -- I had him on a bunch of sleeper lists last year -- but people forget that Guerra actually converted 21 of 23 saves last year, did close in the minors and has the gig right now. I'm not convinced he loses it.
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Jesus Guzman hits .300 and goes 20/20. That's right. You heard me. I'm reaching on the power, but these are supposed to be bold. Guzman did have 13 home runs in just under 500 at-bats last season, between Triple-A and the bigs. No team in baseball stole more bases than the Padres in 2011, so I think they will continue to run. And Guzman plays all over, giving him multiple ways to get to 500 at-bats. Hopefully, this finally takes pressure off my beloved Kyle Blanks.
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The best fantasy pitcher on the Giants this year isn't Tim Lincecum and it isn't Matt Cain. It's Madison Bumgarner. I love everything I've seen and read about Bumgarner. He's young enough to make yet another leap forward, and has been dominant in spring training (20 strikeouts, 3 walks, no home runs).
And with that, my preseason work is done. Good luck in your remaining drafts. I'll be writing every week during the season, in addition to the daily podcasts and frequent video hits, as I continue to be employed as ESPN's senior fantasy analyst. Hey, I guess I had one more bold prediction in me.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Past-present-future: Dunn, Matusz, others
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Eric Karabell

Not to belabor the point, but Chicago White Sox designated hitter/first baseman Adam Dunn didn't merely have a bad 2011 season; he had one of the worst seasons in baseball history. I think there's a difference. I mean, it was a bad year for plenty of players, either because of injury or simply performance, but Dunn lost 101 points of batting average, and he wasn't exactly winning batting titles to begin with. He didn't hit for power. His numbers against left-handed pitching -- six hits in 94 at-bats -- were mind-boggling.


Then again, from 2004-10, Dunn was a picture of consistency across the board for the good (power, durability) and the bad (batting average, defense). You knew what you were going to get … until 2011. So which do you trust, years of steady numbers or an unimaginable season with a .159 batting average?
<offer>Let's try something new here, featuring players that had truly awful numbers in 2011. I'm not talking Carl Crawford here, in terms of value or stats; Crawford wasn't unusable. He was still a top-50 outfielder on the Player Rater. These guys below, they were unusable.</offer>
Let's look at what we said a year ago, what happened and what I think will happen, and in some cases you'll see that simply forgetting 2011 occurred is the wise course of action.
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Adam Dunn, 1B/DH, Chicago White Sox



Dunn heading into 2011: After years of steady power numbers in the NL, he went to a home run hitter's park in the AL, which should easily make Dunn worth his fourth-round pick. (Yep, he was 38.4 in ADP!)
Dunn today: It's incomprehensible how bad he was. It never happened before.
My projection: I say he bounces back, and not because he has had a solid spring (4 home runs, 13 walks, just 4 strikeouts). With him, it seems like his frame of mind got off track and he lost confidence. The skills remain. I say he hits 25 home runs, knocks in 80 and bats .240. We'll take that late in a draft.
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Brian Matusz, SP, Baltimore Orioles



Matusz heading into 2011: Young lefty really emerged in the second half of 2010, posting a 3.63 ERA, 1.19 WHIP and nice K rate. Further growth seems reasonable, and he should be a reliable No. 4 fantasy starter in mixed leagues.
Matusz today: No starting pitcher with that many innings had ever posted an ERA so high. Allowing 18 home runs in 49 2/3 innings is hard to do.
My projection: The fact that his lost velocity is back this spring changes everything. The Orioles should have shut him down last September. There's no reason why his helpful 2010 numbers can't return.
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Alex Rios, OF, White Sox



Rios heading into 2011: Unlike Dunn, he tends to have the occasional off year, but coming off 21 homers, 34 steals and a .284 batting average, he's a coveted all-around option available in the fifth round.
Rios today: A .265 OBP and 11-steal season? Really? He seemed disinterested much of 2011, and the numbers show it.
My projection: Who knows when his motivation kicks in, but he's batting third for a new manager, and from 2007-10, he did hit .280 with an average of 19 home runs and 27 steals. I could see 15 home runs and 20 steals, which is still worth a 20th-rounder.
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Kyle Drabek, SP, Toronto Blue Jays



Drabek heading into 2011: This young Blue Jays right-hander has the bloodlines and stuff to thrive, even in the tough AL East. Command is occasionally sketchy, but there's a big strikeout future here.
Drabek today: Posted a 6.67 ERA and 1.91 WHIP between the majors and minors over 153 2/3 innings, somehow issuing 96 walks and the same number of whiffs. Yep, command, control, everything was an issue.
My projection: Looks terrific this spring after tossing five shutout innings against the Yankees on Tuesday. Has a 3.14 spring ERA. Claims it wasn't only mechanical problems to blame for 2011, but mentally things snowballed. Could make April rotation and stick, but he's not worth a pick in mixed leagues. Hope for a 4.25 ERA and twice as many strikeouts as walks.
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Vernon Wells, OF, Los Angeles Angels



Wells heading into 2011: Bloated real-life contract notwithstanding, Wells gave terrific value to fantasy owners with a 31-home run, 88-RBI season in 2010. Expect power numbers to dip some, but with a career .280 batting average, he's at least safe.
Wells today: Wells hit .218, the lowest of 145 qualifiers for the batting title in 2011. His OBP was .248. The 25 home runs just weren't worth it.
My projection: If he could hit .260 with the 25 home runs, nobody would complain. Well, you know what? Expect some BABIP bounce-back, and I see him hitting .250 with 20 home runs and 10 steals. Even in a standard league, he's worth the risk in Round 20.
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Derek Lowe, SP, Cleveland Indians



Lowe heading into 2011: The reliable innings-eater averaged 15 wins, a 3.95 ERA, 1.33 WHIP and 131 strikeouts from 2008-10. Age is not a factor since he's a ground ball specialist. No reason to expect pending doom.
Lowe today: Pending doom occurred; he had a 5.05 ERA, 1.50 WHIP and 17 losses against nine wins. The Braves sent him to the Indians.
My projection: He didn't exactly head to a team with a defensive-minded infield -- sorry, Asdrubal Cabrera was not a good defender other than the occasional "SportsCenter" highlight -- but Lowe's slider has been effective this spring (3.00 ERA, 1.20 WHIP), and the AL Central, after Detroit, isn't a strong division. When his unlucky FIP and BABIP come back to more normal levels, Lowe could slash a run off that ERA and win 12 games.
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Chone Figgins, 3B, Seattle Mariners



Figgins heading into 2011: Clearly took steps backward in his first season with Mariners, losing 143 OPS points, but he stole the same 42 bases. He should do it again in 2011.Figgins today: He had a miserable season in which he stopped hitting, drawing walks, running and eventually playing.
 

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Good News For Granderson

Negative is bad. Negative reinforcement, negative bank account, negative plus-minus. Negative is the best, however, when it comes to X-rays. Wednesday delivered two of them.

Curtis Granderson was a late scratch from the Yankees lineup on Tuesday with right elbow soreness, but was given the go ahead Wednesday when a precautionary MRI came back negative. He’s in no danger of missing Opening Day.

The news was the same for Jed Lowrie and his sprained right thumb, though the nature of his ailment and long-and-winding injury history mean he’s not out of the woods yet. Where Granderson could return to the lineup as soon as this afternoon, there are no such assurances with Lowrie. A trip to the disabled list seems unlikely, but Lowrie’s injuries have a way of making the unlikely likely. Negative X-ray or not, he’ll need to prove he can grip a bat before getting back in the lineup. Owners in NL-only leagues should have Four Stars Move Closer to Returns

There were no X-rays for Miguel Cabrera, Corey Hart, Michael Morse or Nick Swisher, but the news was good for all four.

Cleared to resume physical activities on Tuesday, Cabrera (eye) hit in the cage and fielded grounders Wednesday, and could return to game action as early as this afternoon. This writer’s choice for 2012's top fantasy player, Cabrera appears poised to live up to his vow of being ready for Opening Day.

