Results tagged ‘ sox ’
Why The Rays Will Not Win The AL East
There has been a lot of speculation this season that the Tampa Bay Rays can return to their 2008 form and overtake the Yankees and Red Sox. Writers have been naming players like Evan Longoria to win the MVP (which is entirely possible) and carry the ball club. However, there is one word that sums up why the Rays cannot match up with the Yanks and Sox: Pitching.
In 2008, the Rays were the cinderella story of baseball. They had star young players like Longoria and B.J. Upton that were led by veterans such as Carl Crawford and Troy Percival. They were also led by a great pitching staff that included Matt Garza, James Shields, and Scott Kazmir. It was the perfect storm and they rode it all the way to the world series.
Also in 2008, the Yankees failed to reach the playoffs for the first time in ages, and thus were motivated to go on a spending spree in the offseason. Not only did they pick up one of the best offensive players in the game in Mark Teixeira, but they also fortified their rotation with CC Sabathia and A.J. Burnett. Those two, along with good ‘ol Andy Pettitte, took the Yankees all through October and went on to win the world series.
This too had an effect on a division rival, as the Red Sox also fortified their team over the 2009-10 offseason. They went out and signed the likes of John Lackey, Mike Cameron, Adrian Beltre, and Marco Scutaro. By combining Lackey with their already strong rotation, they have one of the very best rotations in all of baseball.
Another team with one of the best rotations: the Yankees. After trading for Javier Vazquez and finally placing Phil Hughes in there, they are all set for October. This is why the Rays cannot beat the Yankees or Red Sox, their starters just don’t match up. Think about the starting five for the three teams:
Yankees:
1. CC Sabathia
2. A.J. Burnett
3. Andy Pettite
4. Javier Vazquez
5. Phil Hughes
Red Sox:
1. Josh Beckett
2. Jon Lester
3. John Lackey
4. Dice-K
5. Clay Buchholz
Rays:
1. Matt Garza
2. James Shields
3. Jeff Niemann
4. David Price
5. Wade Davis
The Yanks and Sox’s rotations are far superior. If you look at the individual match-ups, the only way the Rays could theoretically win is if Price and Davis finally start pitching their potential. Until then, the Rays will remain in 3rd place, and out of the playoffs while the Yankees and Red Sox fight it out at the top.
The Johan Santana Trade Revisited
On February 2nd, 2008, the Minnesota Twins traded LHP Johan Santana to the New York Mets for four prospects. All seemed right with the world after it: the Mets, a year after they blew a historic lead to the Phillies, acquired one of the best pitchers in all of baseball in Santana and everyone thought they were primed for the post-season.
The Yankees-Red Sox rivalry (both teams considered front-runners for Santana at different times) didn’t dramatically shift in one direction since neither team nabbed Johan.
Plus the Twins felt that they got some very good prospects in return for their ace pitcher.
Oh how we were wrong. Let’s play this thing out with the winners and losers as they stand today in 2009:
Winners:
New York Mets:
The Mets acquire Johan Santana and then immediately signed him to a 6-year, $137.5mm contract, the largest contract for any pitcher at the time. This would prove to be a great move as Santana went 16-7 with a 2.53 ERA and 206 K’s in 234.1 IP. He would finnish 2nd in the NL Cy Young voting to Tim Lincecum of the Giants. This year he’s been good as well pitching to the tune of 3.13 ERA, .01 higher than that of his career. However, due to injuries to other players and bad offense surrounding Santana, the Mets failed to reach the postseason in 2008 and it looks as though the same ending will result here in 2009.
New York Yankees:
By not trading for Santana, Yankees’ GM Brian Cashman was bashed by the New York media. However, the move not to trade for the ace lefty has to proved to have been possibly the best move of Cashman’s career; Due to the prospects he didn’t give up at the time.
The Yankees top offer was Melky Cabrera, Phil Hughes, Jeffery Marquez, Ian Kennedy and Jhonny Nunez.
By not making the deal, the Yankees spun those prospects around for great things. Now the Yankees have C.C. Sabathia/Mark Teixiera in place of Johan Santana (they wouldn’t of been able to sign all three), Melky Cabrera has been playing a good centerfield and is having a solid bounce-back season, Phil Hughes is finally realizing his potential as a dominate set-up man, and Marquez and Nunez were both traded to the White Sox for Nick Swisher, the Yankees powerful right fielder. All has worked out extremely well for the Yankees.
