Showing posts with label MLB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MLB. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

2010 World Series - Schedule - Facts - etc

Incase you missed it. Prince James got beat last night!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!





Don't tune out this World Series
Great article by Gene Wojciechowski

SAN FRANCISCO -- Watch. Don't watch. It's not like Joe Buck will send me a commission check if you do.
But this World Series has yee-haw thrill ride written all over it. In fact, when the Texas Rangers and San Francisco Giants advanced to the Fall/Early Winter Classic, I sprayed myself with ginger ale.
Nothing against the New York Yankees, but I needed a baseball blood transfusion. I'm A-Rod'd and Derek Jeter'd out.
Another appearance by the pinstripers would have meant at least two games at Yankee Stadium and countless shots of really rich people on cell phones sitting behind home plate in those cushioned chairs the size of Murphy beds. And you don't even want to know how many times we would have had to watch the chalupa commercial where Joe Girardi slaps another man's bum.
Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Phillies have gone to the last two World Series. So it's somebody else's turn, OK? Plus, who wants to see good guy Ryan Howard go through the division, league and possibly the World Series without driving in a run?
I love this Series and this matchup because absolutely no one on the planet predicted it last March. (And if you did, I want to see documentation.) Its come-out-of-nowhere quality makes it the Boise State vs. Missouri of World Series.
As late as Aug. 28, the Giants were jock-strap deep in trouble. They were six games out of the NL West lead and trailed Atlanta in the wild-card race, too. They had just lost their third game in a row, this time 11-3 to last-place Arizona. The Giants weren't out of it, but their traveling secretary wasn't exactly calling around for postseason hotel rates.
Of course, that's nothing compared to the Rangers. As late as Aug. 5, the franchise was auctioned off like a foreclosed house on eBay. Think about it (I guarantee you Mark Cuban does; his investment group was the losing bidder): One of your World Series teams was a custodian of bankruptcy court less than three months ago. Now the team is overseen by the legendary Nolan Ryan, who still looks like he could beat the sani socks off Robin Ventura.
How strangely cool is that? This whole Series is cool.
In honor of Giants closer Brian Wilson, I'm dyeing my goatee Just-For-Men jet black. Hockey players grow playoff beards, Wilson grows facial hair from Mars. Meanwhile, I can't look at Giants starter Tim Lincecum without thinking, Jeff Spicoli and "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." What Jefferson was saying was, Hey! You know, we left this England place 'cause it was bogus; so if we don't get some cool rules ourselves -- pronto -- we'll just be bogus too! Get it?
The Freak is your Game 1 starter. He'll face the Rangers' pitching freak, Cliff Lee, who has not lost any of his eight postseason starts (7-0, 1.26 ERA). Lee is more automatic than a gas station car wash.
The Rangers are managed by Ron Washington. No biggie, except that he tested positive for cocaine use in 2009, publicly apologized in March and rewarded the Rangers' faith in him by leading the team to its first Series appearance.
Their best everyday player is outfielder Josh Hamilton, who was a walking drug and
alcohol lab until 2005. If Hamilton's ongoing story of demon fighting doesn't cause a lump in your throat, then you're the world's only living heart donor.
Then there's the ultra-private Vlad Guerrero, deemed expendable by the Los Angeles Angels. So he comes to Texas and makes his first Series appearance in a glorious 15-year career. I like watching Guerrero because he swings at anything and usually hits those things very hard and very far. You know when the plate umpire tosses a scuffed ball toward the dugout? Vlad will swing at those, too.
The Rangers' catcher, Bengie Molina, was the Giants' catcher until he was traded in July. He's holding a winning baseball Lotto ticket. That's because he's likely to get voted a full Series share by each team, meaning an estimated $1.2 million postseason payday.
And it's hard not to have a soft spot for Rangers president Ryan. I covered one of the Von Ryan Express' no-hitters when he pitched for Texas. Afterward, he kept us reporters waiting -- not because he was being a jerk, but because he first wanted to work out! The man pitches a no-hitter and then does a workout that buckled my knees. That Old School mentality has rubbed off on the Rangers like pine tar on a bat handle.
Again, cool.
I love that the Rangers got here on a $55 million payroll, while the Yankees and their $206 million roster are being treated for playoff withdrawal. I love that Jerry Jones built a football palace for his Dallas Cowboys but that Ryan and GM Jon Daniels built a team.
And how can you not go on a warm and fuzzy alert when talking about the Giants? The Giants last celebrated a World Series in 1954. They weren't even Californians back then; they were New Yorkers. Only the Cleveland Indians (62 years) and, sigh, the Chicago Cubs (102 years) have longer winless streaks.
Look at the Giants' lineup and bench. It's dotted with baseball refugees, such as outfielder Pat Burrell, who was dumped by the Tampa Bay Rays. And had you heard of Cody Ross before the postseason started? Didn't think so.
The Giants signed Barry Zito to a $126 million contract -- and left him off the playoff roster. They traded the respected Molina so they could insert a rookie catcher, Buster Posey, in the lineup. They diminished the role of pricey outfielder Aaron Rowand, all in the name of winning.
The Giants win heroically (Juan Uribe's eighth-inning dinger in Game 6 of the NLCS) and nervously (Wilson's 3-2 strikeout of Howard to end that series was on the lowest sliver of the strike zone). Six of their seven postseason wins have been by one-run margins.
I've reached a settlement agreement with my DVR. It gets the NFL games while I'm gone. I get to watch the World Series live.
For once, I got the better deal.







World Series TV Schedule
San Francisco
Texas
Game 1: Wed. Oct. 27, Rangers at Giants, 7:57 p.m., FOX
Game 2: Thur. Oct. 28, Rangers at Giants, 7:57 p.m., FOX
Game 3: Sat. Oct. 30, Giants at Rangers, 6:57 p.m., FOX
Game 4: Sun. Oct. 31, Giants at Rangers, 8:20 p.m., FOX
Game 5:* Mon. Nov. 1, Giants at Rangers, 7:57 p.m., FOX
Game 6:* Wed. Nov. 3, Rangers at Giants, 7:57 p.m., FOX
Game 7:* Thur. Nov. 4, Rangers at Giants, 7:57 p.m., FOX


The 10 best pitchers to NEVER start a World Series Game 1:
1. Randy Johnson
2. Pedro Martinez
3. Steve Carlton
4. Robin Roberts
5. Juan Marichal
6. Gaylord Perry
7. Ferguson Jenkins
8. Nolan Ryan
9. Phil Niekro
10. Roy Halladay

Most World Series Game 1 starts
1. Whitey Ford, 8
2. Red Ruffing, 6
3. Allie Reynolds, 4
(tie) Chief Bender, 4
5. Jack Morris, 3
Dave Stewart, 3
Don Gullett, 3
Ken Holtzman, 3
Paul Derringer, 3
Carl Hubbell, 3
Waite Hoyt, 3

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

College Football TV Schedule - Reds Clinch -



2010 College Football TV Schedule: Week 5

Thursday, Sept. 30 Network Time (ET)
Texas A&M at Oklahoma State ESPN 7:30 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 1 Network Time (ET)
Brigham Young at Utah State ESPN 8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 2 Network Time (ET)
Ohio State at Illinois BTN Noon
Louisiana-Monroe at Auburn ESPNU Noon
Miami (Fla.) at Clemson ESPN2 Noon
Vanderbilt at Connecticut ESPN3 Noon
Northwestern at Minnesota ESPN Noon
Kentucky at Mississippi ESPN3 Noon
Kansas at Baylor FSN Noon
Florida State at Virginia GamePlan Noon
Alcorn State at Mississippi State ESPN3 Noon
Temple at Army CBS CS Noon
Ohio at Eastern Michigan ESPN3 Noon
TCU at Colorado State MTN 2 p.m.
Tulane at Rutgers ESPN3 2 p.m.
Idaho at Western Michigan ESPN3 2 p.m.
Navy at Air Force Versus 2:30 p.m.
Texas vs. Oklahoma ABC 3:30 p.m.
Wisconsin at Michigan State ABC 3:30 p.m.
Tennessee at LSU CBS 3:30 p.m.
Michigan at Indiana ESPNU 3:30 p.m.
Virginia Tech at NC State ABC 3:30 p.m.
East Carolina at North Carolina ESPN3 3:30 p.m.
Florida International at Pittsburgh ESPN3 3:30 p.m.
Duke at Maryland ESPN3 6 p.m.
UTEP at New Mexico MTN 6 p.m.
Georgia at Colorado FSN 7 p.m.
Florida Atlantic at South Florida ESPN3 7 p.m.
Georgia Tech at Wake Forest ESPNU 7 p.m.
Louisville at Arkansas State ESPN3 7 p.m.
Louisiana-Lafayette at North Texas ESPN3 7:30 p.m.
Florida at Alabama CBS 8 p.m.
Boise State at New Mexico State ESPN3 8 p.m.
Stanford at Oregon ABC 8 p.m.
Washington at USC ESPN2 8 p.m.
Notre Dame at Boston College ABC 8 p.m.
Marshall at Southern Miss CBS CS 8 p.m.
Penn State at Iowa ESPN 8:05 p.m.
Nevada at UNLV MTN 10 p.m.





Congrats to the Cincy Reds!!!3. The Reds walk off with the NL Central.

Batting in the ninth inning of a tie game, rightfielder Jay Bruce belted a home run over Great American Ballpark's centerfield fence. When Bruce touched home plate, the Reds didn't just beat the Astros 3-2 on a walk-off home run but secured their first postseason trip since 1995.
Despite the dramatic headline-grabbing playoff-clinching moment, it was the performance of Cincinnati starter Edinson Volquez that ought to have excited fans most. The Reds won the Central primarily by bludgeoning opponents with their offense's NL-leading 768 runs, but that style of play doesn't always succeed in October.
The Reds don't have a true ace, just a hodge-podge of pitchers who'd be Nos. 2-4 starters on any other team. While Bronson Arroyo and Johnny Cueto are having fine seasons and will presumably start the first two games of the NLDS, manager Dusty Baker has question marks after that -- Travis Wood has likely earned a start, but he's a rookie with fewer than 100 career innings, making the recent re-emergence of Volquez confidence-inspiring.
Volquez has returned from Tommy John surgery, a 50-game drug suspension and even a minor-league demotion for ineffectiveness that lasted into September. But Since his return to the majors he's delivered four straight quality starts, including Tuesday's outing of six innings, two runs, eight strikeouts and one walk. Overall in his last four starts he's thrown 27 2/3 innings with 31 strikeouts and a 1.95 ERA.
Power pitching plays in the postseason, and Volquez has the most electric stuff on Cincinnati's staff, with a 9.6 K/9, nearly two strikeouts per nine better than the second-highest rate on the team, Homer Bailey's 7.8.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Stephen Strasburg is Ready To Throw!





SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Stephen Strasburg smiled at the question and was quick with an answer -- no, he's not yet where he wants to be.
"Now that I've been able to make it to Triple-A, right below the big leagues, I really want to keep working harder," Strasburg said Wednesday night after throwing six innings of no-hit ball in his second start for the Syracuse Chiefs, a 4-0 victory over the Norfolk Tides. "I don't want to leave anything for chance. I want to earn a spot up there some day."
"Up there" is with the Washington Nationals, who made the 21-year-old sensation the top pick of the 2009 draft. At this rate, it shouldn't be long.
Strasburg threw 79 pitches, 55 for strikes, struck out seven and walked one in facing 19 Norfolk batters, one over the minimum, before departing without allowing a hit. In two International League starts since Friday, he has struck out 13 and allowed one hit in 12 innings.
"It's nice to have some success so far in your first year," Strasburg said. "But you can't take anything for granted. You've got to keep working out there because this game is going to humble you in a second."
Strasburg's biggest challenge on a chilly night when he didn't get to bat because of the designated hitter rule might have been pitching the final inning after the Chiefs scored four runs during a rally in the bottom of the fifth that took nearly a half-hour.
"He had to work harder to get his stuff than he did last game, but it came," Chiefs manager Trent Jewett said. "I thought the big hurdle was when we had the long inning in the fifth to go back out for the sixth and hold them at bay. A lot of times, especially in the cold weather, that's a difficult challenge."
Strasburg wasn't on a strict pitch count, but on a chilly night the Chiefs felt no reason to push the prize of the Nationals' franchise beyond six innings.
Strasburg went to three-ball counts on just four batters and lowered his earned-run average to 1.06 in seven minor league starts. He finished his impressive stint by getting leadoff hitter Joey Gathright to swing futilely at an 81 mph curve on an 0-2 delivery.
"It was everything everyone said it would be, it was tough," Tides catcher Adam Donachie said. "He's got command of every pitch. You can't go up there just looking for one pitch. You can sit on one pitch, but he can mix it up pretty well. There's nothing more you can say about him."
In the first inning, Strasburg threw 15 pitches, 10 for strikes. He issued a two-out walk to Jeff Salazar on a 95 mph fastball but got lefty-swinging Josh Bell on a soft flyout to left to end the inning.
Tides second baseman Scott Moore was Strasburg's first strikeout victim, unable to react to an 81 mph curveball on a 1-2 offering in the second. Strasburg then induced both shortstop Robert Andino and first baseman Michael Aubrey to ground out to first -- Aubrey on a 97 mph fastball on a 3-0 pitch -- to end the inning.
Norfolk right fielder Blake Davis led off the third by hitting a hard one-hopper on an 0-2 pitch that glanced off shortstop Pedro Lopez's glove for an error. Davis was then caught stealing and Strasburg struck out Donachie looking at an 80 mph curveball and Gathright looking at a 98 mph fastball over the inside corner.
Strasburg retired the side in order in the top of the fourth on 16 pitches, getting his fourth strikeout when Salazar could only wave at an 83 mph curve.
The Tides went down in order again in the fifth as Strasburg registered two more strikeouts. Moore went down on three pitches, the last a 95 mph fastball across the middle of the plate, and Aubrey was caught looking at an 82 mph curve.
"He's comfortable with taking on information and putting it into his game," Jewett said. "Obviously, there's a huge amount of talent there, but he did exactly what the pitching guys asked him to do. It was great work. You just don't see changeups like that very often. The fact that he understands it, trusts it ... is really mature."
A franchise-record crowd of 13,777 turned out for Strasburg's debut on Friday night, but despite clear skies and a game-time temperature around 50 degrees, only 6,702 fans came out Wednesday night.
The Nationals are expected to keep Strasburg in the minors until early next month. Strasburg, who starred at San Diego State, signed a $15.1 million, four-year contract, a record for an amateur player, with Washington last August.
"I know they have a plan for me," he said. "I'm still hungry. I'm starting to smell it a little bit. Hopefully, I can get there soon. I don't want to be in Triple-A the rest of my career."
That shouldn't be a problem.


American League
EAST
Tampa Bay Rays 24 10 .706 -- 9-6 15-4 7-3 Won 2
New York Yankees 22 11 .667 1.5 10-2 12-9 7-3 Won 1
Toronto Blue Jays 20 16 .556 5 7-10 13-6 7-3 Won 1
Boston Red Sox 18 17 .514 6.5 12-11 6-6 7-3 Lost 1
Baltimore Orioles 10 24 .294 14 5-9 5-15 4-6 Won 1
Central W L Pct GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
Minnesota Twins 22 12 .647 -- 12-6 10-6 7-3 Won 1
Detroit Tigers 19 15 .559 3 11-4 8-11 5-5 Lost 1
Cleveland Indians 13 18 .419 7.5 6-8 7-10 4-6 Won 3
Chicago White Sox 14 20 .412 8 9-10 5-10 4-6 Lost 1
Kansas City Royals 11 23 .324 11 4-10 7-13 1-9 Lost 7
West W L Pct GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
Texas Rangers 19 15 .559 -- 12-7 7-8 7-3 Won 1
Oakland Athletics 18 16 .529 1 13-7 5-9 6-4 Lost 1
Los Angeles Angels 15 21 .417 5 9-11 6-10 3-7 Lost 2
Seattle Mariners 13 20 .394 5.5 8-10 5-10 2-8 Lost 1

National League
East W L Pct GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
Philadelphia Phillies 20 13 .606 -- 10-6 10-7 7-3 Lost 1
Washington Nationals 19 15 .559 1.5 11-8 8-7 6-4 Won 1
New York Mets 18 16 .529 2.5 14-8 4-8 4-6 Lost 1
Atlanta Braves 16 18 .471 4.5 8-4 8-14 6-4 Won 3
Florida Marlins 16 18 .471 4.5 7-9 9-9 4-6 Lost 1
Central W L Pct GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
St. Louis Cardinals 20 14 .588 -- 10-5 10-9 4-6 Lost 2
Cincinnati Reds 19 15 .559 1 10-8 9-7 7-3 Won 5
Milwaukee Brewers 15 19 .441 5 4-11 11-8 5-5 Lost 3
Chicago Cubs 15 20 .429 5.5 8-8 7-12 3-7 Won 1
Pittsburgh Pirates 14 20 .412 6 9-9 5-11 4-6 Lost 4
Houston Astros 12 21 .364 7.5 7-15 5-6 4-6 Won 3
West W L Pct GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
San Diego Padres 21 12 .636 -- 11-5 10-7 6-4 Won 2
San Francisco Giants 18 14 .563 2.5 10-7 8-7 5-5 Lost 2
Los Angeles Dodgers 17 17 .500 4.5 10-6 7-11 7-3 Won 4
Colorado Rockies 16 17 .485 5 8-6 8-11 5-5 Won 1
Arizona Diamondbacks 14 21 .400 8 7-11 7-10 3-7 Lost 6

Thursday, April 29, 2010

MLB: The Young Guns are Taking Over



Heyward, Davis lead sterling class in Year of the Phenom
by: John Heyman Good Article on the yooung guns. I think this will all change when the pitchers come up in a month.
This past weekend at Citi Field, a pair of rookies, one the most talked about prospect in the game, the other a recent call-up who has already been causing a stir in his first week, crossed paths for the first time on a major league field. In a season that is looking like it will be the Year of the Phenom, both Ike Davis of the Mets and Jason Heyward of the Braves have been turning heads and earning rave reviews from their managers not only for how they play but also for how they handle themselves.
"He's a very confident and comfortable young man at this level,'' Mets manager Jerry Manuel said of the 23-year-old Davis. "He doesn't seem to play with the anxiety of a young person playing in the major leagues for the first time.''
"He's a great kid,'' Braves skipper Bobby Cox said of the 20-year-old Heyward. "His makeup is off the charts.''
Heyward also stands out for his remarkable calm. While others have compared him to Willie McCovey, Willie Stargell and Ken Griffey Jr., he remains unfazed. "I don't have any expectations,'' he said. "I just intend to be patient and take what the game gives me.''
One scout has called Heyward "the best prospect I've seen in decades." On Sunday, Cox praised his baserunning ability by saying, "He has big-time instincts. He has some larceny in him.'' Keep in mind that those comments came from a level-headed future Hall of Famer who's seen it all and has every reason to keep expectations down. And they come, too, with Heyward having exactly zero stolen bases.
Heyward was programmed to be a star from the start, as his father, Eugene, a former Dartmouth basketball player, molded him to be a major leaguer while eschewing all other sports. But there has been no sign of any of the potential pratfalls associated with such single-mindedness.
Some have said the buildup is too much, the hype too high for Heyward. But everyone from baseball lifers like Cox to scouts to sportswriters have been raving about him. Veteran Troy Glaus is one of the rare people tempering his comments about Heyward. "He's got a good head on his shoulders, he's got all the ability and he's doing a great job,'' Glaus said. "But let the kid get his feet wet. He's got 50 at-bats.''
To be precise, Heyward has 59 at-bats, but they've been pretty productive ones. He has four home runs and 16 RBIs for the offensively inept Braves (see below). But he also has 23 strikeouts, including at least one in each of the last eight games before the rain-shortened 1-0 defeat Sunday night to the rival Mets. Cox acknowledged pitchers are making early adjustments to beat him and now it's Heyward's turn to adjust. It's a "cat and mouse game'' Glaus said.
Pitchers may soon have to adjust to Davis as well, who had a stellar first week in which he batted .318 with a .400 on-base percentage and a .500 slugging percentage. Going into the season, Davis was ranked as merely the seventh best first-base prospect by Baseball America, behind Texas' just-promoted Justin Smoak, Florida's Logan Morrison, Toronto's Brett Wallace, Oakland's Chris Carter, Atlanta's Freddie Freeman and Cincinnati's Yonder Alonso, and just ahead of Boston's Lars Anderson. A Mets official, upon Davis' call-up last week, cautioned against raising expectations. Referring to Heyward, the official said of Davis, "He's not that kind of prospect.''
You can't tell that to Mets fans now, not after Davis started his career by excelling at the plate and helping the Mets to six wins in his first seven games. He also powered his first big league home run on Friday, 450 feet to the faraway Citi bridge in right-center field. "I've only seen one other player hit it there and that was Carlos Delgado,'' one NL scout said. "But one difference between the two is this: Davis can really play first base.
Davis said he couldn't be sure it was the farthest ball he's ever hit since he said he swings hard every time and has connected that sweetly a few times before. But he didn't seem too concerned about it. Davis, the son of former Yankees relief star Ron Davis, has impressed in the clubhouse with an unassuming manner. He said he held no illusions his big spring would land him on the team, fully understood the Mets' call to go with the more experienced Mike Jacobs and wasn't expecting to be anything beyond "maybe a September call-up."
With Davis already in the majors, and already thriving, Manuel and the Mets brass have reason to be excited, though they aren't getting ahead of themselves. "He's smooth, he's rhythmic, he has soft hands and he really gets extended when he hits -- so that means power,'' Manuel said. "The test will come when he goes around [the league] a couple times.''
Mets fans eager for a new hero aren't going to wait that long. They are already crediting Davis for the Mets' sudden hot streak that has them back above .500 for the first time since Opening Day. But Davis' ascension happened to come shortly after the return of the team's most important player, shortstop Jose Reyes, plus Manuel's prescient decision to switch from Gary Matthews Jr. to Angel Pagan in center field. A Mets official said the team's "energy'' returned the same time Reyes did. But the fans, perhaps wary of all the injured Mets, seem to view Davis as nearly as important a figure.
While Mets people were guarding against the label of "savior'' being applied, nobody sees any sign the attention is going to Davis' head. "He's got all the tools, there's no question about it,'' David Wright said. "But the best thing about him is he hasn't bought into all the hype surrounding his call-up. That's more impressive than what he's done on the field.''
Heyward and Davis are far from the only young stars drawing praise in a year that may wind up being recalled for its sterling rookie class, even if not all the best ones have reached the majors yet.
The Nationals' Stephen Strasburg, last year's No. 1 overall drat choice, has been overpowering at Double-A Harrisburg, going 2-0 with a 0.73 ERA and 17 strikeouts in 12 1/3 innings. Washington GM Mike Rizzo cautiously warned that Strasburg wasn't ready when he kept him off the major league roster toward the end of spring training, but everyone figures he will be up with the big club by June 1, after three to four starts each at both Double-A and Triple-A. The Nationals plan to have Strasburg throw around 130 innings this year, with about two-thirds of them coming at the big-league level, assuming he continues his minor-league domination.
The Reds' Cuban import Aroldis Chapman has also been terrific so far, though he probably doesn't have the maturity of some of the other phenoms. Legend has it he complained about the early bids for him, telling people that if he wasn't going to get $60 million for his troubles that maybe he should have stayed in Cuba, a legend that was verified by someone who knows him well. Nonetheless, Chapman has a 0.60 ERA and 18 strikeouts in 15 innings at Triple-A Louisville, numbers that could at least tempt the Reds to bring him up, considering how poorly their rotation has fared thus far. Chapman has been so dominant early that he's evoking comparisons to a young Randy Johnson.
There is a temptation, even a danger, in making such declarations. As Glaus pointed out, there's a very good reason the great prospects are often still compared to Mickey Mantle, and it's because no one has come along in "50 some years'' to top Mantle in terms of talent. As talented as Heyward is, he's not Mickey Mantle.