The step Morse (lat) took was more incremental, but no less significant. Roughly a week removed from undergoing a platelet rich plasma injection, Morse was cleared to resume baseball activities, and could be ready for Opening Day depending on the progress he makes in the next 3-4 days. Originally a candidate to spend a decent chunk of April on the disabled list, Morse should at worst miss 1-2 series.

Swisher (groin) reported no unusual soreness after making 10 plate appearances in a minor-league game, and is expected to return to the lineup before the end of the week. He’s been sidelined since last Tuesday. He remains on pace to suit up when the Yanks begin the year in Tampa Bay on April 6.

The news was best for Hart (knee), who doubled and singled in a Triple-A game, his first of the spring. Hart still won’t be ready for Opening Day, but barring a setback, he won’t miss more than a handful of games as the Brewers set out to defend their National League Central crown.

Backed Up

Things were far less rosy for Too Early to Say

The news was inconclusive for Dan Haren, Nelson Cruz and Fernando Rodney, though none appear on the verge of lengthy absences.

Haren complained of a “dead arm” following a middling Wednesday outing against the Reds, but expressed minimal concern. "I've been battling it for a couple days," Haren said. "Usually, right about now, if not a little bit before, you get it. It lasts about a week or so. I'm sure it'll be fine."

Among the most durable starters in the league, Haren hasn’t made less than 33 starts or tossed fewer than 216 innings since 2004. He should be fine for the Angels’ season opening series against the Royals.

Haren’s American League West rival Nelson Cruz left Texas’ win over Kansas City with injury, but mercifully not one of his signature leg ailments. Hit on the right hand by a Luke Hochevar pitch in the third, he remained in the game for one more at-bat before being removed as a precaution. Deemed day-to-day by the powers that be, Cruz shouldn’t need more than a handful of days to round back into game shape.

Igagone

Japan’s pipeline of pitchers to America has provided everything from true phenomenons (Hideo Nomo) to frustrating enigmas (Daisuke Matsuzaka) and workmanlike relievers (Takashi Saito).

It’s also produced Kei Igawa. Signed to a five-year, $20 million deal by the Yankees in December 2006, Igawa ended up spending more time in Scranton than the Bronx. While posting an unseemly 6.66 ERA in 71 1/3 MLB innings, he racked up an absurd 533 minor-league frames, 469 2/3 of which came in Triple-A.

His deal finally ran out last fall, and he officially called it a major-league day on Wednesday, signing a two-year contract with the Pacific Coast League’s Orix Buffaloes. Now 32 and humbled like no other Japanese pitcher in America, it’s safe to say he’s thrown his last pitch stateside.

Short Hops




Justin Morneau is surging, Cameron Maybin is struggling and Jamie Moyer is closing in on a roster spot. … Concern arose when Brian Wilson was scratched from a “scheduled appearance” Wednesday, but it was later revealed to be all a mix up. The Beard is fine. … Felipe Paulino (elbow) is ticketed to begin the year on the disabled list. If Luis Mendoza runs with the fifth spot in Kansas City’s rotation during Paulino’s absence, it could prove to be an extremely poor-timed injury for one of 2011’s biggest surprises. … J.J. Hardy received a cortisone shot in his troublesome right shoulder Tuesday. It’s expected to alleviate pain he’s been feeling while throwing. The ailment has not been an issue for Hardy at the plate. … Desmond Jennings (shoulder) is expected to play in the outfield Thursday for the first time since his March 14 collision with B.J. Upton. Jennings has already returned to the dish. … Ted Lilly (neck) will throw a bullpen session today. … Released by the Astros after going 1-for-25 this spring, Jack Cust signed a minor-league deal with the Yankees.
 

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Cain Not Long For S.F.?

We’ve officially reached the point of spring training where there’s more news being made off the field than on it. From transactions to playing time to injury, Thursday covered every base of the big news diamond.

Twisting in the wind since the Angels’ stealth acquisition of Albert Pujols, Bobby Abreu learned there’s a 50-50 chance he'll be dealt to the Indians, who have been scouring high-and-low for help in the outfield. Although Abreu would be of use to a team currently set to go with Aaron Cunningham and Shelley Duncan in left field, it wouldn’t be with his defense, where he hasn’t been an asset since George W. Bush’s first term.

The move may not even be a boon for the Tribe at the dish. Abreu has been in methodical decline as a hitter, seeing his OPS drop precipitously each of the past three years, falling all the way to .717 (across 585 plate appearances) in 2011. That’s better than what Cunningham mustered in 101 plate appearances for the Padres (.624), but nowhere near the pop Duncan provided in 247 trips to the plate (.808).

Of course, Duncan’s numbers came as a part-time player (a righty, he was oddly much more effective against right-handers than southpaws), but it’s arguable that’s what Abreu should be after hitting .238/.319/.279 in 167 plate appearances against lefties last season. Throw in that Abreu turned 38 on March 11 and is hitting .087/.160/.130 this spring (200th out of 200 qualifying players), and you have a move that would be anything but a slam dunk.

Let’s Make (It Hard to Make) a Deal

That appears to be the mindset of Miguel Montero and Matt Cain, both of whom made it clear Thursday they will be operating on their own negotiating terms during their walk seasons.

Montero’s are far more, shall we say, “optimistic” than Cain’s. The soon-to-be 29-year-old backstop — who’s appeared in more than 85 games just twice in five major-league campaigns — is reportedly seeking “Victor Martinez money,” or roughly $50 million over four seasons.

Holding out for such a big deal would be shrewd if Montero could replicate his .282/.351/.469 line from 2011, but not if he accomplishes it playing only 85 games. Seeing as there is almost no chance the cost-conscious Diamondbacks would meet such an asking price, it’s possible the first casualty of Yadier Molina’s eye-popping extension won’t be a team that capitulates into overpaying, but a player emboldened to overplay his hand.

Cain, on the other hand, is simply doing what any durable 27-year-old with a career 3.35 ERA and 7.4 K/9 should do: playing hardball.

San Francisco’s Bobby Hill lookalike has let it be known he’ll cease talking contract on Opening Day, and recently refused to answer “yes” when asked if "all things being equal” he’d like to re-up with the Giants. As long as Cain stays healthy — something he’s likely to do after making at least 31 starts each of the past six years — he should have little trouble landing in excess of $100 million next winter.

A New Start?

Jeff Samardzija scored his first touchdown since 2006 on Thursday. A frequent punchline since passing up the NFL for the Cubs, Samardzija has finally made his way from the fringes of the league to the starting rotation after posting a 4.50 ERA, 1.00 WHIP and 16/1 K/BB ratio in 20 spring innings.

The owner of a career 4.40 ERA and 1.30 WHIP across 169 2/3 big-league frames, Samardzija is likely only getting the chance because he’s a former bonus baby pitching for a rebuilding team. However, he took a big-enough step forward in the bullpen in 2011 that it’s not total folly to gamble that his mid-90s fastball might translate to going six innings every fifth day.

Samardzija’s traditionally poor command makes it unlikely that he’ll run with what could be his last chance to earn a starting job, but he has just enough promise to make it worth him monitoring him in NL-only leagues.

Miggy, Grandy Good to Go

On Wednesday, we learned Miguel Cabrera (eye) and A Yu Beginning

The Rangers announced Wednesday that Yu Darvish’s regular-season debut will come on April 9 against the Mariners in Texas.

It means Darvish is slotted fourth in the Rangers’ rotation, and will be matched up with countryman Ichiro Suzuki in his big-league christening. We get the feeling many in East Asia will be keenly interested in the proceedings.

In line to make one-more spring start, Darvish has turned in a 3.00 ERA and 1.44 WHIP across nine Cactus League innings, issuing seven free passes to go along with 10 strikeouts. There is every reason to believe he’ll be an above-average fantasy pitcher this season, but it could take 4-5 outings for him to settle into his comfort zone. Don’t panic if Darvish’s April is less than stellar.

Out of Context, Likely Insignificant, Yet Undeniably Interesting Spring Numbers

Ryan Raburn and Brennan Boesch are two of five players with an MLB-leading six home runs.

Andre Ethier has more triples (three) than home runs (two).

Albert Pujols is third in spring OPS. Lorenzo Cain and Alex Liddi are first and second, respectively.