Boston Red Sox:
While Brian Cashman’s move not to deal for Santana was good, Red Sox GM Theo Epstien’s may have been even better. The Red Sox top offer looked like this: Jon Lester, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jed Lowrie, Michael Bowden.
By not trading for Santana, they now have an dominate pitcher in Lester, one of the best base-stealers in the game in Ellsbury, Lowrie’s a below-average shortstop, and Bowden has huge potential (despite a terrible performance against the Yankees on Friday.
Losers:
Minnesota Twins:
Yes it’s true, the Twins, the team that dealt Santana are our one-and-only losers in this deal. They held out on Santana for too long and wound up taking the worst package on the table. Carlos Gomez, despite playing terrific defense and having amazing speed, never gets a chance to show off that speed because he never gets on base. His OBP his barely over .300 while his BA is constantly in the low to mid .200s.
The Twins recently released Phillip Humber so he’s a dud. Mulvey has pitched a little in the majors and hasn’t been that bad and Deolis Guerra is ranked as the Twins #12 prospect.
However, what’s even worse is what the Twins didn’t trade for: both the Red Sox and the Yankees had great offers on the table but the Twins kept asking for more.
With the Yankees, the Twins kept asking for Phil Hughes AND Joba Chamberlain, even though the Yankees stated clearly that Joba was off-limits.
With the Red Sox it was even worse, the Twins were asking for Jon Lester, Clay Buchholz, AND Jacoby Ellsbury. The Red Sox were never going to do it. Plus the Twins just should’ve asked for Lester and Ellsbury, both of whom were much better better than Buchholz.
Bottom line, the Twins messed up and the Mets, Yankees, and Red Sox all capitalized…big time!
Papi Was A No-Brainer
For years Yankee fans were tormented by those of the Sox for all the pinstriped players using PEDs. But no longer must we just look back at them blank-slated, for now we have a comeback. His name: David Ortiz.
When the Minnesota Twins released Ortiz after the 2002 season, they did so knowing that they were giving up an average player. However, he was no where near the level that he was at when he arrived in Boston. “Big Papi” hit 58 homers combined with the Twins over 6 seasons. That’s only 4 more home runs than he hit in the 2006 season alone. Ortiz never drove in more than 75 runs in the Twin Cities, but has accomplished that feat in every single season in Boston and had driven in more than 100 runs in everyone until last year when he “only” knocked in 89. His SLG%, which always hovered below .500, rose up to the mid .600s on the BoSox.
It really was no secret that something happened when he changed cities and it definitely wasn’t the stadium. Before joining the Red Sox, Papi was a terrible 1-for-23 at Fenway with only 2 RBIs and no home runs since 2001.
At this point, it was pretty apparent that Ortiz was probably taking PEDs, but the way he talked about them, he made some people think otherwise. David was one the biggest voices against steroids in baseball that you would’ve never thought he would have been taking them himself. However, that has now turned him into one of the largest hypocrites to ever play baseball (unless Wade Boggs turns up on a list as well).
The only thing that remains is for Papi to admit it, something he has yet to do. And if he doesn’t, that’ll mean just another thing that A-Rod has surpassed him in.
Yanks Win Bidding For Dominican Catcher
According to George A. King III of the New York Post, the Yankees have agreed to terms with Dominican catching prospect Gary Sanchez. Sanchez, 16, isn’t able to sign with a major league team until the international signing period begins on July 2nd. Until then, no deal can be made final. That being said, Sanchez expressed a lot of interest of joining the Yanks and has agreed to a deal which includes a $2.5MM signing bonus.
Sanchez is not expected to hit as well as, fellow international-signing catcher, Jesus Montero, however he is more adapt defensively.
The other international prospect the Yanks are viewing is infielder Miguel Angel Sano who has drawn interest from multiple teams. He will be tougher to sign due to the inflation of competition, but it all depends on how much desire the Yankees have for the young shortstop. After all, they have still not found a decent replacement for when the captain hangs up his pinstripes.
Other Notes:
Despite having sent a scout to watch him, the Yankees show no interest in signing, former Red Sox and Met pitcher, Pedro Martinez. Martinez has been working out for scouts in the dominican republic, but, according to his agent, seeks a deal worth at least $2MM. The Yankees would only be interested if he would be willing to accept a minor-league deal……Yanks’ first round pick in this years draft, Slade Heathcott, was with the team the during the Nationals series and took BP while wearing a full uniform. He has yet to sign…..Possible 2010 draft No. 1 pick and S.I. coverboy, Bryce Harper will play for the Yankees this summer against the Red Sox (no not like that). Harper, 16, was one of many players picked for the Yankees to play a Red Sox high school team. Both clubs will choose various high school prospects, put them in uniform, and pin them against each other in Fenway. Harper has expressed a lot of interest in joining the Yankees in the future, listing “Playing in pinstripes” as one of his goals in Sports Illustrated.
