Once again, Huston Street’s health a concern
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/17/2010 @ 10:58 am)
While he proved to be a nice surprise in 2009 by staying relatively healthy on his way to racking up 35 saves, a 3.06 ERA and a 0.91 WHIP, Rockies’ closer Huston Street is once again an injury concern for fantasy owners.
The Denver Post reports that Street felt tightness in his shoulder while recently playing catch and has been shut down indefinitely. There’s now a good chance that he will start the 2010 season on the disabled list, pending the results of a MRI. With Rafael Betancourt also sidelined due to a shoulder injury, Colorado may have to turn to Manny Corpas to close games to start of the season.
How will Street’s injury affect your draft? Well, hopefully you weren’t overvaluing him on draft day solely based on his ’09 production. He was a top 10 closer before the injury, but now you might want to avoid him altogether on draft day. And with his early struggles last year, you might want to avoid Corpas until late in your draft as well.
Given his history and current injury issues, there are plenty of other closers that will be more reliable and offer more upside than Street will. That list includes the Giants’ Brian Wilson, the Cubs’ Carlos Marmol, the A’s Andrew Bailey and the Mariners’ David Aardsma. Any one of those relievers would offer you more value than Street in your draft, with less risk.
For The Scores Report’s official 2010 fantasy rankings of relievers, click here.
Photo from fOTOGLIF
Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB
Tags: 2010 Fantasy Baseball Preview, 2010 fantasy baseball rankings, 2010 fantasy baseball rankings relievers, Colorado Rockies, Huston Street, Huston Street DL, Huston Street fantasy status, Huston Street injury, Huston Street Rockies, Manny Corpas, Rafael Bentacourt
2010 Fantasy Baseball Preview: Relief Pitchers
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/12/2010 @ 1:35 pm)
All 2010 Fantasy Articles | 2010 Position Rankings
When it comes to drafting relief pitchers, keep in mind that the only thing you care about is saves. Sure, drafting a closer like Mariano Rivera, Jonathan Papelbon or Jonathan Broxton will also net you value in other categories such as ERA and/or WHIP, but if saves are your main objective than why overpay?
Chances are, you’ll have the opportunity to draft a starter or decent bat (at least one that will contribute to your team on a regular basis) in the same rounds that Rivera, Papelbon and Broxton are selected in. If you’re head over heels for those guys and want a sure thing, then don’t let us stop you from drafting them. But in the end, we think you’ll get more value in passing on those top closers and targeting the guys that we have listed below. Just remember to nab another pitcher that will get you saves later in your draft or else you will regret not taking Rivera/Papelbon/Broxton when you had the chance.
Heath Bell, Padres
Bell pitches for a team that will be in a lot of close games and that plays in a spacious park. What’s not to like? The Padres also don’t have a quality set-up man to pitch in front of Bell, so owners can draft him in confidence knowing that San Diego will have to use him in later innings if they want wins.
Joakim Soria, Royals
Be careful with Soria, because he’s being overvalued on draft day. He’s a great closer, but he battled shoulder issues last season and he plays on a team that won’t offer him a ton of save opportunities. Draft him with confidence, but don’t reach for him.