Eric Hosmer across 75 plate appearances: .418/.468/.746. He has driven in a league-leading 26 runs in the process.

Raul Ibanez across 51 plate appearances: .125/.176/.271

Adam Dunn across 56 plate appearances: .252/.380/.501

Carlos Santana across 62 plate appearances: .164/.254/.364

Zack Greinke and Josh Beckett are second and third in spring ERA. Luis Mendoza is first.

Bruce Chen’s 11.50 ERA is 80th out of 80 qualifiers.

Short Hops

The Royals are “leaning toward” installing Jonathan Broxton over Greg Holland at closer. If you had the misfortune of selecting Joakim Soria in an early-spring draft, you’d still be wise to stash both. … Brad Hawpe was released after hitting .261/.370/.478 this spring and refusing a minor-league assignment. He’s near the end. … Kevin Kouzmanoff will begin the year in the minors. The odds are low he becomes a factor in AL-only leagues. … Juan Pierre cracked the Phillies’ 40-man roster, an indication he’ll begin the year in the bigs. Weep for Domonic Brown. … Yoenis Cespedes will have none of what Shawn Kelley is cooking. … Jed Lowrie is awaiting MRI results on his sprained right thumb after X-rays came back negative Wednesday. As we’ve learned the hard way with Lowrie, the news is far too often not good. … Carl Crawford (wrist) could return as early as late April after his original timeline had him sidelined into mid-May. Coming off a year in which everything went wrong for their $142 million left fielder, the Red Sox would be wise not to rush him. … As expected, Freddy Sanchez (shoulder) will begin the year on the disabled list. Keep your expectations low in NL-only leagues.
 

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Top young arms: Part 2

Elite prospects who don't dominate out of the gates can fall off the radar. But there's a learning curve with any young ball player. I call the first year or two of learning in the big leagues Prospect Purgatory. There's a wide range of potential outcomes, and patience is paramount. Utilizing the qualification criteria listed below, this article is aimed at projecting how some of today's young, coveted arms will perform. And check out Top Young Arms: Part 1.


Qualification Criteria
1. Age 23 or younger2. Less than 125 career MLB innings pitched3. Upside is as an above-average MLB starting pitcher4. Has already pitched in the big leagues

For a look at my top 100 prospects, player rankings, projections and more, get Rotoworld's Draft Guide.


Henderson Alvarez, RHP, TORAge: 21A sinker baller with outstanding command, Alvarez sits in the mid-90s with elite, elite...ELITE downward movement. His slider was no better than average in 2011, but it could quickly become average and maybe better. Though he doesn’t command it as well as his fastball, it flashes big, sharp break. His changeup is a swing-and-miss offering. Athletic, he hides the ball well and works quickly with a good tempo.Prediction: Alvarez SHOULD emerge as a top-of-the-rotation starter, so long as he can stay healthy. He could pitch like a No. 2 in 2012 and turn into one of the top 10 pitchers in baseball by 2013. It’s big, big upside.Jordan Lyles, RHP, HOUAge: 21A strike-thrower, Lyles works up in the zone with a high-80s-to-low-90s fastball that has solid, late life. His curveball can be a strikeout pitch. Lyles is tall, athletic and able to repeat his delivery well, though he doesn’t offer much deception. He pitches with confidence, despite his below-average fastball velocity. He’s at his best when he’s working quickly and getting ahead of hitters, which he does well. He didn’t throw his changeup often in 2011, but he was able to finish hitters with it.Prediction: Lyles could be a No. 2 starter if he ever gains fastball velocity or continues to improve his already impressive fastball command. Otherwise, he’s a solid bet to have a fine career as a mid-rotation starter, perhaps as early as 2012.Julio Teheran, RHP, ATLAge: 21While he’s very much a young, elite prospect, Teheran is far from a lock to be a No. 1-2 starter. He has excellent arm speed and generates excellent velocity, but his fastball is pretty straight and he leaves it up in the zone a lot. He is going to be home-run prone. His changeup is a plus pitch. He also shows a curveball that could be above average. Coordinated with good balance, he throws with a bit of effort. Combine that with his arm speed, and he may be a guy who isn’t equipped to exhibit elite fastball command.Prediction: Teheran should find his way into the Braves rotation for a good chunk of 2012 and show the stuff to be a No. 3-4 starter. He has No. 2 upside, but he has some work to do before he gets there. Age and time are both on his side.Jacob Turner, RHP, DETAge: 20 Equipped with a good curveball, solid changeup, low-to-mid-90s four-seamer and a potential above-average sinker, Turner has the arsenal to stick in the big leagues for a while. He gets ahead of hitters with his four-seamer and locates it well. It doesn't have much movement but it gets on hitters quickly. While his curveball doesn’t have eye-popping depth or bite, it has consistent break and he commands it well. It was a strikeout pitch for him during his brief stint in the big leagues last season. His changeup compliments his fastball and curve well. Turner, who was shut down with a dead arm during spring training, should make his way back to the big leagues quickly if healthy. Though he’s pretty smooth in his windup, his delivery causes him to throw with a good amount of effort. This hasn’t negatively impacted his command, but it’s not exactly what you want to see from a guy who’s trying to prove he can throw 175-plus innings a season.Prediction: He has a quality four-pitch mix that he commands well. He isn’t overpowering, so expecting him to become a top-of-the-rotation starter could be a bit much, but then again he has the arsenal depth and command to possibly turn into a No. 2. For 2012, expect mid-rotation performance.Alex White, RHP, COLAge: 23The headlines around Alex White over the last few months haven’t been positive, but his upside on the mound has been evident for over half a decade. A sinkerballer with a four-seamer that touches the mid-90s, he throws a lot of strikes but can get a little sloppy in the strike zone. His sinker has outstanding, late break. His slider and changeup can both get swing-throughs, especially down in the zone -- his slider has tight, near-12-to-6 break. He didn’t command either particularly well during his time in the big leagues last year. And he’s hittable when he’s up in the zone. He has a balanced delivery with good arm speed and tempo.Prediction: White has No. 2 upside, which could become within reach as he continues to improve his command down in the zone. Until then, he’s going to have some outings where he gets hit around, as he doesn’t have the stuff to get too much of the plate. I’d expect him to pitch like a slightly-below-average MLB starter this season but there may be a little more in there.
 

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Mock 4.0: Representing the masses

By A.J. Mass | ESPN.com

The games have started to count -- two of them, anyway -- and the 2012 season is just about to get into full swing. With that in mind, and with many leagues staging their drafts as close to Opening Day as possible, it seemed only appropriate for one more foray into the mock draft world to give those owners one last glimpse as to the possibilities that await them.

As such, 10 intrepid drafters gathered together on Wednesday as we, the ESPN.com Fantasy team, held our final mock draft of the 2012 season. In first-round order, the participants were as follows: fantasy editor Brendan Roberts, analysts Tristan H. Cockcroft and Matthew Berry, contributor Brian Gramling, the Answer Guys' Shawn Cwalinski and Dave Hunter, Insider contributor Todd Zola, me, fantasy Insider Eric Karabell and fantasy editor James Quintong.
Because by this time of the year we've already done several of these exercises in allocating the available player pool onto rosters, it's easy to fall into similar patterns of selecting the same names in the same places. So for this last go-round, I thought I'd critique the general trends of ESPN live drafters with a personal strategy of using the most recent average draft position list to choose my players, at least until the very late stages of the draft, when I might need to stray a bit from that restriction to grab particular positional needs.
With that in mind, let's take a look how this draft shook out. ESPN standard rules and roster sizes apply. For a look at the final rosters, click here.
ROUND 1

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 1 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Ryan Braun, Mil, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 2 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Miguel Cabrera, Det, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 3 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Albert Pujols, LAA, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 4 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Matt Kemp, LAD, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 5 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Jose Bautista, Tor, 3B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 6 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Troy Tulowitzki, Col, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 7 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Robinson Cano, NYY, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 8 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Jacoby Ellsbury, Bos, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 9 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Justin Upton, Ari, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 10 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Joey Votto, Cin, 1B </td></tr></tbody></table>