Bits and Pieces: Jackson ‘n’ Jackson, Swish/Nady, Melky
Austin Jackson (Right) high-fives Hall of Famer, Reggie Jackson (Left) after hitting a grand slam on Tuesday.
Jackson ‘n’ Jackson:
As Yankees’ top prospect, Austin Jackson, was rounding the bases on Tuesday, Reggie Jackson was feeling like a proud-papa. Reggie has taken it to himself to help and support Jackson throughout his minor-league career, attending to numerous games at each level that he has reached. “Its a good thing,” Austin said after the game. “He comes back and works with me in the cage and gets me back to where I need to be when I’m struggling a little bit. It’s good to have a Hall of Famer working with you.” Jackson was reassigned to minor league camp after the game, making his grand slam a bittersweet-victory.
Girardi: Nady is starting RF:
Joe Girardi announced this week that “if we were to break (camp) today, Nady would be my right fielder.” This comes as disappointing news to Nick Swisher, who has had a very odd off-season. He was dealt to the Yankees in the beginning of the year as part of a 4-player trade and was informed that he would be the club’s starting first basemen. Once the Yankees signed Mark Teixeira however, it became apparent that Swisher would instead battle Xavier Nady for the right field spot. After now losing that job to Nady, Girardi will have to work hard to find at-bats for Swisher.
However, I strongly believe that Swisher should be the right fielder, not Nady. He is better in basically every category. Nady will hit about 25 HRs and drive in over 100 runs. Swisher will hit 25-30 HRs but will probably not reach the 100-RBI plateau for he is willing to take a walk in a RBI situation. However, that too is another one of his strengths: his eye. Swisher has one of the best eyes in the game (see the book “Moneyball”) and works deep into counts, a trait of recent successful Yankee teams. Scouts also say he is the better baserunner and fielder. This basically means that the Yankees are choosing the worse hitter, fielder, baserunner, eye, and power-hitter to play right field for them…..wait what??
Yanks Looking to Get Melky-Dealty:
Earlier this off-season, the Yankees attempted to trade Melky Cabrera for Mike Cameron of the Milwaukee Brewers and after it seemed like a deal was imminent (so close that I even added Mike Cameron to the Yankees roster in MLB ’08 The Show) the talks were broken off. A couple months later, they were renewed again. However, they too were broken off. Well now Melky is still out there and the Yanks are looking to deal him (just not for Cameron). The most likely suitor at the moment are the Chicago White Sox who would most likely use Cabrera as their starting CF.
Who’s Next? Holliday?
Now that the Yankees have signed Andy Pettitte, they are pretty much done with their offseason spending. And for all of you Manny Ramirez hopefuls out there, you should probably understand this before you embarrass yourself in front of a friend or co-worker: ahem…MANNY RAMIREZ IS NOT GOING TO THE YANKEES!!!! GET OVER IT!!!
Okay, so now that i’ve gotten that off my chest, it’s time to go over what this article is really about: who (if anyone) will the Yankees go after next offseason after spending a gagillion ($422mm to be precise) dollars on CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett, and Mark Teixiera alone. Well, there really isn’t that much choice. With most of the top free-agents likely to exercise options or sign long-term deals with their current teams (Josh Beckett and John Lackey to name a few), really the only top-knotch player out there, is Matt Holliday. After being traded to the A’s this offseason, it appears that Holliday is headed for free agency (unless of course he gets traded to a club that then signs him to a long term deal, which is extremely unlikely considering his agent is Scott Boras).
Of course that brings us to the question of “will the Yankees pursue him?” It’s the same question that was brought up earlier this offseason with A.J. Burnett, Mark Teixiera, and Manny Ramirez (there was never any question about Sabathia). The Yankees will have $45mm coming off the books as Jose Molina, Johnny Damon, Xavier Nady, Hideki Matsui, and Andy Pettitte will be free agents. More importantly however, with Damon, Nady, and Matsui leaving, it will mean the Yankees will have a vacancy in the outfield and in the DH hole. Now a lot of things could happen with that. Prospect Austin Jackson will be ready to man centerfield, which may or may not put Brett Gardner or Melky Cabrera in left, and would also give Nick Swisher the right field job. For DH, the Yankees could either switch Jorge Posada over there and use a prospect such as Francisco Cerevelli to man the catchers position, call up maybe an Eric or Shelley Duncan, or sign a Carlos Delgado or a Hank Blalock to a one year deal. However, the option that you’ve all been waiting for: signing Matt Holliday.