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Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB
Tags: 2010 Fantasy Baseball, 2010 Fantasy Baseball Preview, 2010 fantasy baseball rankings, 2010 fantasy baseball rankings closers, 2010 fantasy baseball rankings relief pitchers, 2010 Fantasy Position Rankings, Brian Wilson, Carlos Marmol, Fantasy Baseball Preview, Heath Bell, Huston Street, Joakim Soria, Jonathan Broxton, Jonathan Papelbon, Mariano Rivera
FBB Notes: Liriano to start opener, Street named closer, Wilson hurt
Posted by Anthony Stalter (04/02/2009 @ 11:22 am)

- The Twins placed RHP Scott Baker on the 15-day DL with right shoulder stiffness, which means Francisco Liriano will start for Minnesota on Opening Day. (Rotoworld.com)
- It appears that Huston Street has officially beat out Manny Corpas for the right to be named the Rockies’ Opening Day closer. (Denver Post)
- Giants’ closer Brian Wilson (who saved 41 games last season and made the All-Star Game) hasn’t pitched in eight days because of an infected middle finger and could miss Opening Day. San Fran would likely choose either Jeremy Affeldt or Bob Howry to close in Wilson isn’t ready by next Tuesday. (San Francisco Chronicle)
- Cardinals’ third basemen Troy Glaus might not return before the All-Star Break as he continues to rehab following shoulder surgery. (St. Louis Dispatch)
- The Reds are showing interest in outfielder Gary Sheffield, who was released by the Tigers last week. (Reds.mlb.com)
- Fernando Rodney has been named the Tigers’ closer for Opening Day, although manager Jim Leyland indicated that Brandon Lyon could still get the opportunity to close games early on. (Detroit Free Press)
Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB
Tags: Bob Howry, Brian Wilson Giants closer, Brian Wilson Giants hurt, Cincinnati Reds, Detroit Tigers, Fantasy baseball news, Fantasy Baseball rumors, Fernando Rodney closer, Francisco Liriano, Gary Sheffield, Gary Sheffield Reds, Huston Street, Jeremy Affeldt, Manny Corpas, Minnesota Twins, Rockies name Huston Street closer, San Francisco Giants, Scott Baker, Troy Glaus, Troy Glaus injury, Twins Opening Day starter
Hot Stove League: Mets Appear to Covet Everyone
Posted by Mike Farley (11/29/2008 @ 1:59 pm)
The New York Mets covet _________. Those words have been uttered in every Hot Stove rumor out there, because they are more than just rumors. The Mets, who had a second straight free fall from first place in 2008, are apparently looking to fix more than their horrendous bullpen as they move into Citi Field in 2009. In no particular order, here are the players GM Omar Minaya has been talking to or about: Manny Ramirez, Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez, Huston Street, Kerry Wood, Brian Fuentes, Orlando Hudson, Jon Garland, Freddy Garcia (a reported shoulder injury may stall that one), Raul Ibanez, Kevin Millwood, Jermaine Dye, Rafael Furcal, Juan Cruz, Derek Lowe, Edwin Jackson, Juan Rivera and Javier Vazquez. The only one right now that appears close to reality is Furcal, as reports have filtered in that the Mets are offering a nice incentive-based deal. And Wood, who was not offered a contract by Arizona as expected, is at the bottom of the Mets’ wish list due to his injury history. Meanwhile, the Mets also do not think they can pay what Oliver Perez’ agent is asking, and there is a possibility the animated lefty could be headed to division rival Atlanta.
Jake Peavy’s on-again, off-again relationship with the Hot Stove League has continued, but now there is talk that the Cubs might make a move, along with a third team. That’s because the Cubs do not have the pitching prospect that Padres’ GM Kevin Towers is asking for.
Jason Varitek is not likely to accept salary arbitration by the Red Sox and could be headed somewhere else, possibly Detroit. Meanwhile, every team under the sun has been offering mediocre catchers to the Sox.
Andy Pettitte, who was rumored to be talking to former manager Joe Torre about pitching for the Dodgers, is talking now like he wants to stay in New York and play in the Yankees’ new stadium. Speaking of the Dodgers, they are also talking to free agents Trevor Hoffman and Randy Johnson, both on the far side of 40 years old, but both still effective.
While Aaron Heilman was as much of a disaster as a pitcher can be in New York, why is it that both the Rays and Rockies are looking to trade for him? The guy has good movement on his pitches, but proved last season that he can’t get anyone out, especially with a game on the line.
With rumors flying around (and let’s face it, they are true) that Lebron James will be traded to the Knicks or leave Cleveland as a free agent in a couple of years, there has been talk that James’ buddy CC Sabathia may take the Yanks’ offer a bit more seriously if that all happens. Hmmmm.
Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB, Rumors & Gossip
Tags: Aaron Heilman, Andy Pettitte, Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Boston Red Sox, Brian Fuentes, CC Sabathia, Chicago Cubs, Citi Field, Cleveland Cavaliers, Colorado Rockies, Derek Lowe, Detroit Tigers, Edwin Jackson, Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez, Freddy Garcia Raul Ibanez, Hot Stove League, Huston Street, Jake Peavy, Jason Varitek, Javier Vazquez, Jermaine Dye, Joe Torre, Jon Garland, Juan Cruz, Juan Rivera, Kerry Wood, Kevin Millwood, Kevin Towers, LeBron James, Los Angeles Dodgers, Major League Baseball, Manny Ramirez, MLB, New York Knicks, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Oliver Perez, Omar Minaya, Orlando Hudson, Rafael Furcal, Randy Johnson, rumors, San Diego Padres, Tampa Bay Rays, Trevor Hoffman, Yankee Stadium
No big signings, but a few rumbles of thunder
Posted by Mike Farley (11/22/2008 @ 1:10 pm)
It’s been over a week since the period of free agency officially began, and yet we have no big signings just yet. That doesn’t mean there haven’t been talks, or even money offered. But it does mean that certain players and their agents just aren’t ready to make hasty decisions without weighing multiple options, and perhaps driving prices up into the stratosphere.
Brewers’ GM Doug Melvin was miffed that the Yankees made the kind of offer they knew the Brewers couldn’t match–$130 or $140 million over six years, where the Brewers were hoping for more in the $100 million range. The Dodgers reportedly are getting set to offer CC between $110 to $120 million, plus the comforts of living on the west coast and getting the chance to swing a bat every five days. The Dodgers are also interested in trading for Toronto’s Roy Halladay, who suddenly is being mentioned in trade rumors. If the Dodgers are not able to sign CC or trade for Halladay, word is they will put their resources into re-signing one Manny Ramirez. Oh, and the Giants are also talking about making CC an offer. Imagine CC and NL MVP Tim Lincecum at the top of the rotation, something that could shift the balance of power in the NL West.
There is likely to be a bidding war between the Red Sox, Jays, Yankees, Orioles, Braves and Phillies for righty AJ Burnett, the most coveted pitcher in the free agent pool not named CC.
If you saw the Mets’ bullpen blow about a quarter of their losses last season (okay, maybe more), you know that GM Omar Minaya has made the pen a priority in the off-season. So not only are the Mets looking to sign a free agent stud like Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez or Brian Fuentes, they are also looking to trade for Seattle’s JJ Putz or newly acquired Rockies’ pitcher Huston Street. The terribly ineffective Aaron Heilman is being dangled as trade bait, but for the names they’re looking at, the Mets would probably have to offer up a lot more than that.
Talks seem to keep breaking down about the Padres trading Jake Peavy…first with the Braves, then with the Cubs (after they re-signed Ryan Dempster)….and now the Yankees are being mentioned. Hmmm.
And Mark Teixeira is being mentioned in the same breath as the words “Washington Nationals.” Raise your hand if you saw that coming…..
Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB, Rumors & Gossip
Tags: A.J. Burnett, Aaron Heilman, Atlanta Braves, Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, Brian Fuentes, CC Sabathia, Chicago Cubs, Colorado Rockies, Doug Melvin, Francisco Rodriguez, free agency, free agent signings, Hot Stove League, Huston Street, Jake Peavy, K-Rod, Los Angeles Dodgers, Major League Baseball, Manny Ramirez, Mark Teixeira, Milwaukee Brewers, MLB, MLB salaries, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies, Roy Halladay, Ryan Dempster, San Diego Padres, San Francisco Giants, Toronto Blue Jays, Washington Nationals
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