In previous drafts, there was some question as to Ryan Braun's status. However, aside from a nagging groin injury, there's no longer anything to worry about in terms of his playing time for 2012. Without having to factor a 50-game gap in his statistics, Brendan Roberts snagged him with the No. 1 overall pick this time around. Roberts would question those who would question the pick: "Why not? He's durable, in his prime and a five-category stud."
When my turn came around, Jacoby Ellsbury was the highest position player on my personal list as well as the clear ADP choice at this point of the draft. If you were looking to go with a starting pitcher early, drafting one in the neighborhood of picks 8-13 wouldn't be the craziest idea in the world, but with elite hitters flying off the board early, it would seem "smarter" to wait until the "pitcher's seal" is cracked by somebody else before diving in.
ROUND 2

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 11 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Hanley Ramirez, Mia, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 12 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Dustin Pedroia, Bos, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 13 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Adrian Gonzalez, Bos, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 14 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Evan Longoria, TB, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 15 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Prince Fielder, Det, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 16 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Jose Reyes, Mia, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 17 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Carlos Gonzalez, Col, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 18 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Adrian Beltre, Tex, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 19 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Andrew McCutchen, Pit, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 20 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Ian Kinsler, Tex, 2B </td></tr></tbody></table>

With a clear tier of three players at the top of second base and shortstop, it's not shocking that the remaining members of these groups went off the board in Round 2. However, Berry was not looking up the middle when his pick came along at No. 18, passing on Ian Kinsler to grab Adrian Beltre.
"I have Beltre at No. 17 in my top 250 ranks, so getting him at No. 18 made total sense to me. I felt anyone past him would be a reach, and because I'd already gotten Pujols, the ability to get my corner spots done with my first two picks -- especially as I am down on guys like David Wright, Ryan Zimmerman and Aramis Ramirez this year -- was a no-brainer to me," Berry explained.
My pick at No. 13 was Adrian Gonzalez, which is not a move I would have made on my own. It's not that I don't think Gonzalez is a good value there, but it meant I picked two Red Sox hitters with my first two picks. While I'm not opposed to getting several hitters on one major league team's lineup over the course of a draft, I'd probably have gone with Prince Fielder instead had I been left to my own devices, simply to spread the risk out a bit.
ROUND 3

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 21 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Roy Halladay, Phi, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 22 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Clayton Kershaw, LAD, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 23 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Giancarlo Stanton, Mia, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 24 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Justin Verlander, Det, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 25 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Curtis Granderson, NYY, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 26 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> David Wright, NYM, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 27 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Mark Teixeira, NYY, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 28 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Cliff Lee, Phi, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 29 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Felix Hernandez, Sea, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 30 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Tim Lincecum, SF, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 4

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 31 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Ryan Zimmerman, Was, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 32 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Eric Hosmer, KC, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 33 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Jered Weaver, LAA, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 34 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Matt Holliday, StL, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 35 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Michael Bourn, Atl, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 36 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Paul Konerko, CWS, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 37 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Dan Uggla, Atl, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 38 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Cole Hamels, Phi, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 39 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Jay Bruce, Cin, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 40 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Hunter Pence, Phi, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

Six starters went off the board in Round 3, which didn't surprise me. In my personal rankings, I have seven starters in the top 25. As such, once you get into this part of the draft, the value of grabbing your staff anchor here gets to the point where you simply can't pass it up regardless of how deep you may feel starting pitching is this year.
When my pick came along, Cliff Lee was at the top of the board, and I had no issues with that choice here. The run on pitchers continued after my pick, with Felix Hernandez and Tim Lincecum being selected next. I asked Quintong whether he was influenced by the "run" or his pick was planned all along. Even in retrospect, he's not quite sure. "I was already looking at a starting pitcher in the third round since it seemed like it was a good time to get a top-notch ace," he said. "But I also kind of got caught in the run, though I have no qualms about making that pick."
In other words, although he was already considering a starting pitcher at the time, once the run started, it was difficult for him to even consider another option. It's a common thing that happens to owners in drafts, especially with a ticking clock forcing you to make decisions quickly.
In Round 4, Karabell might have reached a bit for Eric Hosmer, but he wanted to be sure he nabbed a player he thinks much higher of today than he did at the start of the spring. "I've basically decided that Hosmer is going to do a lot better than what we have projected him for, so why wait two or three rounds to get him? I've moved Hosmer ahead of Paul Konerko and expect 25 homers, 90 RBIs."
There's no point in playing chicken if you have that kind of faith in a player. Fearing he wouldn't have gotten Hosmer if he waited, Karabell pounced and was quite happy with the result, a feeling that repeated itself when he grabbed Brett Lawrie with his next pick. The moral of the story is to grab whom you want when your turn comes to avoid getting stuck with a roster of guys you can't stand.
ROUND 5

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 41 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Pablo Sandoval, SF, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 42 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Elvis Andrus, Tex, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 43 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Josh Hamilton, Tex, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 44 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Dan Haren, LAA, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 45 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Ben Zobrist, TB, 2B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 46 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Brandon Phillips, Cin, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 47 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Zack Greinke, Mil, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 48 </td><td> Mass </td><td> CC Sabathia, NYY, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 49 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Brett Lawrie, Tor, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 50 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Nelson Cruz, Tex, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 6

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 51 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Shane Victorino, Phi, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 52 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Jimmy Rollins, Phi, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 53 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Mike Napoli, Tex, C, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 54 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Jon Lester, Bos, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 55 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Craig Kimbrel, Atl, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 56 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> David Price, TB, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 57 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Starlin Castro, ChC, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 58 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Asdrubal Cabrera, Cle, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 59 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Carlos Santana, Cle, C, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 60 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Yovani Gallardo, Mil, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

After the ADP told me to grab Jered Weaver in Round 4, CC Sabathia was the Round 5 pick assigned to me "by the masses." That's a pretty good trio at the top of my rotation, and a quick scan of the remaining list as it stood at the time indicated it was likely to be quite a few rounds before another SP rose to the top, especially given the likelihood that other owners were about to start grabbing the remaining few members of the top 20 before too long.
Cockcroft went with Elvis Andrus here, showing a lot of support for the shortstop. "He is 23, he fills the tough shortstop spot with 35-steal speed, and he's hitting .370 and drawing walks this spring. I think there's more room for growth. I've come to think that we, as a group, were too low on Andrus at the summit."
Given the number of middle infielders who went off the board between Cockcroft's Round 5 and 6 picks -- Ben Zobrist, Brandon Phillips, Jimmy Rollins, Starlin Castro and Asdrubal Cabrera -- it's pretty safe to assume that Andrus would not have been around for the taking at No. 59.
The collective wisdom tells me to grab the first catcher of the draft, Mike Napoli, in Round 6. I think in most leagues, you might have to grab him, Carlos Santana and maybe even Brian McCann a round earlier than this. In our mock drafts with only one catcher required to have a legal roster, we all tend to wait a bit longer to fill that slot.
Another tendency in our mocks is to wait on closers and "not pay for saves," so it's always interesting when a reliever goes in the first eight rounds. Knowing full well the ESPN.com mock draft trend, Hunter still grabbed Craig Kimbrel at pick No. 55. Why? Hunter had a plan: "With the strategy I was running, it was important for me to get the best closer in the game even if it meant taking him earlier than normal. My goal heading into this draft was to draft three or four closers, and the rest top middle relievers. The idea being that I would win ERA, WHIP and saves, while forgoing wins and strikeouts."
Hunter's final pitching staff will end up consisting of nine relievers, and the post-draft projections have him winning the league by nine points. Sure, projections are just that, and the end result may not bear such sweet fruit, but by having a plan going in and executing it perfectly, were we to play this league out, Hunter would be starting out in a very strong position.
ROUND 7

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 61 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Stephen Strasburg, Was, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 62 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Matt Cain, SF, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 63 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Carl Crawford, Bos, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 64 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Lance Berkman, StL, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 65 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> C.J. Wilson, LAA, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 66 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Brian McCann, Atl, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 67 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Adam Jones, Bal, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 68 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Alex Rodriguez, NYY, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 69 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Shin-Soo Choo, Cle, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 70 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> James Shields, TB, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 8

