MLB All-25 and Younger Team
Posted by Anthony Stalter (06/08/2009 @ 4:32 pm)

There’s a different feel to baseball again – a good feeling.
Yeah, I know – there are probably still plenty of players who are cheating. But at least the league is (finally) making somewhat of an effort to clean up its image and for that, we as fans have hope that maybe someday the game will be juice-free again.
Those who have watched their fair share of baseball this season should be reveling in how the game is getting younger again. Instead of teams waiting for dingers in order to score runs, clubs are bunting, stealing and manufacturing scoring opportunities – the way the game is supposed to be played.
After watching how the Rays won last season, more and more teams are building their rosters by developing home grown talent rather than signing big-name free agents (save for the Yankees, of course) and it’s making the game exciting again. An onus has been made on youth and speed and for the first time in quite a while, baseball is once again a young man’s game.
That said, I’ve decided to have a little fun by constructing an entire 25-man baseball roster (I’ve named the team “Team Youthful Exuberance”) by using only players who are 25 years of age and younger. Rules and guidelines for the roster are below so enjoy and as always, feel free to make an argument for any players that I might have missed.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: Adam Jones, Andrew Bailey, Best young MLB pitchers, Best young MLB players, Best young MLB position players, Best young MLB relievers, Best young MLB starters, Brian McCann, Chad Billingsley, Cole Hamels, Daniel Bard, Dustin Pedroia, Evan Longoria, Hanley Ramirez, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jeff Samardzija, Joakim Soria, Joe Mauer, Joel Zumaya, Jonathan Broxton, Jose Reyes, Justin Upton, Miguel Cabrera, MLB All-25 and Younger Team, Nick Markakis, Prince Fielder, Ryan Braun, Ryan Perry, Tim Lincecum, Yovani Gallardo, Zack Greinke
Tigers to trade Miguel Cabrera? Not a chance.
Posted by Anthony Stalter (04/22/2009 @ 11:15 am)

Tigers’ GM Dave Dombrowski immediately shot down rumors that Detroit could trade slugger Miguel Cabrera by the end of the season.
With one of his strongest replies to any question he’s been asked in his current role as the Tigers president and general manager and chief executive officer, Dave Dombrowski on Tuesday called the repeated speculation he’s heard on ESPN that the Tigers could make Miguel Cabrera available for a trade this season “completely absurd.”
“Not only that, but it upsets me,” he said. “We have no intention whatsoever to trade him.”
Dombrowski said he’s heard such speculation more than once on ESPN.
“There’s nothing that can happen this year that would make us think about trading Miguel Cabrera,” he said. “The guy’s only 26 and might be battling for the MVP award. It’s not going to happen. We have an owner (Mike Ilitch) that would never let it happen.”
The Tigers gave up a five-tool prospect in Cameron Maybin as part of the package to acquire Cabrera from Florida, so why would they deal him this season? Like Dombrowski said, Cabrera is 26 years old and an MVP candidate – it’s not going to happen.
MLB Daily Six Pack 4/9
Posted by Anthony Stalter (04/09/2009 @ 10:00 am)

1. The defending champs needed that one…
Staring 0-3 in the face, the Phillies rallied from a 10-3 deficit in the seventh inning to beat the Braves 12-11 on Wednesday. Raul Ibanez homered and drove in three runs as Philly went on to score eight runs in the seventh inning. While 1-2 isn’t the start the defending champs would have liked, maybe now their offense has awaken from their slump and they can use this game as a confidence builder.
2. And I was like, Emilio!
I know, I know – it’s only one sweep of the Nationals (and at home no less). But the Marlins’ 3-0 start (they beat Washington 6-4 on Wednesday) should raise some eyebrows because this team is loaded with bright, young talent. Granted, Emilio Bonifacio isn’t going to hit .571 the rest of the way, but he gives the Fish a strong table setter at the top of the lineup and catcher John Baker has been a nice surprise so far in the two-hole. If the young starting pitching can hold up and five-tool 22-year old outfielder Cameron Maybin can grow up in a hurry, the Mets, Phillies and Braves will definitely have competition this year in NL East.
3. The Tigers might not have a good year, but Miggie will.
For all intents and purposes, it looks like the Tigers are due for another down year, although outside of Justin Verlander, the starting pitching has looked good the past two nights. But one thing that won’t hold Detroit back this year is Miguel Cabrera, who hit two dingers and drove in four runs in the Tigs’ 5-1 victory over the Blue Jays on Wednesday. It’s early, but Cabrera looks like he’ll be a favorite for the AL MVP all season.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: Adam Jones, Atlanta Braves, Boston Red Sox, Brian Roberts, Cameron Maybin, Carlos Pena, CC Sabathia, Cincinnati Reds, Detroit Tigers, Edinsn Volquez, Emilio Bonifacio, Florida Marlins, John Baker, Jon Lester, Justin Verlander, Miguel Cabrera, MLB news, MLB roundup, MLB scores, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Nick Markakis, Philadelphia Phillies, Raul Ibanez, Scott Kazmir, Tampa Bay Rays, Washington Nationals
2009 MLB Preview: #12 Detroit Tigers
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/25/2009 @ 11:00 am)