At least, not yet.



Strasburg by June?????
www.si.com
Stephen Strasburg is coming. The Washington Nationals have been guarded about their plans for Strasburg, the top pick in last June's draft, who signed for a record $15.1 million out of San Diego State. But he will not be with Harrisburg, in Class AA, much longer. After an apprenticeship for Class AAA Syracuse, Strasburg is expected to be in the majors by June. He is clearly ready for a promotion: after firing five no-hit innings in his fourth start on Tuesday, Strasburg is 3-0 with a 0.52 earned run average. His single drove in the only run in a 1-0 victory, and he now has 23 strikeouts and 3 walks in 17 1/3 innings.


MLB Power Rankings April 26-30th
1 (2) Rays 14-5 Carl Crawford has been caught stealing three times so far. In 2009, he was caught stealing for the third time on June 6.
2 (1) Yankees 12-6 Fun with statistics: The lowest payroll among the eight highest revenue teams, measured in terms of percentage of total team revenues, belongs to the Yankees, right in line with league average. (Jason Rosenberg, It's About The Money)
3 (4) Twins 13-6 It might be safe to say Justin Morneau's back is fully healed. He's among the league leaders in most offensive categories and has already drawn 20 walks, leading to a robust .511 on-base percentage. (Nick Nelson, Nick's Twins Blog)
4 (3) Phillies 11-7 The offense has slumped over the past seven games, averaging just three runs per game. Starting pitching has been the silver lining. (Bill Baer, Crashburn Alley)
5 (5) Cardinals 11-7 The Cardinals lost their first series of the year (to the Giants), but Colby Rasmus continues to emerge (team-leading .466 wOBA) and Chris Carpenter allayed Week 1 concerns about health with back-to-back double-digit strikeout starts. (Matt Philip, Fungoes)
6 (9) Athletics 12-8 Daric Barton, hitting .328 with a .488 OBP, fractured his middle finger Sunday. It's unknown if he'll miss time.
7 (21) Padres 11-7 The Padres have outscored their opponents 27-10 in the fourth inning of games this year. (Geoff Young, Ducksnorts)
8 (6) Giants 10-8 The Giants' offense has been a problem this past week as the team averaged only 1.6 runs per game while going 2-4. (Chris Quick, Bay City Ball)
9 (7) Marlins 10-9 Dan Uggla averages one strikeout every 3.87 ABs for his career. His average in 2010? One K every 6.45 ABs.
10 (15) Angels 10-10 Brandon Wood's two-run double Sunday accounted for his first extra-base hit and his first two RBIs of the season.
11 (10) Rockies 10-9 The Rockies have opened the season with three straight series wins at Coors Field for the first time since 2003.
12 (11) Tigers 10-9 Tigers fans thought Dontrelle Willis was the rotation's weakest link, but right now Rick Porcello's struggles are more alarming: 1-2, 7.91 ERA plus 33 hits in just 19 IP. (Mike McClary, The Daily Fungo)
13 (12) Blue Jays 10-9 Adam Lind, who struck out three times Sunday, has gone 3-for-22 (.136) with nine strikeouts over the past week.
14 (13) Red Sox 8-11 Though the Red Sox call themselves victors of four of their past six games, there's only so much love to go around when they outscore the 3-16 Orioles by a total of one run over three games. (Mike Silver, Fire Brand of the AL)
15 (18) Mariners 9-10 The Mariners have slumped under .500 thanks to a bullpen that's proving its volatility and to minor injuries to the fragile Jack Wilson and Milton Bradley. (Jon Shields, Pro Ball NW)

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

2010 MLB Power Rankings 4-13-10




2010 MLB Power Rankings 4-13-10
www.espn.com
1 (3) Phillies 5-1 Newfound plate discipline of Jimmy Rollins has the Phillies' offense clicking on all cylinders. (Bill Baer, Crashburn Alley)
2 (1) Yankees 4-2 After starting the season 4-2 against their two AL East rivals, the Yanks are ready to get their rings for No. 27 on Tuesday against the Angels. (Jason Rosenberg, It's About The Money)
3 (9) Twins 5-2 How will Target Field play? We'll find out, but in the meantime, the Twins have already begun launching home runs on the road (10 in seven games).
4 (13) Giants 5-1 Behind the hot hitting of Pablo Sandoval (1.047 OPS) and Edgar Renteria (1.345 OPS) the Giants are off to a 5-1 start. (Chris Quick, Bay City Ball)
5 (15) Tigers 5-1 Miguel Cabrera is the AL's leading hitter (.522) through the first week of the season and also leads in OBP (.621).
6 (5) Cardinals 4-2 The Cardinals' offense averaging 7.0 runs created/game and starting rotation have been enough to overcome anticipated weakness in bullpen (4.62 FIP). (Matthew Philip, Fungoes)
7 (2) Red Sox 3-3 If only Papi could find that sweet March swing (2-for-14, 5 K's in 2010). (Mike Silver, Fire Brand of the AL)
8 (25) Blue Jays 5-1 Vernon Wells went 1-for-10 with four strikeouts in the weekend series against Baltimore.
9 (4) Rays 3-3 Ben Zobrist is hitting .304 with an .855 OPS out of the No. 3 spot in the Rays' order.
10 (6) Braves 3-3 Jason Heyward has been getting a lot of attention, but what about the start for Martin Prado (NL-best .542 BA)?
11 (22) Athletics 5-2 The A's won back-to-back season-opening series for the first time since 2004.
12 (12) Rangers 3-3 Vladimir Guerrero seems to be liking life in a Rangers uniform (.500, 1.187 OPS).
13 (19) Marlins 4-2 First baseman Jorge Cantu has 10 RBIs and at least one in each of the Marlins' first six games.
14 (7) Rockies 3-3 So far Ubaldo Jimenez has pitched like an ace -- 2-0, 2.25 ERA, 13 K's in 12 IP.
15 (23) Diamondbacks 4-2 Kelly Johnson is second in the NL in homers (3) and slugging (.947) and third in OPS (1.426).
16 (17) Brewers 3-3 Trevor Hoffman has given up at least one run in three of his four appearances this season.
17 (11) White Sox 2-4 The struggles of Alex Rios have continued into 2010 (.174 BA, .661 OPS).
18 (18) Reds 3-3 The Reds have won three out of four although Joey Votto doesn't have an RBI since the team's season opener.
19 (10) Dodgers 2-4 Opening Day starter Vicente Padilla has failed to get out of the fifth inning in his first two outings.
20 (8) Angels 2-5 It was a nightmarish first week for Brandon Wood: 1-for-19, seven K's, no RBIs.
21 (14) Cubs 2-4 Bullpen issues need to be addressed in a hurry or it could be a long season. (Joe Aiello, View from the Bleachers)
22 (20) Mets 2-4 The Mets start the week in last place, hitting .188 with runners in scoring position, as they travel to Colorado and St. Louis. (Joe Janish, Mets Today)
23 (16) Mariners 2-5 Franklin Gutierrez (.444) is the only Mariners player hitting over .300.
24 (30) Pirates 3-3 Since hitting three homers in the first two games, Garrett Jones has cooled off, going 2-for-15.
25 (27) Padres 2-4 Padres pitchers allowed 11 homers in the season's first week, most in the National League. (Geoff Young, Ducksnorts)
26 (26) Indians 2-4 The Indians haven't hit or pitched all that well so far, but they've made only one error over their first six games.
27 (28) Nationals 3-3 The Nationals will try for their third straight win Monday without third baseman Ryan Zimmerman in the lineup (hamstring injury).
28 (29) Royals 2-4 Jose Guillen went 3-for-8 with two homers and four RBIs over the last two games against Boston. (Craig Brown, Royals Authority)
29 (21) Orioles 1-5 Closer Mike Gonzalez has already blown two saves in three chances, allowing four earned runs and four walks in only two innings.
30 (24) Astros 0-6 The Astros are the majors' lone winless team and also have the worst run differential (minus-24).

Monday, March 1, 2010

2010 MLB Top Prospects



2010 MLB Top Prospects
www.espn.com
This is Baseball America's 21st annual Top 100 Prospects list, our definitive annual ranking of the best professional talent in baseball below the major league level. And this year, we're turning the focus in the list to the best tool for each player. We'll highlight that tool, as well as giving it a grade on the 20-80 scouting scale—where 20 is the worst, 80 the best, and 50 major league average.