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 71 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Rickie Weeks, Mil, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 72 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> David Ortiz, Bos, DH </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 73 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Alex Gordon, KC, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 74 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Alexei Ramirez, CWS, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 75 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Michael Morse, Was, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 76 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Madison Bumgarner, SF, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 77 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Aramis Ramirez, Mil, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 78 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Billy Butler, KC, DH </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 79 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Desmond Jennings, TB, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 80 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Matt Wieters, Bal, C </td></tr></tbody></table>

My picks in the next two rounds were Alex Rodriguez and Alex Gordon. Apart from having the same first name, the two could not be more different. In A-Rod, we're hoping for one more season before the injuries take a permanent toll on the once-great hitter. With Gordon, we're hoping that the promise of a onetime can't-miss prospect wasn't limited to 2011's long-awaited breakout campaign. Given events of the spring, with Rodriguez visiting doctors and Gordon crushing the ball, we'll hope for a 1-for-2 here.
I was not expecting Adam Jones to be taken so soon, but Zola grabbed the Orioles outfielder at No. 67. As he explained, "I was looking to piece-meal enough steals together so I wouldn't have to get a steals specialist, and I like the upside potential of Jones in terms of both power and speed. I was going to go with Crawford had he slipped."
However, Crawford went four picks earlier, and in the end, Zola went for the "safety" of Jones over Shin-Soo Choo, who went to Karabell at No. 69. Karabell also selected David Ortiz, a value pick in terms of stats, to be sure. The problem with Ortiz is his DH-only status, which makes you have to slot him in at the utility spot and probably is responsible for adding a good two to three rounds to his ADP.
Sometimes you end up taking players you don't like, simply because you're out of alternatives. Gramling, having passed on a third baseman until now, found himself with only Aramis Ramirez and Kevin Youkilis to choose from in the "upper tiers." To illustrate this truth, consider that Martin Prado in Round 14 was the next third baseman selected after those two went off the board. (Youkilis went to Cockcroft early in Round 9.)
Here's how Gramling decided between the lesser of two evils. "I'm not a huge fan of Ramirez, but Youkilis is too much of an injury risk. Ramirez always hits well against NL Central teams, and his lineup in Milwaukee will be better than his Cubs lineups of the past few seasons, which should make up for his slight downgrade in ballparks from a power standpoint."
ROUND 9

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 81 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> B.J. Upton, TB, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 82 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Kevin Youkilis, Bos, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 83 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Ian Kennedy, Ari, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 84 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Matt Moore, TB, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 85 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Jayson Werth, Was, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 86 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Michael Cuddyer, Col, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 87 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Ichiro Suzuki, Sea, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 88 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Mariano Rivera, NYY, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 89 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Michael Young, Tex, 1B, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 90 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Brett Gardner, NYY, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 10

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 91 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Jason Heyward, Atl, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 92 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Howard Kendrick, LAA, 2B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 93 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Jonathan Papelbon, Phi, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 94 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Ricky Romero, Tor, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 95 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> John Axford, Mil, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 96 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Corey Hart, Mil, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 97 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Chris Young, Ari, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 98 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Freddie Freeman, Atl, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 99 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Matt Garza, ChC, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 100 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Jeremy Hellickson, TB, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 11

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 101 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Daniel Hudson, Ari, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 102 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Cameron Maybin, SD, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 103 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Drew Stubbs, Cin, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 104 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Brian Wilson, SF, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 105 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Joel Hanrahan, Pit, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 106 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Carlos Beltran, StL, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 107 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Mat Latos, Cin, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 108 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Adam Wainwright, StL, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 109 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Josh Beckett, Bos, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 110 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Jordan Zimmermann, Was, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 12

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 111 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Rafael Betancourt, Col, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 112 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Tommy Hanson, Atl, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 113 </td><td> Mass </td><td> J.J. Hardy, Bal, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 114 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Miguel Montero, Ari, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 115 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Emilio Bonifacio, Mia, SS, 3B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 116 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Brandon Beachy, Atl, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 117 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Adam Lind, Tor, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 118 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Dee Gordon, LAD, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 119 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Jose Valverde, Det, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 120 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Derek Jeter, NYY, SS </td></tr></tbody></table>

"In for a penny, in for a pound." My team's offense is starting to worry me a bit, but at this point of the proceedings, I'm actually quite happy to see that the ADP is pushing me to continue to bolster my pitching staff. After all, if I'm already playing catch-up on offense, I'd better make darn sure my mound team is able to finish at or near the top in all five pitching categories. So I'm more than happy to use these rounds to grab Mariano Rivera and Jonathan Papelbon to secure what should be 70-80 saves. Adam Wainwright, who has been putting up nothing but goose eggs all spring, also joins my already-strong starting rotation. J.J. Hardy might not hit 30 home runs again, but since we're already behind in power, we'd be more than happy to get 20 from our shortstop with a 12th-round pick.
I wasn't the only owner who was waiting on offense. Cwalinski had done enough mocks this year to recognize that he was typically waiting too long to grab starting pitching. Learning from his past mistakes, he made it a point to grab David Price, C.J. Wilson and Madison Bumgarner in Rounds 6-8. However, that put him behind the eight ball in terms of outfielders.
The result? Jayson Werth and Corey Hart in Rounds 9 and 10. "The worst case with Werth would be that I get last season's numbers from him," Cwalinski said. "However, he is a career .265 hitter and a good bet for 20-plus home runs and 15-plus steals."
Hart likely will miss the first series of the season with a bad knee, and that's likely the reason that his draft stock has been steadily falling of late. He's got top-20 outfielder potential and might miss three to six games in April. That's no reason to run away from him in the same way owners are jumping ship on players with more serious injuries, like Chase Utley. When enough owners in your draft get scared by those red letters "DTD," you can find some bargains.
ROUND 13

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 121 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Andre Ethier, LAD, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 122 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Neil Walker, Pit, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 123 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Cory Luebke, SD, SP, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 124 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Josh Johnson, Mia, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 125 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Jason Motte, StL, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 126 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Nick Swisher, NYY, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 127 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Erick Aybar, LAA, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 128 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Ubaldo Jimenez, Cle, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 129 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Yu Darvish, Tex, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 130 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Alex Avila, Det, C </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 14

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 131 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Michael Pineda, NYY, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 132 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Max Scherzer, Det, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 133 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Joe Mauer, Min, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 134 </td><td> Zola </td><td> J.J. Putz, Ari, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 135 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Drew Storen, Was, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 136 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Martin Prado, Atl, 3B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 137 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Buster Posey, SF, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 138 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Coco Crisp, Oak, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 139 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Logan Morrison, Mia, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 140 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Jhonny Peralta, Det, SS </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 15

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 141 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Heath Bell, Mia, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 142 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Mark Reynolds, Bal, 3B, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 143 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Shaun Marcum, Mil, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 144 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Andrew Bailey, Bos, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 145 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Carlos Lee, Hou, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 146 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Angel Pagan, SF, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 147 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Torii Hunter, LAA, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 148 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Gio Gonzalez, Was, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 149 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Anibal Sanchez, Mia, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 150 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Kyle Farnsworth, TB, RP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 16

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 151 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Ryan Roberts, Ari, 2B, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 152 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Ervin Santana, LAA, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 153 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Melky Cabrera, SF, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 154 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Huston Street, SD, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 155 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Colby Rasmus, Tor, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 156 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Dustin Ackley, Sea, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 157 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Nick Markakis, Bal, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 158 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Kelly Johnson, Tor, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 159 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Jesus Montero, Sea, DH </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 160 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Jordan Walden, LAA, RP </td></tr></tbody></table>