Now there are many reasons why the Yankees could probably sign him. Number one, the money. Holliday would probably require Mark Teixeira type money, which the Yankees actually have room for. In fact, they could even sign him and another player if the really wanted to. They have room for him financially. The next reason is that he would fill a potential hole. If the Yankees had an outfield of Matt Holliday, Austin Jackson, and Nick Swisher, I’d be just fine. Plus if someone really didn’t like Holliday in the outfield, and wanted Gardner there instead, the Yanks could just slot Matt in the DH spot and it would work perfectly. However, that would have a few ramifications. It would mean that Jorge Posada would be forced into being the full time catcher since he wouldn’t be able to turn to the DH role as backup. However, I see the Holliday playing left field scenario as more likely.
Another thing this would do, would be to allow Jesus Montero the time he needs to develop. I know that some people view him as the predecessor to the Jorge Posada throne, but that’s just not very likely for two main reasons: Number 1, when Posada’s contract expires after the 2010 season, the Yankees will likely try to sign Joe Mauer (which is a story for another day). But the more important, reason number 2, is that Montero is really lacking as a defensive player. He’s overweight, and slow behind the plate. In fact, many scouts and people around baseball see him as a first baseman/DH type of player (just like Jason Giambi). And if the Yankees were to sign Holliday (or just leave things as they are for that matter) it would give Montero the time he needs to fully develop as a hitter and get used to that DH role which he would most likely occupy in the Bronx. A quick note, for those of you who are not familiar with Jesus Montero, check him out. The guy hit over .320 last year in Yankees single-A and has frequently been called the best hitter in the Yankees system.
If the Yankees signed Matt Holliday, it would all but signal the end of Johnny Damon’s years in pinstripes, and let me be the first to say “it was a hell-of-a-run.” Johnny has really had some great times in the Bronx, with probably the highlight coming last year when he went 6-for-6 in a hot afternoon game against the Royals. However, Damon’s leaving really takes a toll on the Yankees’ defense as Damon was frequently sacrificing his body for the team. More importantly though, it leaves the Yankees without a true, number one hitter. But not to fear, Austin Jackson is (almost) here! Jackson fits the leadoff hitter model perfectly (speedy guy with decent power who can get on base). Plus, if he can’t handle it, they can always try Gardner, or Cabrera or whoever the hell is manning center for the Yankees these days. The Yankees have really seemed to take an over-the-top interest in centerfield lately, I mean, Mike Cameron?? What??!! But I’m getting off topic.
There has also been some speculation that the Red Sox, fresh off of getting beaten by the Yankees in the Mark Teixeira derby, will go all-out for the young left fielder. However, I don’t see it. They just don’t really have room for him with 2 young players (and J.D. Drew) manning the 3 outfield spots. Of course I mean Jacoby Ellsbury and Jason Bay, both of which are very talented players. And if Ellsbury’s not going anywhere (I bet the Twins are regretting not taking that Ellsbury, Lowrie, and Lester for Johan Santana deal right about now), than it seems as though Jason Bay would be the odd-man-out. But hold on a second, the Red Sox are actually quite fond of Jason Bay and aren’t about to let him leave. So if there’s no room in the outfield, where do you put Matt Holliday? DH? *Buzzer Sound* Big Papi’s already got that and isn’t about to give it up to some hot-shot kid. Well then is there any where else? No. That’s it. The Red Sox just don’t have room for Holliday and thus I don’t think he’s going to go there.
The final point (finally) that I’m going to make has to do with Matt Holliday’s family, mainly his Dad. Holliday’s Dad is a big fan of the Yankees and it would be a “dream come true” for him to have his son don the pinstripes (of course Scott Boras may beg to differ but that’s beside the point). Last year at the 2008 All-Star game at Yankee Stadium, when his son Matt hit a homerun for the NL squad, his dad Tom literally jumped out of his seat and rejoiced. Before Matt had been traded to Oakland, Tom Holliday said, “if someone would have called me today and said Matt had gotten traded to the Yankees, I’d have been hunting for a place to celebrate.” Well for now Tom’s going to have to stay up watching his sons games on the West Coast. However in future, he might just be playing in a city closer to home: New York.