The Top 100 Prospects list is the culmination of our offseason prospect coverage, which begins with our reviews of the top talent in each minor league and proceeds with ranking the talent in each major league farm system. Our staffers and correspondents talk to general managers, managers, scouting directors, farm directors, scouts, coaches and other people in the game. Four people contributed to the voting this year: Co-Editors Will Lingo and John Manuel, executive editor Jim Callis and assistant editor Conor Glassey. Each person compiled a top 150 list, and we then reviewed the composite numbers and made adjustments before locking down the final list.

The rankings follow our standard prospect guidelines, which means any player who has not exceeded 130 at-bats, 50 innings or 30 pitching appearances in the major leagues (without regard to service time) is eligible. As always, our view is not necessarily to what a player will do this season, but what his ultimate major league ceiling is, weighed against the likelihood that he will reach that ceiling.

01 JASON HEYWARD OF, BRAVES
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: 2010

11 DUSTIN ACKLEY OF/1B/2B, MARINERS
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 22 ETA: 2011

02 STEPHEN STRASBURG RHP, NATIONALS
Best Tool: Fastball.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 21 ETA: Mid-2010

12 ALCIDES ESCOBAR SS, BREWERS
Best Tool: Defense.
BA Grade: 70.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: 2010

03 MIKE STANTON OF, MARLINS
Best Tool: Power.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: Mid-2010

13 JUSTIN SMOAK 1B, RANGERS
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 70.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: Mid-2010

04 JESUS MONTERO C,
YANKEES
Best Tool: Power.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: 2011

14 MADISON BUMGARNER LHP, GIANTS
Best Tool: Fastball.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: Mid-2010

05 BRIAN MATUSZ LHP, ORIOLES
Best Tool: Changeup.
BA Grade: 70.
Opening
Day Age: 23
ETA: 2010

15 DOMONIC BROWN OF, PHILLIES
Best Tool: Arm.
BA Grade: 70.
Opening
Day Age: 22 ETA: 2011

06 DESMOND JENNINGS OF, RAYS
Best Tool: Speed.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: Mid-2010

16 STARLIN CASTRO SS, CUBS
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: 2011

07 BUSTER POSEY C, GIANTS
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 70.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: Mid-2010

17 MARTIN PEREZ LHP,
RANGERS
Best Tool: Curveball.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 19 ETA: Mid-2011

08 PEDRO ALVAREZ 3B, PIRATES
Best Tool: Power.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: Mid-2010

18 JEREMY HELLICKSON RHP, RAYS
Best Tool: Command.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 22 ETA: Mid-2010

09 NEFTALI FELIZ RHP, RANGERS
Best Tool: Fastball.
BA Grade: 80.
Opening
Day Age: 21 ETA: 2010

19 AARON HICKS OF, TWINS
Best Tool: Arm.
BA Grade: 75.
Opening
Day Age: 20 ETA: Mid-2011

10 CARLOS SANTANA C, INDIANS
Best Tool: Power.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 23 ETA: 2010


20 LOGAN MORRISON 1B, MARLINS
Best Tool: Bat.
BA Grade: 65.
Opening
Day Age: 22 ETA: 2010

Monday, February 1, 2010

MLB Best Free-Agent Pick-Ups for 2010


Free agents are flying off the shelves at bargain prices as reporting dates near, and several more are available.
But the off-season’s biggest changes already have been made, so it’s time to look at five developments of major impact:
www.msnbc.com
1. King Felix stays in Seattle
The Mariners have done the most this winter to improve and challenge for a division title.
From signing Chone Figgins to dealing for Cliff Lee to taking a shot on Milton Bradley in a talent-for-talent steal for Carlos Silva, general manager Jack Zduriencik has made a hard-to-pronounce name for himself in a busy off-season.
Legitimate questions about having enough offense remain, but there is little doubt that locking up ace Felix Hernandez with a five-year, $78-million deal helps make the Mariners a playoff threat for the foreseeable future.
Hernandez will make an Opening Day start at 23, celebrate a birthday three days later, and over the course of this contract could become the best pitcher in the game. And every championship team needs a No. 1, especially in late October.
So that makes the $78-million price tag a relative bargain, even though it’s a big step up for the Mariners — especially at the back end of the deal: $6.5 million in 2010, $10 million in 2011, $18 million in 2012, $19.5 million in 2013 and $20 million in 2014.
As Zduriencik said: “There’s no better move than to secure a Felix Hernandez. This one was immense.’’

2. Roy Halladay to the Phillies
Let’s not over-think this one. Instead, let’s focus on it from a balance of power perspective.
And what we have here is clearly the best team in the National League adding to its rotation an ace who most agree was the best pitcher in the American League. And they’ll have him for the entire 2010 season, too.
The best just got even better, and that has to be scary stuff to the rest of the NL, not to mention whoever wins the AL pennant.
Would it have been more intriguing — and possibly more dominating — if they had hung onto Cliff Lee, at least for awhile in the 2010 season? Absolutely.
But forget the payroll implications for a minute. When you traded three of your top four prospects to get Lee, plus six more for Joe Blanton (July 2008) and Brad Lidge (November 2007), it’s time for some prudent, long-range thinking.
Even after the Lee deal that brought them Phillippe Aumont, Juan Ramirez and Tyson Gillies, the Phillies are a bottom-third organization in terms of prospects.
So a few years from now, we’ll probably be saying GM Ruben Amaro did the smart thing long-term back in the winter of 2009-10 by sending Lee to the Mariners.

3. Curtis Granderson to the Yankees
There are mixed reviews on the Yankees’ entire winter of activity: They already had Javier Vazquez and Nick Johnson, and now have brought them back for second turns in pinstripes.
They let go of World Series hero Hideki Matsui, and cried cheap on bringing back Johnny Damon, who clearly is better in the new Yankee Stadium than he will be anywhere else.
But adding another All-Star – and a personable and marketable one at that – in Granderson ushers in a much-needed move to get younger and more athletic. And the price was minimal – low-ceiling young big-leaguers Austin Jackson and Phil Coke.
Plain and simple, this was the Yankees and GM Brian Cashman capitalizing on the Tigers’ economic woes that also led them to part ways with Placido Polanco, Edwin Jackson and Fernando Rodney.
And here’s a prediction: Granderson is made for the big stage. Watch his career reach the next level in the Bronx.

4. Rangers’ ownership situation resolved
A variety of problems keep franchises from success – everything from inferior stadiums to inefficient player development to trouble at the top -- say, something along the lines of McCourt v. McCourt.
But the Texas Rangers are about to turn a negative into a positive with the pending majority ownership change from over-leveraged Tom Hicks to Chuck Greenberg’s group.
Part of what’s good about the transition is what won’t change: The Nolan Ryan-led organization – with arguably the game’s best farm system -- will remain in place.
“The franchise has been on the right path for some time,’’ Greenberg said recently. “We have a great deal of anticipation about where that road is going to lead us.’’
And with financial restrictions listed, there is the likelihood of a mid-season deal to push the Rangers over the top in a suddenly-tough AL West.
“Two things organizations need to make a move like that is depth of talent and depth of resources,’’ Greenberg said. “Fortunately, we’ll be two for two.’’
(And maybe they won’t let their No. 1 draft choice slip away unsigned, either – as they did last summer).

5. Ben Sheets to Oakland
This has become a modus operandi for A’s GM Billy Beane, the latest in a line of successful outside-the-box methods.
And frankly, one that has become a necessity given that the early Moneyball ideas aren’t working as well now that Zito-Hudson-Mulder has morphed into Anderson-Braden-Cahill.
We saw it last season with the Matt Holliday deal (although the cost proved to be steep: Huston Street and an emerging Carlos Gonzalez):
Spend $10 million, get a few months of production from a top talent on the verge of free agency, then flip him for some high-level prospects to whom somebody else already has paid the big signing bonus.
And, this one should work out even better for the A’s, as Holliday never fully succeeded in making one of the toughest moves a hitter could have to make – from Coors Field to the Coliseum.
But the real benefactor here should be Sheets. What better place to showcase your health and restored frontline starter abilities than the pitcher-friendly Coliseum?
By July 31, Sheets may be this season’s Cliff Lee. And Beane may have a few more cheap bricks in a rebuilding process that has some promise.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Bye Bye Cliff Lee and Bye Bye Indians



All of the different articles on the Indians trading Cliff Lee! What is Cleveland coming to? I guess they may know what they are doing, but as a fan I have no idea what they are doing and wonder why they feel they need to release everyone. Any true Indian fans out there that have some sorta perspective or thoughts on this club right now????????





PHILADELPHIA - Looking for an ace to bolster their so-so rotation, the Philadelphia Phillies acquired Cliff Lee from the Indians, who traded the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner for the second straight season.

The defending World Series champion Phillies are sending Cleveland four minor league prospects for Lee and outfielder Ben Francisco, a baseball official familiar with the trade told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The deal is pending medical reviews. Those reviews could take a while because three of the players the Indians are getting from Philadelphia have dealt with recent injuries.
The NL East-leading Phillies are sending Triple-A pitcher Carlos Carrasco, infielder Jason Donald and catcher Lou Marson along with Single-A pitcher Jason Knapp to Cleveland.

Last year, Cleveland dealt CC Sabathia, then the reigning Cy Young winner and in the final year of his contract, to the Milwaukee Brewers. Sabathia helped pitched the Brewers into the postseason before signing a $161 million, seven-year contract with the New York Yankees.

Lee turns 31 next month and his contract includes an $8 million club option for next season.

Hours before the trade was completed, Lee sat in the Indians clubhouse in Anaheim, Calif., talking to reporters as rumors swirled that he might soon be headed to Philadelphia.

“Obviously the Phillies are the defending world champions, they’re a good team and they’re in first place,” Lee said before the Indians played the Angels on Wednesday afternoon. “Honestly, it’s an honor and I look at it as a good thing. If other teams are wanting me and are willing to trade some of their key players and future players for me, it’s a compliment.”

Philadelphia pursued Blue Jays ace Roy Halladay, but shifted its attention to Lee because Toronto’s asking price for the six-time All-Star is high. The Phillies balked at trading top pitching prospect Kyle Drabek, who was the 18th overall pick in the 2006 amateur draft.

Philadelphia acquired Lee without giving up Drabek, rookie left-hander J.A. Happ, who was 7-1 going into his start at Arizona, or highly touted minor-league outfielders Michael Taylor and Dominic Brown.

Asked in Seattle whether he felt the Blue Jays dodged a bullet by the Phillies acquiring Lee instead of Halladay, Toronto manager Cito Gaston said with a chuckle, “Yeah, I guess. Who knows? They may come back and get (Halladay), too. That’d be a pretty good staff there, wouldn’t it?”

Lee gives the Phillies another top starter to join Cole Hamels. The left-hander is 7-9 with a 3.14 ERA in 22 starts this season after going 22-3 with a 2.54 ERA last year. Hamels, the MVP of the World Series and NLCS last fall, has been inconsistent this season. He’s 7-5 with a 4.42 ERA, though he pitched well in a victory at Arizona on Tuesday.