Quality catchers continue to exist and finally start to come off the board again. Alex Avila and Buster Posey go in Rounds 13 and 14, around my pick of Joe Mauer. I particularly like the idea of grabbing a second top-10 catcher in ESPN standard leagues before most people have grabbed their first to gain a little trade leverage for later in the season.
Perhaps because he already has a home run under his belt, Dustin Ackley gets picked in Round 16, a good round ahead of where his ADP has seen him go in drafts. Jesus Montero, at No. 159, also went off the board earlier than expected, and with two games down, he's still no closer to gaining catcher eligibility. Just an FYI.
Karabell grabbed Yu Darvish in Round 13. He'll be the No. 4 starter for Texas, and it looks like the buzz has finally died down enough where he's now being selected perhaps later than he should be going. Rumors of Michael Pineda (No. 131) being sent to the minors to start the season make him a potential later-round bargain, on the assumption that such a demotion would simply be due to roster size issues and the simple fact that Pineda still has options left.
ROUND 17

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 161 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Gaby Sanchez, Mia, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 162 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Jason Kipnis, Cle, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 163 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Brandon League, Sea, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 164 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Jaime Garcia, StL, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 165 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Sergio Santos, Tor, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 166 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Joe Nathan, Tex, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 167 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Wandy Rodriguez, Hou, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 168 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Jemile Weeks, Oak, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 169 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Carlos Marmol, ChC, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 170 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Brandon Morrow, Tor, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 18

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 171 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Hiroki Kuroda, NYY, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 172 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Sean Marshall, Cin, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 173 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Marco Scutaro, Col, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 174 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Jose Tabata, Pit, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 175 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Tyler Clippard, Was, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 176 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Kendrys Morales, LAA, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 177 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Chase Utley, Phi, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 178 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Grant Balfour, Oak, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 179 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Brandon McCarthy, Oak, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 180 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Paul Goldschmidt, Ari, 1B </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 19

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 181 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Jeff Francoeur, KC, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 182 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Ike Davis, NYM, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 183 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Chris Perez, Cle, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 184 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Matt Joyce, TB, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 185 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Javy Guerra, LAD, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 186 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Sergio Romo, SF, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 187 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Tim Stauffer, SD, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 188 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Doug Fister, Det, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 189 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Lucas Duda, NYM, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 190 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Daniel Murphy, NYM, 2B, 3B, 1B </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 20

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 191 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Matt Capps, Min, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 192 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Jason Kubel, Ari, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 193 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Mat Gamel, Mil, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 194 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Edwin Encarnacion, Tor, 3B, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 195 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Ryan Howard, Phi, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 196 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Josh Willingham, Min, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 197 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Alex Rios, CWS, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 198 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Chris Sale, CWS, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 199 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Justin Masterson, Cle, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 200 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Johnny Cueto, Cin, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 21

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 201 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> David Freese, StL, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 202 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Frank Francisco, NYM, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 203 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Francisco Liriano, Min, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 204 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Brett Myers, Hou, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 205 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Yadier Molina, StL, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 206 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Kenley Jansen, LAD, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 207 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Danny Espinosa, Was, 2B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 208 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Lorenzo Cain, KC, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 209 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Adam Dunn, CWS, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 210 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Yoenis Cespedes, Oak, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 22

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 211 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Brennan Boesch, Det, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 212 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Delmon Young, Det, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 213 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Ryan Raburn, Det, 2B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 214 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Ted Lilly, LAD, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 215 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Mike Adams, Tex, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 216 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Vance Worley, Phi, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 217 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Yunel Escobar, Tor, SS </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 218 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Jim Johnson, Bal, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 219 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Derek Holland, Tex, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 220 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Colby Lewis, Tex, SP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 23

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 221 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Carlos Pena, TB, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 222 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Clay Buchholz, Bos, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 223 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Neftali Feliz, Tex, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 224 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Aroldis Chapman, Cin, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 225 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Matt Thornton, CWS, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 226 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Jonny Venters, Atl, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 227 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Allen Craig, StL, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 228 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Mark Trumbo, LAA, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 229 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Jonathan Broxton, KC, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 230 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Addison Reed, CWS, RP </td></tr></tbody></table>

ROUND 24

<table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 231 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Dexter Fowler, Col, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 232 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> John Danks, CWS, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 233 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Mike Carp*, Sea, 1B, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 234 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Greg Holland, KC, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 235 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Tommy Milone, Oak, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 236 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Peter Bourjos, LAA, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 237 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> James Loney, LAD, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 238 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Raul Ibanez, NYY, OF </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 239 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Tim Hudson, Atl, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 240 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Alfonso Soriano, ChC, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

h4> ROUND 25 <table><thead><tr><th> Pick </th><th> Overall </th><th> By </th><th> Player </th></tr><tbody><tr class="last"><td> 1 </td><td> 241 </td><td> Roberts </td><td> Brad Lidge, Was, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 2 </td><td> 242 </td><td> Cockcroft </td><td> Jhoulys Chacin, Col, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 3 </td><td> 243 </td><td> Berry </td><td> Wilson Ramos, Was, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 4 </td><td> 244 </td><td> Gramling </td><td> Francisco Cordero, Tor, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 5 </td><td> 245 </td><td> Cwalinski </td><td> Scott Baker, Min, SP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 6 </td><td> 246 </td><td> Hunter </td><td> Mike Moustakas, KC, 3B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 7 </td><td> 247 </td><td> Zola </td><td> Justin Morneau, Min, 1B </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 8 </td><td> 248 </td><td> Mass </td><td> Vinnie Pestano, Cle, RP </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 9 </td><td> 249 </td><td> Karabell </td><td> Geovany Soto, ChC, C </td></tr><tr class="last"><td> 10 </td><td> 250 </td><td> Quintong </td><td> Mitch Moreland, Tex, 1B, OF </td></tr></tbody></table>

We're finally forced to steer clear of our self-imposed ADP rule to fill out our starting lineups, and it's not too upsetting to see that we're able to grab Jemile Weeks, Marco Scutaro, Mat Gamel, Ryan Raburn and Mark Trumbo in the final portion of the draft. To be able to wait this long and still get guys with 25-homer or 25-stolen-base potential is nothing to sneeze at.
Plenty of injury risks with huge upside are also still around for those willing to roll the dice, such as Kendrys Morales (No. 176), Utley (No. 177), Ryan Howard (No. 195) and Justin Morneau (No. 247) just to name a few.
All in all, this draft can give you a basic idea of where certain players are being selected and let you know which players you might be able to wait that extra round on before reaching for, or to pounce on quicker than you had planned to ensure you reap the benefits of ownership instead of watching one of your rivals laugh his way to a fantasy title.
Of course, every draft is different, and it's always important to have a Plan B in place for when things don't seem to be going your way. But that's all part of the fun, is it not?
Whether you believe that leagues can be won or lost on draft day is up to you, but I can guarantee you that if you don't draft at all, you've got no shot. So grab a group of friends, get in the game and have some fun. You'll be glad you did.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Bad News Bailey

Andrew Bailey began last season on the disabled list, and it sounds like he might be headed there again to kick off the 2012 campaign.



It’s been revealed that the Red Sox closer is dealing with an injury to the thumb on his pitching hand. Although details are sketchy at this point, Bailey hasn’t appeared in a spring training game in over a week, and he’s been sent back to Boston to get checked out.



We don’t know how the injury occurred, nor do we know how long he might be out, so it’s pointless to speculate before he gets looked at by doctors in Beantown. But, the bottom line is that the Red Sox’ season opener is a mere four days away, so there has to be a good chance it will be someone other than Bailey that gets the ball in a save situation early on this season.



So who would the Sox turn to in the ninth inning? Mark Melancon saved 20 games for the Astros last season and would appear to be the obvious candidate, but also in the mix will be The Reds weren’t happy when Juan Francisco showed up to camp overweight, and he didn’t do himself any favors by batting under .200 this spring. But, because he was out of options, Francisco was expected to make the team’s Opening Day roster anyway.



Well, he’ll be on an Opening Day roster, it just won’t be Cincinnati’s.