AL East Best Player List
ESPN.com has MLB player rankings on their site. They use a combination of 2008 statistics and formulas to determine the best players in the league. I’ve put together my own list using the same basic principles but I factored in new players as well
Top 10 Position Players:
1. Alex Rodriguez NYY
2. Mark Teixeira NYY
3. Dustin Pedroia BOS
4. Kevin Youkilis BOS
5. Nick Markakis BAL
6. Brian Roberts BAL
7. Derek Jeter NYY
8. Carlos Pena TB
9. Alex Rios TOR
10. B.J. Upton TB
Top 10 Starting Pitchers:
1. CC Sabathia NYY
2. Roy Halladay TOR
3. Daisuke Matsuzaka BOS
4. Chien-Ming Wang NYY
5. A.J. Burnett NYY
6. Jon Lester BOS
7. James Shields BOS
8. Josh Beckett BOS
9. Scott Kazmir TB
10. Joba Chamberlain NYY
Ultimate Lineup:
1. Dustin Pedroia 2B
2. Derek Jeter SS
3. David Ortiz DH
4. Alex Rodriguez 3B
5. Mark Teixeira 1B
6. Nick Markakis RF
7. Jason Bay LF
8. Jorge Posada C
9. B.J. Upton CF
Ultimate Rotation:
1. CC Sabathia
2. Roy Halladay
3. Daisuke Matsuzaka
4. Chien-Ming Wang
5. A.J. Burnett
Teixeira Signing A Lot Like A-Rod Deal
When Mark Teixeira turned down the Red Sox’ offer for the Yankees’ something about it seemed very familiar. In fact, it was just like when the Yankees traded for Alex Rodriguez in February of 2004. A-Rod, like Teixeira, was a star player and a great hitter who played for the Rangers (Teixeira didn’t go from the Rangers directly to the Yankees like A-Rod). In fact, they both played on the same team in 2003. A-Rod was traded and Teixeira signed as a free agent, but they both could’ve gone to Boston, but didn’t. In the offseason between the 2003 and 2004 seasons, the Rangers were shopping Alex. The Red Sox picked him off the shelf and began to move towards the cashier. However, the deal came up a bit short.
Right around that time, someone said, “hey, wouldn’t it be great if Alex Rodriguez came to New York and just moved to third base?” It seemed unlikely though, as the Rangers had just named A-Rod the captain of their team. But the Yankees swooped in and within about a week, they traded Alfonso Soriano to the Rangers for A-Rod (one of those rare, good player-for-good player deals instead of prospects).
For a while, the Red Sox were seen as the front-runners for Teixeira, just like with A-Rod. However, the Yankees jumped in right at the end and nabbed him for $180 million, $10mm more than the Red Sox were offering.
A-Rod has put up very good numbers in his time so far in the Bronx (.303 AVG, 208 HR and 616 RBI in 5 seasons). However, he’s also attracted a lot of controversy too. Lets just hope that Teixeira only does the first one.
Baseball Needs Yankees
By signing A.j. Burnett, CC Sabathia, and Mark Teixeira, the Yankees have spent $423.5MM in contracts. This has caused many team’s owners and general managers, and some players (Torii Hunter), to hate the Yankees even more. Brewers GM Doug Melvin has said, “At the rate the Yankees are going, I don’t think anyone can compete with them. Frankly, the sport might need a salary cap.” The “salary cap” idea got a lot of discussion. However, with many GMs supporting it, they’re were many against it who were fine with the Yankees’ spending spree. One GM said that this was “the Yankees way of competing,” and that they “paid their price with that luxury tax, so who cares?” That is something that the baseball world has come to realize. The Yankees seem to have an infinite budget, and with the New Stadium (60% bigger than the old one and more expensive) , $88.5MM coming off the books, and after not making the playoffs last year, the Yankees were determined to sign the best players, and they had the budget to do it. However, that is there way of playing the game. Many other teams do it differently such as the Rays who have the second-lowest payroll in baseball, and yet last year beat out the Yankees and the Red Sox (#s 1 and 3 in payroll) for the AL East and won the pennant. Its just the way life works.
However, baseball needs the Yankees. They need that team to hate. They need a Goliath. And now that the Yankees have made half of baseball hate them again, there can be a David.
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