The Phillies have a comfortable lead in the division — seven games ahead of second-place Florida going into Wednesday’s games. They’ve sought pitching help since No. 2 starter Brett Myers had hip surgery in June. Jamie Moyer leads the staff with 10 wins, but he is 46 and has a 5.32 ERA.

The addition of Lee means Philadelphia has to drop someone — possibly Rodrigo Lopez — from its starting rotation. Lopez, though, is 3-0 with a 3.09 ERA in four starts. The Phillies also have Pedro Martinez rehabbing in the minors. The three-time Cy Young Award winner signed a $1 million, one-year contract during the All-Star break.

Francisco, who is batting .250 with 10 homers and 33 RBIs, upgrades Philadelphia’s bench, which has lacked a solid, right-handed hitter.

The Indians have been a major disappointment this season and their decision to deal Lee for prospects is another to blow to Cleveland fans, who have seen stars like Manny Ramirez, Jim Thome and Sabathia leave via free agency or trade.

The club had hoped to sign Lee to an extension but talks broke off during spring training. A succession of injuries and dismal relief pitching dropped the Indians out of contention and forced general manager Mark Shapiro to begin rebuilding.
The Indians traded infielder/outfielder Mark DeRosa to St. Louis last month, sent reliever Rafael Betancourt to Colorado last week and dealt first baseman Ryan Garko to San Francisco on Monday.

Carrasco may be the closest to joining Cleveland’s roster. The 22-year-old right-hander struggled early this season at Triple-A Lehigh Valley, but has pitched well recently. He was 6-9 with a 5.18 ERA in 20 starts, and had 112 strikeouts in 114 2-3 innings.

The 18-year-old Knapp was Philadelphia’s second-round pick in last year’s draft. He’s 6-foot-5, 215 pounds and possesses an overpowering fastball, with 111 strikeouts in 85 1-3 innings. But he hasn’t pitched since July 11 because of right shoulder soreness.

Marson, 23, was hitting .294 with one homer and 24 RBIs in 63 games at Lehigh Valley. He was 4-for-17 in seven games with the Phillies. Donald, 24, recently returned from knee surgery and was batting .236 with one homer and 16 RBIs in 51 games at Lehigh Valley.






Edge of the Cliff
Cliff Lee is moving to Philadelphia and a ballpark that tends to punish fly-ball pitchers. Lee has fly-ball tendencies (54.5 pct of balls in play), but when the ball goes into the air, he keeps it in the park. A look at the pitchers with the lowest fly-ball to home run percentage for pitchers with a minimum 900 batters faced (2008-09):

Player/Team HR/FB Pct.
Tim Lincecum, SF 3.3
Cliff Lee, CLE 3.4
Jair Jurrjens, ATL 3.8
Ubaldo Jimenez, COL 4.0
Mike Pelfrey, NYM 4.1




Unable to land this year's leading contender for the American League Cy Young Award, the Phillies did the next-best thing on Wednesday by acquiring last year's AL Cy Young winner.

In a deal that demonstrated the trade deadline at its best, the defending world champs picked up lefty starter Cliff Lee and outfielder Ben Francisco, while the Indians acquired four of the Phillies' Top 10 prospects, according to Baseball America's preseason rankings (No. 2 Carlos Carrasco, No. 3 Lou Marson, No. 4 Jason Donald and No. 10 Jason Knapp).

It is a trade that gives both teams exactly what they were seeking. The Phillies get a front-of-the-rotation starter to keep the rest of the NL East at arm's length and bolster a potential run at a second straight World Series title, while the Indians restock with a bevy of talented young players, at least three of whom could be ready to make an impact at the major league level as early as next season.

This is just the latest sign that the Phillies intend to be annual contenders for the world championship that eluded them for all but one of their first 125 seasons. Not only do they get Lee this year to help defend their crown, but because of his extremely reasonable 2010 club option of $8 million, they can re-load for another championship push next year as well, and all the while get first crack at signing the 31-year-old to an extension.

Though he has been unable to duplicate the success he had in 2008, Lee is enjoying what may be the second-best season of his career, despite his 7-9 record. Along with ranking seventh in the AL with a 3.14 ERA and leading the league with 152 innings pitched, his HR/9 ratio is nearly identical to what it was a year ago (which will come in handy in the bandbox that is Citizen's Bank Park) and his ERA+, BB/9, K's/9 and K/BB ratios are all better than any season of his career except for 2008.

As much as the Phillies would like Lee to be the pitcher he was while leading the league in wins and ERA last year, they don't really need that to solidify their status as a top title threat. With a battle-tested Cole Hamels -- who won both the NLCS and World Series MVP awards last year -- the acquisition of Lee gives the Phillies a 1-2 punch atop their rotation that is as good as any in the National League. The Phillies don't need Lee to win their third straight division title -- they have a seven-game lead over the underwhelming Marlins and Braves at the moment -- but it was hard to envision them repeating as world champs without upgrading their rotation in some manner. The acquisition of Lee not only improves the top of their rotation but it gives them additional strength for a short series. One area of concern might be how they stack up against a team like the Dodgers if the two were to meet for a postseason rematch. With Hamels, Lee and J.A. Happ, the Phils' three best starters are all left-handers, and the Dodgers have feasted on lefties this season, with a .290 batting average (third in the majors) as well as a .375 OBP and .444 slugging percentages.

That is a concern for October. In the meantime the Phillies not only improved themselves this year, but they also managed to hang on to both of their top starting pitching prospects, Happ and Kyle Drabek, to help ensure that they will be a contender for years to come. It is a sign of the strength of their farm system that they remain stocked with quality young talent even after dealing away four of their Top 10 prospects.

Those four players should quickly help the depleted Indians retool in what has been, along with the NL West, the most mediocre division in baseball in recent years (both of those divisions have placed four different teams in the postseason over the past three years). Marson, who was named the top minor leaguer in the Phillies system last year, has had a cup of coffee in the bigs but has spent the majority of his year at Triple-A Lehigh Valley, where he was batting .294/.382/.370 in 63 games. Though he hasn't shown much power in the minors yet, he is a high on-base guy (he had a .433 OBP in 2008 at Double-A, the highest by any player at that level -- and is .388 for his minor league career). And despite being in his sixth minor league season, he just turned 23 last month. He has received rave reviews for his handling of pitchers and will be increasingly valuable if the Indians follow through on their rumored trade of All-Star catcher Victor Martinez. Should that occur before Friday's deadline, the only catcher on the Indians' active roster would be .199-hitting Kelly Shoppach.

Along with Marson, Donald had long been considered a bright part of the Phillies' future. Though his path to the majors had been blocked by the presence of Jimmy Rollins, Donald impressed by batting better than .300 with double-digit home run totals in the minors in 2007 and 2008. He has struggled somewhat at Triple-A, batting just .236 with a .297 on-base percentage and only one home run. He had played shortstop exclusively until this season, but has received some spot time at both second and third base, perhaps in an effort to either find him a home in Philadelphia or make him more attractive to potential trading partners. Positional versatility out of Donald is a nice bonus for Cleveland, especially in an infield with Jhonny Peralta and Asdrubal Cabrera (both players have been effective at shortstop this year, with Peralta also playing 52 games at third base and Cabrera logging 28 games at second). Donald gives the Indians several options for playing time, and could even open up further trade possibilities for general manager Mark Shapiro.

While Marson and Donald are nice, it is pitching where the Indians were really hurting, and this deal helps them greatly. Unlike last year, when they dealt CC Sabathia at the deadline but still had Lee in the rotation, now the Indians are left with a highly questionable rotation in which Carl Pavano is the wins leader (8) despite a 5.66 ERA. (Not to mention he's on a one-year contract and may not even be around next year.)

To shore up the rotation, the Indians received Carrasco and Knapp. Carrasco, a 22-year-old righty, has been projected as a top-two starter and boasts an effective changeup to complement a low-90s fastball. He was outstanding during his first Triple-A stint last year, posting a 1.72 ERA and 11.3 K/9, but this year he has regressed to a 6-9 record and a 4.18 ERA while notching 8.8 K/9.

Knapp is still just 18 years old, and he has a fastball that reaches 97 mph, two attributes that make him much more attractive than his 2-7 record and 4.01 ERA would suggest. He has struck out 111 batters in just 85.1 innings this year.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Pictures, HighLites and Video Walkthrough of NEW Yankee Stadium














NEW YANKEE STADIUM

New York, New York

Tenant: New York Yankees (AL)

Groundbreaking: August 16, 2006

Construction began: August 17, 2006

Opening: April 2009

Capacity: 51,800

Style: Open air

Surface: Grass

Architect: HOK Sport (Kansas City)

Developer: Tishman Speyer (New York)

Construction: Turner Corp. (Dallas); Skanska USA Civil (Queens) will build structural steel frame and pilings

Owner: New York Yankees

Cost: Approximately $1.3 billion

Public financing: $220 million from New York City for parking facilities ($75 million), parkland along the waterfront ($135 million) and other work related to the stadium

Private financing: Approximately $1.1 billion from the Yankees

Location: Just north of the existing stadium, between 161st and 164th Streets, and between Jerome and River Avenues.

Dimensions: Same as Yankee Stadium

Fences: Same as Yankee Stadium


The Yankess began construction on a new stadium across the street from the current Yankee Stadium in the summer of 2006. Completion is scheduled for the 2009 season. The project is part of a larger redevelopment plan that includes a hotel, conference center and high school for sports-related careers.
The stadium will feature an exterior facade which will replicate that of the original Yankee Stadium. The interior of the stadium will be a separate structure, rising above the top of the exterior. From the outside the structures will look similar to the original stadium. A "great hall" between the exterior wall and the interior structure will feature five to six times more retail square footage than the current stadium. The signature frieze, the lattice work that once rimmed the original stadium's roof, will adorn the new stadium's roof in the original copper.
Just before leaving office in December 2001, former Mayor Rudy Giuliani reached a tentative agreement with both the Yankees and Mets to build them each an $800 million, retractable-roof stadium. Upon becoming mayor, Michael Bloomberg made it clear that he had other priorities and the ballpark plans were put on hold indefinitely.
The proposed Yankees ballpark would seat 47,000 people and feature a retractable roof. The interior would include the facade, as well as the original field dimensions, from Yankee Stadium. Soil from the outfield would be moved to the new stadium.
The city would finance the stadiums by issuing $1.6 billion in bonds, and the teams would have to reimburse the city. Giuliani emphasized that the stadiums would pay for themselves and made good business sense.
In the summer of 2004, New York newspapers reported that the Yankees were on the verge of announcing plans for a new ballpark next to Yankee Stadium. It was rumored that the Yankees would forgo the retractable roof and increase seating capacity to approximately 56,000. As of January 2005, the Yankees have said nothing on the subject.
In January 2005, it was reported that New York City planned on spending $1.1 billion on three sports complexes: $600 million for a Jets stadium on Manhattan's West Side, $300 million toward a new Yankees ballpark and $200 million toward a Nets arena in Brooklyn. The Mets have said they expect to receive the same $300 million subsidy as the Yankees.
In April 1996, the city and state of New York and Yankees owner George Steinbrenner completed a study of four possible sites as a future home for the Yankees. One of those is now the site of the proposed Jets stadium. The other sites studied were Van Cortlandt Park, Pelham Bay Park and the site of Yankee Stadium, all of which are in the Bronx. The study also found that renovation of the Yankees' present stadium in the Bronx would cost at least $770 million (1996 dollars).
Several years ago, New Jersey gave the New York Yankees a plan for a new baseball-only stadium that would hold about 50,000 people and cost about 50 percent less than a multipurpose sports stadium in Manhattan.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Pictures, Videos and facts about new Mets stadium



Citi Field opens with a college baseball game



On November 13, 2006, Citigroup - the leading global financial services company operating in more than 100 countries - and the New York Mets announced an exclusive 20-year, multifaceted strategic marketing and business partnership that includes the naming rights for Citi Field, the new world-class home of the Mets, scheduled to open by Opening Day 2009.