The Reds traded Francisco to the Braves Sunday in exchange for relief prospect JJ Hoover. The move is bad for Francisco in that he’ll leave Great American Ballpark, but it’s good because there’s an immediate opening at third base with The 24-year-old is expected to receive the bulk of the playing time at the hot corner until Chipper is ready, with The Rangers haven’t hidden the fact that they want Hamilton entered camp as the likely starter in left field, with Craig Gentry, Julio Borbon and The news affects Borbon and David Murphy more than anyone else. Borbon could have been on the strong side of a platoon in center with Gentry, but now he’ll be relegated to a bench role. Murphy, on the other hand, looks poised to receive more at-bats, as he should start in left field against right-handers, with Gentry facing the lefties. While he doesn’t stand out in any one area, Murphy has notched double-digit homers and steals two years running, and he should have a good chance to do so again in 2012, making him a viable AL-only league option.



Hart good to go?



Although Brewers manager Ron Roenicke wouldn’t come out and say it definitively, it appears that In the long run it’s not a huge deal, as the Brewers can backdate Hart’s DL stint if need be and he would miss only a few days. But, you can bet that they’d like to be at full strength on Opening Day against the World Champion Cardinals after the Redbirds bounced them from the playoffs in last year’s NLCS.​
http://fantasyfootball.usatoday.com/content/player.asp?sport=MLB&id=3875
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Bold stat predictions for all 30 teams
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Eric Karabell

If you had said a year ago that Matt Kemp and Jacoby Ellsbury would be fantasy's top two players, a pitcher would win MVP and Cy Young honors and Adam Dunn would hit .159 -- I still can't get over that -- I would have used a word to describe these things other than bold. It's more than bold. Hey, being bold is fun or beautiful, or whatever word you choose, and in this blog entry, I'm going to be exactly that, yet in a somewhat realistic way. I really could see this stuff happening!


<offer>It's time to head out onto the proverbial limb. In order to get more names out there, I've made sure many of the statistical culprits below differ from what I noted about the pitchers in December and the hitters from November, and I've made sure my bold thoughts differ from colleague Matthew "Macy" Berry, who got bold in his own right last week.</offer>To add to the boldness, I'm going in order of my predicted wins for each MLB team. I shared these on a recent Baseball Today podcast, where we often go out on limbs (although that was a week ago, and I've adjusted some win totals). Click here to listen to our daily show!





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Texas Rangers (predicted record: 94-68; wins AL West, loses in ALCS): Hate to start with a negative, but I say top fantasy catcher Mike Napoli hits .256 -- he is, after all, a lifetime .264 hitter -- and does not finish among the top five fantasy catchers. That doesn't mean Yorvit Torrealba will, by the way. Joe Nathan will save 35 games. OK, I guess that's positive.
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Tampa Bay Rays (93-69; wins AL East, loses in World Series): Yeah, I love this team, again. Matt Moore wins top rookie honors, Evan Longoria takes the American League MVP, and Desmond Jennings hits 20 home runs and steals 35 bases. But you're drafting those guys anyway. Thinking deeper, I see Carlos Pena beating out Jose Bautista for the home run title, finishing with 42.
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Detroit Tigers (92-70; wins AL Central, loses to Rays in ALDS): Outfielder Delmon Young, who I'm not the biggest fan of, knocks in a team-leading 118 runs, third in the AL behind Bautista and Adrian Gonzalez. Hey, look who will be on base for Young; if only Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder had better table-setters.
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New York Yankees (92-70; wins wild-card game, loses to Rangers in ALDS): I guess I can't predict Jesus Montero hits 30 home runs, like I did in December. He's a Mariner now! Instead, I will say Michael Pineda, acquired for Montero, does what Phil Hughes did in 2011: half a season of starts, ERA over 5.00. You don't want Pineda. Frankly, avoid Hughes and Ivan Nova too. Andy Pettitte ends up as this team's No. 3 starter.
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Philadelphia Phillies (92-70; wins NL East and World Series): Hey, it's my blog; I can pick any team I want! Anyway, the team winning is realistic. I did chop off 10 regular-season wins, though. Ryan Howard and Chase Utley will combine for 490 at-bats and 23 home runs. Not good. However, and I can't believe I'm writing this, Juan Pierre leads off most of the year and steals 32 bases (he's caught stealing 18 times). Hunter Pence hits 30 home runs; no other Phillie hits 20.
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Los Angeles Angels (91-71; loses to Yankees in wild-card game): As Vernon Wells adds 60 points to his batting average compared with last year while still hitting 25 home runs, poor Mike Trout doesn't get called up until August. He will be awesome in 2013, though. Oh, and Mark Trumbo hits only 12 home runs all year. C.J. Wilson wins the AL Cy Young award.
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San Francisco Giants (89-73; wins NL West, loses in NLCS): Other than lefty Madison Bumgarner winning the National League Cy Young award, Aubrey Huff, Melky Cabrera, Nate Schierholtz and part-time second-baseman Brett Pill will all hit more homers than Brandon Belt. Sorry, I would play Belt, but the Giants seem to disagree. And yes, Huff hits .278 with 22 home runs. He's an every-other-year guy.
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Arizona Diamondbacks (87-75; wins NL wild-card game, loses to Phillies in NLDS): Justin Upton wins NL MVP honors with 41 home runs and 25 steals. However, Paul Goldschmidt hits .222 and loses his job, and Josh Collmenter makes only four starts before getting demoted in favor of Tyler Skaggs.
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Miami Marlins (85-77; loses NL wild-card game): Hanley Ramirez ends the year as fantasy's top player (29 home runs, 33 steals, .327 batting average). Josh Johnson makes 27 really good starts. Carlos Zambrano does not.
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Toronto Blue Jays (85-77): Brett Lawrie and Colby Rasmus each hit more than 20 home runs and steal more than 20 bases. Kyle Drabek wins 12 games with 155 strikeouts and a 4.12 ERA.
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Boston Red Sox (85-77): That's right, four AL East teams are pretty good! Jon Lester wins 20 games and the team scores plenty, but the rest of the rotation struggles. Mark Melancon leads the team in saves with 24. Carl Crawford has an even worse season than he did in 2011.





javascript:newWin('http://espn.go.com/mlb/team/_/name/stl/st-louis-cardinals')St. Louis Cardinals (85-77; wins NL Central in one-game playoff, loses to Giants in NLDS): Matthew and I have both predicted great things for Adam Wainwright, but here's more from me: Allen Craig becomes the regular third baseman in June -- David Freese gets hurt (again!) -- and hits 22 home runs. Tyler Greene seizes the starting shortstop and leadoff roles and hits 14 home runs and steals 24 bases. Rafael Furcal is done. Kyle Lohse has a better year than he did in 2011.
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Cincinnati Reds (85-77, loses division playoff): Aroldis Chapman neither starts nor saves a game all year long, but Mat Latos wins 18 games, Sean Marshall saves 36, and Todd Frazier hits 20 home runs as the (mostly) starting third baseman after Scott Rolen gets hurt.
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Atlanta Braves (84-78): Michael Bourn hits below his career average of .272, and those that chose him in the fourth round eventually ask themselves what they were thinking. He does steal 52 bases, though. Livan Hernandez leads the beleaguered (injured) staff in innings but finishes fifth in strikeouts, including being behind closer Craig Kimbrel.
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Milwaukee Brewers (84-78): Ryan Braun regresses all the way to 31 home runs, 31 steals and a .314 batting average. New cleanup man Mat Gamel finishes with more home runs and RBIs than Aramis Ramirez. Francisco Rodriguez is traded back to the Angels in July.
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Washington Nationals (82-80): Jayson Werth ends up as this team's top fantasy hitter, and Jordan Zimmermann is the top pitcher. Bryce Harper is promoted in July and hits only .260 but has 17 home runs and nine steals.
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Chicago White Sox (80-82): I think I've written enough about Dunn and Alex Rios bouncing back. John Danks wins 16, Addison Reed saves 24, and Alejandro De Aza swipes 27 bases.
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Kansas City Royals (80-82): Eric Hosmer finishes fourth in MVP voting with 29 home runs, 109 RBIs and a .309 batting average. No, really. Jonathan Sanchez walks 22 batters in April and ends up on the disabled list. Luis Mendoza is the team's top starting pitcher.
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Los Angeles Dodgers (79-83): Kemp, Dee Gordon, Clayton Kershaw and Javy Guerra will be great. Nobody else will be. Matt Angle finishes second on the team with 21 steals, while Nate Eovaldi wins 12 games.
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Colorado Rockies (79-83): Jamie Moyer leads the staff with 14 wins. Wait, that's no longer bold. Juan Nicasio wins 13. Jorge De La Rosa wins 10. Dexter Fowler becomes a star.
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Cleveland Indians (76-86): No Tribe pitcher wins more than 12 games with an ERA better than 4.00, especially Ubaldo Jimenez. Shin-Soo Choo has his first 25-homer/25-steal season.
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Seattle Mariners (74-88): Ichiro Suzuki knocks in 80 runs. (Hey, his career high is 69!) Chone Figgins returns to relevance, and Montero finally plays his 10th game behind the plate in June. Oh, and Hector Noesi wins 11 games.