Citi Field will feature unprecedented sightlines, amenities, and comfort for Mets fans, sports fans and visitors to the New York metropolitan area. The open-air ballpark connects the Mets' National League heritage to the future and to the City through a number of unique design elements. Citi Field will feature natural grass and capacity for approximately 45,000 fans. A contoured seating configuration will bring spectators closer to the field on all levels to provide optimal sightlines for a more intimate and entertaining experience throughout the park.



> AMENITIES/FAN ENHANCEMENTS
• Citi Field's baseball-specific design produces superior sightlines for the game throughout the venue. There is a more intimate atmosphere with seating angled toward the infield and set down closer to the field. Forty-two percent of the ballpark's seats will be located in the Concourse (or lowest) seating level.

• The ballpark will feature some of the widest unobstructed concourses in new sports facilities. Concession stands and restrooms will be located within the facility's exterior walls leaving the circulation areas with uninterrupted views of the field.

• Wider seats provide enhanced comfort throughout the venue while more space between the rows allows for improved legroom.

• The Concourse level features 360-degree, walk-around circulation around the ballpark with expansive field views and ample standing room. The Promenade level features a split-deck design providing uninterrupted views into the ballpark from the circulation and concession areas.

• Fans throughout the ballpark will have access to multiple sit-down, climate-controlled restaurants, bars, clubs, and lounges, a majority of which will provide field views, and a wide range of menu choices.

• Numerous permanent attractions built into the master plan add to Citi Field's family-friendly environment, including: an expanded Fan Fest family entertainment area within the ballpark on the Concourse level, an enhanced outfield Picnic Area adjacent to the batter's eye, multiple party deck areas, and an interactive Mets museum with club memorabilia and Hall of Fame displays.


> ARCHITECTURAL HIGHLIGHTS
• Inspired by tradition, Citi Field will be clad in brick, limestone, granite and cast stone, with the brick closely resembling the masonry used at Ebbets Field, both in color and texture. Exposed steel will be painted dark blue and the seats will be dark green.

• A structural steel "bridge" motif throughout Citi Field reinforces the Mets' connection to New York's five boroughs while also symbolically linking the team's storied tradition to its future. Design elements call for exposed trusses, light towers, scoreboard structure, and a roof canopy that recall the ballparks of yesteryear.

• This landmark partnership will accelerate Citi's and the Mets' current significant commitments to the community with new resources to develop and launch outreach platforms and programs in and beyond New York City, involving both the Citigroup Foundation and the New York Mets Foundation.

As the first step in this effort, the Mets and Citi will commission a statue and name the entry rotunda of Citi Field - inspired by the classic design of Ebbets Field - to honor Jackie Robinson, the legendary pioneer and great American who broke baseball's color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. The partnership will include a significant commitment to recognize and perpetuate, in and around the rotunda and the community, Robinson's legacy and the "nine values" he embodied as articulated by his daughter and Foundation Vice Chair, Sharon Robinson: courage, integrity, determination, persistence, citizenship, justice, commitment, teamwork, and excellence.

In addition, Citi and the Mets through a pledge to the Jackie Robinson Foundation will help create the Jackie Robinson Foundation Museum and Education Center in lower Manhattan. As much as a tribute to Jackie Robinson, the Museum and Education Center will educate children about Jackie Robinson's pioneering spirit and leading role in social change. This partnership will support new programs for the Jackie Robinson Foundation, including leadership development and scholarships for students who exemplify Jackie's humanitarian ideals.


> SETTING HIGHLIGHTS
• A landscaped plaza around the ballpark will welcome fans, improve access and egress, and create space for pre- and post-game activities, vendors, and other amenities.

Various areas of Citi Field will reinforce the setting of the venue and the Mets connection to the City of New York and baseball history, including: the Ebbets Club behind the plate, Coogan's Landing beyond the leftfield fence, the "East Side" stands in rightfield, and "The Orchard" picnic area in centerfield.


> ON THE DIAMOND
Field Orientation: The four-acre natural turf field will expand from home in a northeasterly direction with the leftfield line stretching northward, and the rightfield line extending eastward.

Right Field Porch: In rightfield there will be a singular deck that will be situated to extend into and over fair territory by eight feet.

Pitcher Friendly: Distinctive asymmetrical outfield walls, along with generous dimensions (LF - 335'; LC - 379'; CF - 408'; RC - 383'; RF - 330') make for a traditional pitcher's park.


> DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION
Sterling Equities, the Mets ownership group, has expertise and experience in the development and management of premium New York City properties, as well as new minor league ballparks in Coney Island and Port St. Lucie, Fla. The Citi Field project is developed by Queens Ballpark Company, L.L.C. and has been designed by the internationally renowned architects of HOK Sport. HOK Sport has designed and renovated 13 of the 30 major league ballparks in use today and seven of the last eight to open in Major League Baseball. Hunt-Bovis, a joint venture of Hunt Construction Group and Bovis Lend Lease, will provide construction management.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

2009 Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds Rosters

Cleveland Indians Roster starters are in bold!!!


2 Jhonny Peralta SS R/R 6-1 210 5/28/1982 Santiago, Dominican Republic
7 Mark DeRosa 2B R/R 6-1 205 2/26/1975 Passaic, NJ
10 Kelly Shoppach C R/R 6-0 220 4/29/1980 Fort Worth, TX
11 Jamey Carroll 2B R/R 5-9 170 2/18/1974 Evansville, IN
12 Ben Francisco LF R/R 6-1 190 10/23/1981 Santa Ana, CA
13 Asdrubal Cabrera 2B S/R 6-0 170 11/13/1985 Puerto la Cruz, Venezuela
17 Shin-Soo Choo RF L/L 5-11 200 7/13/1982 Pusan, South Korea
20 David Dellucci LF L/L 5-11 205 10/31/1973 Baton Rouge, LA
24 Grady Sizemore CF L/L 6-2 200 8/2/1982 Seattle, WA
25 Ryan Garko 1B R/R 6-2 225 1/2/1981 Pittsburgh, PA
27 Anthony Reyes P R/R 6-2 230 10/16/1981 Downey, CA
29 Josh Barfield 2B R/R 6-0 190 12/17/1982 Barquisimeto, Venezuela
30 Masa Kobayashi P R/R 6-0 195 5/24/1974 Yamanashi, Japan
31 Cliff Lee P L/L 6-3 190 8/30/1978 Benton, AR
34 Kerry Wood P R/R 6-5 211 6/16/1977 Irving, TX
37 Jake Westbrook P R/R 6-3 215 9/29/1977 Athens, GA
38 Joe Smith P R/R 6-2 205 3/22/1984 Cincinnati, OH
41 Victor Martinez C S/R 6-2 210 12/23/1978 Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela
44 Carl Pavano P R/R 6-5 240 1/8/1976 New Britain, CT
46 Scott Lewis P S/L 6-0 185 9/26/1983 West Covina, CA
48 Travis Hafner DH L/R 6-3 240 6/3/1977 Jamestown, ND
49 Edward Mujica P R/R 6-2 215 5/10/1984 Valencia, Venezuela
50 Jensen Lewis P R/R 6-3 210 5/16/1984 Cincinnati, OH
53 Rafael Perez P L/L 6-3 195 5/15/1982 Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
55 Fausto Carmona P R/R 6-4 230 12/7/1983 Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
57 Zach Jackson P L/L 6-5 220 5/13/1983 Latrobe, PA
62 Trevor Crowe CF S/R 6-0 190 11/17/1983 Portland, OR
63 Rafael Betancourt P R/R 6-2 200 4/29/1975 Cumana, Venezuela

Cincinnati Reds roster starters in bold

2 Alex Gonzalez SS R/R 5-11 216 2/15/1977 Cagua, Venezuela
3 Willy Taveras CF R/R 6-0 160 12/25/1981 Tenares, Dominican Republic
4 Brandon Phillips 2B R/R 6-0 195 6/28/1981 Raleigh, NC

7 Paul Janish SS R/R 6-2 193 10/12/1982 Houston, TX
15 Jerry Hairston Jr. SS R/R 5-10 190 5/29/1976 Des Moines, IA
19 Joey Votto 1B L/R 6-3 233 9/10/1983 Toronto, Canada
21 Chris Dickerson LF L/L 6-3 228 4/10/1982 Hollywood, CA
25 David Weathers P R/R 6-3 238 9/25/1969 Lawrenceburg, TN
26 Wilkin Castillo C S/R 6-0 200 6/1/1984 Bani, Dominican Republic
28 Edwin Encarnacion 3B R/R 6-2 231 1/7/1983 La Romana, Dominican Republic
29 Ryan Hanigan C R/R 6-0 201 8/16/1980 Washington, DC
32 Jay Bruce RF L/L 6-3 225 4/3/1987 Beaumont, TX
33 Micah Owings P R/R 6-5 220 9/28/1982 Cumming, GA
34 Homer Bailey P R/R 6-3 210 5/3/1986 La Grange, TX
36 Edinson Volquez P R/R 6-0 200 7/3/1983 Barahona Province, Dominican Republic
39 Aaron Harang P R/R 6-7 261 5/9/1978 San Diego, CA
40 Nick Masset P R/R 6-4 235 5/17/1982 St. Petersburg, FL
45 Bill Bray P L/L 6-3 221 6/5/1983 Virginia Beach, VA
47 Johnny Cueto P R/R 5-10 201 2/15/1986 San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic
48 Francisco Cordero P R/R 6-3 238 5/11/1975 Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
51 Jared Burton P R/R 6-5 228 6/2/1981 Westminster, SC
52 Daniel Ray Herrera P L/L 5-6 165 10/21/1984 Odessa, TX
53 Arthur Rhodes P L/L 6-2 212 10/24/1969 Waco, TX
55 Ramon Hernandez C R/R 6-0 225 5/20/1976 Caracas, Venezuela
57 Mike Lincoln P R/R 6-2 218 4/10/1975 Carmichael, CA
60 Adam Rosales SS R/R 6-2 195 5/20/1983 Chicago, IL
61 Bronson Arroyo P R/R 6-4 194 2/24/1977 Key West, FL
66 Matt Maloney P L/L 6-4 220 1/16/1984 Sandusky, OH

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

A-Rod's not the only villain in steroid scandal

I agree with this article from www.msnbc.com. Where are the 103 other names on this list? Don't just ruin A-Rod's life and career, ruin everybody else's too. At this point I could care less who did and did not do steroids. Obviously, everyone at one time or another has tried some sort of enhancer. It is just that some got caught and some did not. Look at Shauwn Merriman of the San Diego Chargers...... he got caught doing steroids, served his suspension and no one cares. If you are going to bring out a list of names, then you should have the balls to list everyone, not just the ones you can write a book about and make some money off of their humility!!!!!

A-Rod's not the only villain in steroid scandal

My first thought after Alex Rodriguez was outed for being among 104 major leaguers who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003 is, “Who are the other 103?”
Come on, Bud Selig and Don Fehr. If we’re going to let one guy get crucified for the results of a test that was supposed to be anonymous, let’s crucify them all. Let’s line the streets with gibbets and hang the lot of them in public so the pious can pelt them with rotten vegetables and mock them for trying to meet our demands to be entertained.
I’ve never been much of an A-Rod fan, as my past columns about him amply demonstrate. But I’ve always been a fan of fairness, and what it happening to the man baseball fans most love to hate (Barry Bonds is out of work, so we’re not counting him.) is, simply put, not fair.
To A-Rod’s credit, his response to ESPN after being caught sounded pretty honest. He said he was young and naïve and he wanted to prove he was worth the biggest contract in baseball history. ‘Roids were part of the culture of the game then, so he took whatever the other guys were taking that helped them play better.
It might sound shallow, but the guy’s a jock. What do you expect?
I know Rodriguez lied a couple of years back when Katie Couric asked him if he had ever used the juice, but I’m not going to hold that against him. That was the same as asking him if he had ever cheated on his wife. Or asking elected officials if they’re atheists. People don’t answer those questions honestly unless they are under oath or confronted with the evidence against them. Even then, they try to wriggle out of it because if you admit it, you’re dead.
Anyway, none of this should surprise anyone. This is, after all, what you get when you let Major League Baseball and its players association try to do anything that might have the kind of consequences A-Rod is suffering now.
The testing that Sports Illustrated says caught A-Rod was supposed to be an anonymous process that would set a baseline for real testing, which would begin in 2004, with penalties. The obvious question is why names were recorded if the tests were to be anonymous. Baseball and the players' union argue that the samples were identified only by number, and the list of names was kept in a separate location so the two would never meet.
But it was the players' association that demanded that the names of the malefactors be preserved, and on Donald Fehr’s head can be heaped the largest pile of abuse. Fehr’s thinking was that he wanted a record to protect against false positive tests, but if the tests weren’t going to be used to discipline anyone, why bother.
How dumb could he be? Doesn’t anyone read the papers or follow the media? If it is possible to connect names and numbers, they will be connected. You could have one list on Mars and the other list on the third moon of Saturn, and somebody will still find them and put them together, especially if it might provide a chance to humiliate someone rich and famous.
In this case, the connection apparently was made by federal prosecutors who subpoenaed the test results as part of the investigations into steroids and baseball. And once the lists were joined, it was only a matter of time before some nitwit who loves bringing down the mighty leaked the big name to reporters, because, you know, it’s A-Rod, and he deserves it.
The trouble is A-Rod doesn’t deserve it. Nobody does.
But baseball and its union have mishandled the steroids issue at every turn. Both started by ignoring that there might even be a problem. The players’ association fought testing or penalties at every turn. Bud Selig was delighted at all the fans and money that came into the game because players were hitting heroic numbers of home runs. And the media, with rare exceptions, raised few questions until the truth came out. And then the reaction was shock and outrage.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Greatest Performances by a Backup


Greatest Performances by a Backup

As if Boston fans didn't have enough to worry about, what with the Red Sox about to head back to the postseason and the Celtics prepping to defend their NBA title. But now Tom Brady is injured, and New England turns its lonely eyes to one Matt Cassel (no relation to Celts PG Sam Cassell). Perhaps Cassel can turn in a performance for the ages, and join the greatest performances by a backup in sports history...

1. Lou Gehrig: In 1925, Yankees first baseman Wally Pipp went down with a headache, and Gehrig filled in that day...then went on to play in every game for the next 14 years.

2. Tom Brady: During the 2001 season, after Patriots starter Drew Bledsoe was injured with internal bleeding, Brady stepped in, finished the season 11-3, and led the Pats to a Superbowl victory.

3. Robert Horry: Since the 1999-2000 NBA season, the most games Robert Horry has started in a season is 26, but he still always seems to come up big in crunch time.

4. Frank Reich: Most people forget that when the Bills came back from a 35-3 deficit to beat the Oilers, it was Reich, not Jim Kelly, who led the way.

5. Magic Johnson: OK, so Magic was really a starter (at point guard), but with the 1980 NBA Finals on the line, he filled in for an injured Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and posted 42 points, 15 boards and 7 steals and led the Lakers to the NBA title.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Homerun Derbies of the Past!!!








1985 The first derby champion, Dave Parker, hit 6 homers to beat future hall of famers Jim Rice, Eddie Murray, Ripken Jr., and Ryan Sandberg in the Metrodome.
1993 Ken Griffey Jr. hits one off of the warehouse across the street from Camden Yards.
1996 Barry Bonds took his only derby crown in Veterans Stadium in Philly. Long before steroids.
1998 Griffey Jr. became the only 2 time winner at Coors Field.
2000 Sammy Sosa hit a record 26 homers at Turner Field.
2005 Bobby Abreu hit a record 24 homeruns in the 1st round at Detroit's Camerica Park. He ended up with a record 41 total, but only hit 6 homers the rest of the season.
2007 Everyone came out in their kayaks in San Francisco, but went home with nothing because their were no splash-downs.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Where are they now???? Anna Kournikova and Jim Abbott




Good article from http://cnnsi.com


Where Are They Now? Anna Kournikova and Jim Abbott

Now 27, Anna Kournikova is all grown up Story Highlights

Ten years later, Anna Kournikova has matured in attitude and in style
She's content with the phenomenon she was and the woman she's become
Kournikova now lives in Miami Beach and plays tennis a few times a week. Anna Kournikova's looks haven't changed much, but her outlook definitely has.
It's 1998 and I'm trying to interview Anna Kournikova. It's a bit like attempting to secure an audience with a world leader, which, Kournikova's handlers would have you believe, she is. Billed as "the most downloaded female on the planet," Kournikova is flanked by a battalion of handlers, agents, managers and other assorted obstructionists.
There are months of delays and unreturned calls. When favored with the courtesy of a response, the communication is annoying in the extreme. Can you send your questions in advance? Can you embed references to the products of Anna's various sponsors in whatever you write? That would really help speed the process! Finally, after more than a year, I am granted a 10-minute session at a hotel in New Jersey where Kournikova is being paid a prince(cess)ly fee to play in a weekend tennis exhibition. Monitored by yet another handler, Kournikova spends the excruciating session chomping on pink gum, staring at her nails, and performing a nimble feat of dialogue by giving yes/no answers to questions that begin with the word "how."
It's 2008 and I'm trying to interview Anna Kournikova. Half an hour before the appointed meeting time, my cellphone chirps. Chastened by experience, I steel myself for a call apologizing for a last-minute change of plans. But, no, it's Anna -- on an unblocked number -- confirming that she's running on schedule and if I'm having trouble finding a parking space at the Starbucks where we're scheduled to meet, I can always park at the adjacent Whole Foods. She arrives alone, pulling up in a tasteful but hardly ostentatious ride. She makes eye contact. She chews no gum. Ninety minutes into what is more a conversation than an interview, she is still going strong. No, I'm forced to admit, I have not read the book Eat, Pray, Love. "You really should," she says. "It's spiritual, but well-written at the same time."
She's 27 now, and while she pretty much looks the same as remembered, Anna Kournikova bears only the vaguest resemblance to the one-woman international conglomerate that damn near hijacked women's tennis a decade ago. While she's unwilling to concede that she's retired, she hasn't played a WTA Tour match in more than five years. The regal prom queen who once memorably remarked to a suitor, "You can't afford me," is now recommending literature. The tennis mercenary who allegedly made $50 million in off-court income before the age of 18 is now an ambassador for the Boys & Girls Clubs of America -- which sounds like so much p.r. until you learn that in April she went to gritty Tijuana, Mexico, to help open a youth facility.
When it's pointed out how little the Kournikova of today conforms to the image she created years ago, she nods her head so forcefully her Gucci sunglasses nearly fly off her face. "Of course, I'm a different person! People say, 'I can't believe how much you've changed!' What did they expect? People grow, evolve. It would be sad if I didn't change!"
Kournikova is now a RIPO -- Russian in Passport Only. She holds a green card and lives full time in Miami Beach, the port she entered in 1992, when she was a 10-year-old prodigy armed with talent and attitude in equal measure. "When Anna won a point, it wasn't an achievement," recalls Nick Bollettieri, her first American coach. "That was how it was supposed to go. I mean, she was Anna Kournikova." At age 14 she won the Orange Bowl, the top international junior event. At 17, in her breakthrough season of '98, she scored victories over Lindsay Davenport, Martina Hingis and Steffi Graf, advanced to the fourth round of the U.S. and French Opens, and cracked the Top 20 for the first time. With that, Anna Inc. was open for business.
Tennis gave me my life," she says. Does she wish she'd dialed back the hype machine? "It's hard. We did the best we could. But there was no blueprint."
The Kournikova phenomenon was a classic case of harmonic convergence. Women's sports -- tennis in particular -- were growing in popularity, eyed as a promising frontier by sports marketers. The Internet enabled fans from Minsk to Minneapolis to access Kournikova in a way they never could, say, Chris Evert. As the global economy kicked into high gear, you could scarcely find a more ideal exponent for it than an exotic Russian who spoke flawless English and performed all over the world.
Kournikova embraced it all. The daughter of communism (she was born in Moscow in 1981) took commercialism to new extremes. She endorsed products from watches to brokerage firms to sports bras, virtually every campaign built around her looks rather than her athletic prowess. When she wasn't pushing products, she was striking come-hither poses for magazines. (Full disclosure: In 2000, Kournikova, then 18, graced the cover of a certain weekly sports magazine, wearing little besides a peach shirt and a Mona Lisa smile.) The pundits could debate whether this was a feminist setback or a feminist triumph -- "What is she supposed to say, 'No, I don't want your money?' That's like winning the lottery and then saying, 'No, I don't really deserve it,' " no less than Martina Navratilova once said of Kournikova. Meanwhile, Kournikova was making bundles of cash for her sponsors, her tour, her agents and, not least, herself. Nathalie Tauziat, a higher-ranked but less publicized WTA player at the time, called Kournikova, "a blonde windfall."
But Kournikova's cult of personality exacted a price on her tennis. While the contagion known as Annamania raged and hormonally charged boys showed up en masse at women's tennis matches for the first time, an inconvenient truth persisted: Kournikova, for all her appeal, had never won a tournament. Pitted against the hype, her ability had little chance. Distraction was her destruction.
In the retelling, Kournikova was the tennis equivalent of the Fridge, a unique physical specimen rather than a creditable athlete. In truth -- and this is what gives the story a slightly tragic ring -- Kournikova was abundantly gifted. She played whimsical, well-rounded tennis and excelled at the net, an area of the court most contemporary players avoid as if it were quicksand. She reached as high as eighth in the singles rankings and in 1999 was the world's top doubles player. But the weight of never having won a title ultimately crushed her. "I put pressure on myself, especially as I got older," she says. "At 16, 17 you have no fear. You don't think or analyze. You just play on automatic. You can get smarter as you get older, but in sports you can be too smart, you know?"
Her fragile psyche was compounded by a fragile body. Foot, back and ankle injuries forestalled her career. By the spring of 2003 she was playing low-level challenger events in an attempt to revive her game. That May she withdrew from a match against a 16-year-old arriviste named Maria Sharapova. The following week Kournikova played in Charlottesville, Va., in front of a crowd consisting mostly of Virginia frat boys. She lost to a Brazilian ranked outside the top 300 and hasn't played a sanctioned match since.
Her impact unquestionably went beyond commerce and Internet photo galleries. Following the trail blazed at least in part by Kournikova, there are five players in the WTA's Top 10 from Russia or the former Soviet Union. "Anna," says fourth-ranked Svetlana Kuznetsova, "showed there was possibility through tennis." As playing careers go, however, Kournikova's is a case of sizzle beating steak, in straight sets.
In assessing her record, Kournikova speaks with such candor and detachment that it's almost as if she's describing another person. "In a perfect world, would I have won a tournament? Yes. But I wasn't able to string those matches together. Sometimes I got unlucky, and sometimes I just lost." Regrets? "Not a thing. Except to be a little stronger physically. Come on, regrets? I grew up a little girl in the Soviet Union playing at a small sports club. Tennis gave me my life." Does she wish she'd dialed back the hype machine a bit? "It's hard. We did the best we could. But there was no blueprint." And whatever you do, don't lavish her with a shred of sympathy. "Hey, I took the money. It's simple. If you don't want the attention, don't take the money."
Tennis has come to rival boxing in the frequency of comebacks, so don't be surprised if Kournikova joins the swelling ranks of the "unretired." She works out daily and this spring clocked seven-minute miles running in a charity triathlon in Miami. Though her hands are noticeably free of calluses, she plays tennis a few times a week, sometimes on the public courts not far from her waterfront home. This summer she'll compete for the St. Louis Aces in the World TeamTennis league. "Honestly, who knows?" she says. "I'm young enough to still play. But physically could I take it?"
Meanwhile, she spends her days living what she admits is a charmed existence. Her parents, Alla and Sergei, divorced in 2004, but Alla moved to Palm Beach, remarried and has a three-year-old son, whose half sister is all too happy to babysit. "I get my kid fix," she says. "Then I say, 'Here ya go, Mom. See ya.' " Kournikova is a spokesperson for K-Swiss. She reads. When the urge strikes, she hits the South Beach clubs. And there are those Boys & Girls Club fund-raisers. "Don't get the wrong idea," she says. "I basically get dressed up and beg people for money."
Testament to the durability of fame, she still has run-ins with the paparazzi. She claims it's particularly bad when she goes out with her longtime boyfriend, singer Enrique Iglesias. "Girls look at him. Guys look at me," she says. "It goes with the job, but it gets annoying when you feel violated. Just take the picture and be done." She can still watch celebrity shows and learn about herself. For the record: "I'm not married, not pregnant, didn't have a boob job, no Botox. What else?"
If it sounds as though she's figured life out, well, she hasn't. "Here's one thing I don't get," she says. "Why are people afraid of getting older? You feel wiser. You feel more mature. You feel like you know yourself better. You would trade that for softer skin? Not me!"