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San Diego Padres (74-88): Youngsters Yasmani Grandal (catcher) and Jedd Gyorko (third base) make big league debuts in June and thrive. Edinson Volquez leads the staff with 16 wins, but 11 of them come in home games. Anthony Bass wins 11 games as a starter.
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Minnesota Twins (74-88): I said in December that Joe Mauer would win his fourth batting title. I feel even stronger about that now. But watch Trevor Plouffe turn into Michael Morse (22 home runs?) and Chris Parmelee have the season we hoped Brandon Belt would have. Rookie Liam Hendriks wins 12 games.
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Oakland Athletics (71-91): Yoenis Cespedes hits 21 home runs, edging out Jonny Gomes for the team lead. Yeah, not a ton of offense here. Brandon McCarthy finishes with a sub-3.00 ERA. Manny Ramirez doesn't play another big league game.
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Pittsburgh Pirates (71-91): Andrew McCutchen finishes one home run short of his first 30/30 campaign. Speaking of 30, Pedro Alvarez gets demoted to Triple-A after that many games, hitting .173 and striking out in half of his at-bats to earn the assignment.
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Chicago Cubs (71-91): Unheralded Bryan LaHair hits 21 home runs for the Cubbies, while trade acquisition/prospect Anthony Rizzo hits two. Rafael Dolis leads the team in saves with 17.
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New York Mets (67-95): David Wright has a big comeback season, but he spends the final two months with the Angels after a blockbuster trade. New York papers wish him well. (Oh wait, no chance of that.) Lucas Duda leads the team with 27 home runs and 85 RBIs. Jonathon Niese wins 15 games.
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Baltimore Orioles (66-96): I think we've all sung the praises of the rejuvenated Brian Matusz enough. Catcher Matt Wieters leads the team with 26 home runs and 89 RBIs.
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Houston Astros (63-99): It's not pretty, but there are stats to be had. Jordan Schafer steals 24 bases. J.D. Martinez knocks in 85 runs. Kyle Weiland wins 12 games. Yep, it's a Triple-A team.
 

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Votto Wins the Lotto

Joey Votto doesn't need Mega Millions to hit the jackpot. Bob Nightengale of USA Today reported Monday that the 28-year-old first baseman has reached agreement with the Reds on a 10-year, $225 million contract extension. While early speculation was that this extension would include the two years and $26.5 million remaining on his existing contract, it actually runs from 2014-2023, which means that Votto is under contract for the next 12 years at the whopping sum of $251.5 million.

Votto is now in some pretty exclusive company, joining Alex Rodriguez, Albert Pujols and Prince Fielder as the only players to sign for more than $200 million. It's also the biggest contract ever for someone who wasn't a free agent, topping Derek Jeter's ten-year, $189 million contract with the Yankees back in February of 2001.

This is an absolutely stunning commitment and a huge risk on the part of the Reds, who play in a small-to-medium sized market and set a franchise record last season with a modest payroll of around $81 million. Votto is clearly one of the best players in the sport right now, but with a full no-trade clause, this contract could be a major albatross if he takes up 20 percent of the Reds' payroll through his late-30s.

It's pretty clear that the Reds are banking on the landscape changing in the years ahead, likely in the form of a lucrative new television contract. Their current deal with Fox Sports Ohio is believed to be worth around $10 million per season and runs through 2016.

It will be interesting to see whether the Reds can also afford to keep Brandon Phillips, who is due to become a free agent after the 2012 season. The 30-year-old will almost certainly want something similar to fellow second baseman Dan Uggla, who inked a five-year, $62 million extension with the Braves last offseason. If the Reds let him walk, we may end up seeing the speedy Rotoworld's Online Draft Guide.

Cain Gets Paid

Joey Votto wasn't the only prominent player who agreed to a contract extension on Monday. As reported by Andrew Baggarly of CSNBayArea.com, the Giants have signed Matt Cain to a five-year, $112.5 million contract extension which could keep him with the club through at least 2017. The deal surpasses Kevin Brown (seven years, $105 million) for the richest contract ever given to a right-handed pitcher.

Cain receives a $5 million signing bonus and will make $20 million per season from 2013-2017. He is already under contract for $15 million this season. The deal also includes a $21 million club/vesting player option for 2018 or a $7.5 million buyout.

Cain's 69-73 career record obscures the fact that he has been one of the most durable pitchers in the game since making his major league debut in 2005. The 27-year-old right-hander has made 30 starts in each of his six full seasons in the majors and has topped 200 innings in each of the last five. His 3.35 ERA is ninth-lowest among active starters and he has made a habit out of outperforming his xFIP, so it's getting pretty difficult to doubt his success.

While locking up Tim Lincecum is next on the agenda for the Giants, Cain's contract has likely set the baseline for what to expect if Cole Hamels and/or Zack Greinke hit the open market this winter.

Bailey Headed For Surgery?

Ryan Boyer went over Andrew Bailey's thumb injury in Monday's Spring Training Daily, but it turns out the situation is more serious than originally thought. According to Peter Abraham of the Boston Globe, surgery was recommended after Bailey was examined Monday in Boston.

Bailey is scheduled to visit with Dr. Thomas Graham on Tuesday in Cleveland for a second opinion and it's possible surgery could be done at that time. We won't know anything about a timetable until then. However, it's safe to rule him out for Opening Day at this point.

Early speculation pegged Alfredo Aceves as a potential replacement for ninth inning duties, but Mark Melancon could also be an option if Bailey needs to miss an extended period of time. Both are worth adding where available.

Chapman Bullpen-Bound

The Reds made it official Monday, moving Aroldis Chapman back to the bullpen while awarding the final spot in the starting rotation to Homer Bailey. Chapman impressed after being stretched out as a starter this spring, posting a 2.12 ERA and 18/2 K/BB ratio over 17 innings, but Reds manager Dusty Baker would prefer to use him in a set-up role now that Sean Marshall is taking Ryan Madson's place as the closer.

Though not unexpected, this is a frustrating turn of events for Chapman owners. The hard-throwing left-hander should still rack up plenty of strikeouts in the Reds' bullpen, but he's unlikely to have much value in standard mixed leagues unless Marshall struggles or hits the disabled list at some point.

It would be nice to see Chapman get a chance to start eventually, but it's unclear when that might happen. Or if he'll be sent back down to the minors in order to do it. He obviously could be much more valuable as a starter in the long-term, but his previous control problems provide some reason for skepticism. I'd be fine with the decision to move him back to the bullpen if the Reds appeared to have a real plan in place for him. For some reason, it always seems like they are winging it.

Francisco's Ailing Knee

The Mets signed Frank Francisco to a two-year, $12 million contract over the winter to take over the team's closer job, but it's possible he might not be ready for Opening Day. The 32-year-old right-hander had fluid drained from his sore left knee on Sunday and went for an MRI on Monday.

Mets manager Terry Collins admitted Monday that Francisco's knee has been bothering him all spring, which makes sense given his diminished velocity and 5.25 ERA and 7/4 K/BB ratio over 12 innings this spring. Of course, injuries are nothing new with Francisco. He hasn't logged more than 52 2/3 innings in a season since 2008 as a member of the Rangers.

We should know more about Francisco's status on Tuesday, but Jon Rauch, Ramon Ramirez and Bobby Parnell figure to be in the mix if he needs to begin the season on the disabled list. Parnell is having the best spring of the bunch, but this isn't the best situation for fantasy owners.
 

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