Jim Abbott
He pitched the U.S. to Olympic gold two decades ago, then spent 10 seasons in the majors. Even now, he's an inspiration to athletes trying to overcome their disabilities

THE LETTERS come from Saratoga, Calif., from Fairfax, Va., from Monmouth Beach, N.J., written by determined mothers, desperate fathers and sometimes the children themselves. The content can be remarkably similar. A boy is born without the use of one hand. A doctor suggests that he try soccer, but the boy is interested only in baseball.
And before anyone can change his mind, he finds out that somebody played major league baseball despite having one hand, accomplishing more in the majors than most of his peers did with two. The boy is introduced to the legend of Jim Abbott.
Twelve-year-old Michael Branca learned the legend from his mother, Robin, who had heard about Abbott on the car radio during the 1988 Olympics. Ten-year-old Billy Inserra learned it from a children's book about Abbott, Overcoming the Odds, which Billy chewed on as a baby. And eight-year-old Blaise Venancio learned it on the Internet, watching video of Abbott artfully transferring his glove from his left hand, which is fully developed, to his right arm, which ends in a fleshy nubbin. Michael, Billy and Blaise are all Little Leaguers who practice the Abbott Switch, in which Abbott would catch the ball with the glove on his left hand, then cradle the glove in his right arm while pulling out his left hand and letting the ball fall into it.
Of course, none of them were alive 20 years ago, when Abbott went the distance for Team USA to win the gold medal game at the Seoul Olympics. None of them were alive 15 years ago, when he threw a no-hitter for the New York Yankees. And none of them were watching nine years ago, when he tossed his last pitch, for the Milwaukee Brewers. Abbott wonders why, now that he's 40 and long retired from baseball, boys and girls keep writing him letters. Perhaps it's because they know he writes back.
Officially, Abbott is a motivational speaker, hired by corporations such as Prudential, Exxon and Wells Fargo to tell his story. Unofficially, he is the repository for everybody else's story. Abbott receives approximately 20 e-mails or letters a month, all of them heart-wrenching, many of them about children who are missing a hand, or part of a hand, or feeling in a hand. He responds to each one personally.
"To Blaise," reads the note to Blaise Venancio. "I just wanted to wish you the very best of luck with baseball this year. Hopefully you are having a great time playing. I know it is sometimes hard to do things a little differently from other kids. But believe me, if you stick with it, you can be just as good. Always believe. Anything is possible."
Blaise, from Monmouth Beach, N.J., is a natural lefthander who was born with Poland's Syndrome, which cost him the use of his right hand. When he started playing baseball, he wanted to wear a glove on his right hand, like all the other southpaws. His father, Matt, tried five different mitts, bathing them in oil to soften the leather, but Blaise couldn't close any of them. Finally in March, Matt showed Blaise the video of another lefty with a similar problem. Blaise decided then to copy the man in the video.
In May, wearing his glove on his left hand, Blaise ran in from centerfield to cover second base, making a backhanded pick-up of an in-between-hop throw. When asked how he did it, Blaise said, "Jim Abbott. He's my friend."
ABBOTT LIVES on a cul-de-sac in Corona del Mar, Calif., within walking distance of the beach. He spends his summers in Northern Michigan, at a house in the woods on a lake. He and his wife, Dana, have two physically gifted daughters, 11-year-old Madeleine and eight-year-old Ella, who pitch for their youth softball teams. Abbott also has hundreds, if not thousands, of other, physically challenged kids.
Abbott started meeting them shortly after he joined the California Angels in 1989, after an All-America career at Michigan. Sitting in the clubhouse, he would feel a tap on his shoulder, from a coach or a clubby. He knew what the tap meant: There was an aspiring baseball player outside who wanted to meet him. "They would always have their gloves with them," Abbott says. "I'd ask them to show me how they switched their glove, and they would do it real fast. And then I'd show them how I did it. And we'd do it together."
It's not just kids who draw strength from Abbott's story. On May 29, Abbott delivered a speech at the Ritz-Carlton on Lake Las Vegas for a corporation called Investors Capital. After Abbott's talk ended with a standing ovation, he walked into the lobby and was greeted by 36-year-old Adam Schenk. Schenk developed his first brain tumor when he was three. During surgery on a second tumor, when he was 30, Schenk had a stroke, resulting in massive nerve damage to the right side of his body, including his right hand. "When I was in the hospital, Jim is the one who inspired me to eat again and walk again and dress myself again," Schenk says.
Schenk and Abbott sat in the lobby of the Ritz for more than an hour, two guys talking baseball. Schenk recited all of Abbott's big league statistics—an 87--108 record, 888 career strikeouts and a 4.25 earned run average. "You know," Schenk told him, "it wasn't a very good record." Abbott nodded knowingly.
After he retired in 1999 Abbott got a call from Lilly Walters, author of One-Hand Typing and Keyboarding Manual. Walters, who lost part of her left hand in an accident when she was 10, wanted a testimonial for her book. But she also represented public speakers and asked if he was interested in a gig. Abbott was an unlikely choice, devoid of bluster and ego, a guy who kept his gold medal hidden at the bottom of a dresser drawer. Besides, even speaking at full volume Abbott often sounds as if he is whispering. But he enjoys connecting with an audience and feels that his story can make a positive impact on people's lives.
Still, "I don't want to talk about my playing days forever," he says. "You can't live in the past. You have to find the next phase, the next passion. Tell me: Where do I go from here?"
The answer lies in all those letters. They come from 13-year-olds like Andrew Christopoulos, who has a rare blood disease called Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis that required weekly chemotherapy treatments for four months. Abbott's letter to Andrew read in part, "I've always believed that tough challenges make even tougher people. Andrew, you will always be up to any challenge. Always believe that."
Abbott does not like to be portrayed as an ambassador, but that will be his next job description. Neil Romano, the head of the U.S. Department of Labor's Office of Disability Employment Policy, has tabbed Abbott to be the office's spokesperson. "Jim Abbott exemplifies," Romano says, "that people with disabilities have an awful lot to give."
Romano knows policy, but Abbott knows people. He knows so many, in fact, that it is impossible for him to remember all their names and faces. So when he thinks of them all, he often thinks of just one.
"His name is Joe Rogers," Abbott says. "He wrote me a letter once. He is a hockey player from Michigan, a goalie, and he uses his hand for his glove. He's going to Notre Dame [on a partial scholarship]. He's terrific, just the nicest kid in the world. I wish I could know every single one of them as well as I know him. I ask myself all the time if I'm doing enough. I wish I could do a lot more."