Click Here to see Previews of all 30 MLB Teams
Offseason Movement: The Tigers didn’t make a ton of offseason moves, but they did add shortstop Adam Everett, catcher Gerald Laird, pitchers Edwin Jackson, Brandon Lyon and Juan Rincon.
Top Prospect: Rick Porcello, RHP
Porcello, who is widely considered one of the best pitching prospects in baseball, was selected with the 27th overall pick in the first round of the 2007 draft. He has a low-to-mid 90s fastball, a slider, changeup and a curve, but it’ll take time for that array of pitches to be mastered. Some believe that the 20-year old is ready now, but there are signs (mostly his K/IP ratio) that another year or two in the minors would do him good. Unless Jeremy Bonderman starts the season on the DL, Porcello will likely start in Double-A this season to gain more experience.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: 2009 Detroit Tigers Outlook, 2009 Detroit Tigers Preview, 2009 MLB Preview, 2009 MLB Projections, 2009 MLB Team Previews, Adam Everett, Armando Galarraga, Brandon Lyon, Carlos Guillen, Curtis Granderson, Dontrelle Willis, Edwin Jackson, Gary Sheffield, Gerald Laird, Jeremy Bonderman, Juan Rincon, Justin Verlander, Magglio Ordonez, Miguel Cabrera, MLB Preview 2009, Nate Robertson, Rick Porcello, Rlacido Polanco
2009 Fantasy Baseball Preview: Third Basemen
Posted by David Medsker (03/03/2009 @ 8:00 pm)

All 2009 Fantasy Articles | 2009 Position Rankings
Here is everything you need to know about the depth at the third base position these days: On CBS Sports’ cheat sheet for the top players at each position, they list 41 starting pitchers, 25 relief pitchers, 67 outfielders, 25 first basemen, 25 second basemen, 25 shortstops, 30 catchers…and 15 third basemen. Fif, teen. But wait, it actually gets worse: of those 15 third basemen, two are full-time first basemen (Kevin Youkilis, Miguel Cabrera) one is a full-time catcher (Russell Martin), and one played nearly 100 games at DH (Aubrey Huff). In other words, just over a third of all the teams in Major League Baseball have a third baseman worth drafting. And they include Ryan Zimmerman and Edwin Encarnacion as two of those 11 players, meaning even that number is padded.
What this means for you, gentle reader, is that assuming Jose Reyes, Hanley Ramirez and Albert Pujols are no longer on the board, you are a stone cold fool if you don’t draft either David Wright or Alex Rodriguez at your earliest opportunity, and you could even be excused for drafting Wright or A-Rod ahead of the other three. (Don’t let this whole ‘steroids pariah’ hoopla scare you; A-Rod’s gonna put up crazy numbers this year.) Almost overnight, third base has become a fantasy wasteland, so you’d be wise to snag a stud third baseman if you can, especially now that Ryan Braun has lost his 3B eligibility and Troy Glaus decided to go under the knife at the 11th hour. But even when the big names are off the board, don’t panic; there are some players that can keep your fantasy team from having a smoking hole in the ground where third base used to be.
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Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB
Tags: 2009 Fantasy Baseball Rankings, 2009 Fantasy Baseball Third Basemen Rankings, Adrian Beltre, Alex Gordon, Alex Rodriguez, Aramis Ramirez, Aubrey Huff, Casey Blake, Chipper Jones, Chone Figgins, Chris Davis, David Wright, Edwin Encarnacion, Evan Longoria, Fantasy Baseball Preview 2009, Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Fantasy Baseball Third Basemen Rankings, Garrett Atkins, Jorge Cantu, Kevin Kouzmanoff, Kevin Youkilis, Mark Reynolds, Miguel Cabrera, Mile Lowell, Ryan Zimmerman, Third Base Fantasy Baseball Rankings
2009 Fantasy Baseball Preview: First Basemen
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/03/2009 @ 7:00 pm)

All 2009 Fantasy Articles | 2009 Position Rankings
If you do a detailed search for rankings of first basemen for your 2009 fantasy league, the only consistent thing you’ll see is: 1. Albert Pujols, STL.
After King Albert, first basemen ranked 2 through 7 is a toss up. Some fantasy pundits believe Detroit’s Miguel Cabrera is the next best 1B after Pujols, while others still feel that Philadelphia’s Ryan Howard deserves the No. 2 spot. One of the Yankees’ big offseasons signings, Mark Teixeira, is also getting some love behind Pujols, while Milwaukee’s Prince Fielder, Minnesota’s Justin Morneau and San Diego’s Adrian Gonzalez are floating anywhere from No. 4 to No. 7.
What’s the deal? After Pujols, how do you value the first basemen that fall 2 through 7? By home run totals? By age? In the case of Fielder, by the size of their waistbands? First and foremost, you can’t go wrong with any of the first basemen in the top 7, if not the top 10. They’ll all give you good to great home run and RBI totals and if you’re lucky, a couple will even hit .300 and produce 100 runs.
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Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB
Tags: 2009 Fantasy Baseball First Basemen Rankings, 2009 Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Adam LaRoche, Adrian Gonzalez, Albert Pujols, Aubrey Huff, Carlos Delgado, Carlos Pena, Casey Kotchman, Chris Davis, Conor Jackson, Derek Lee, Fantasy Baseball First Basemen Rankings, Fantasy Baseball Preview 2009, Fantasy Baseball Rankings, First Basemen Rankings for Fantasy Baseball, James Loney, Joey Votto, Justin Morneau, Kevin Youkilis, Lyle Overbay, Mark Teixeira, Miguel Cabrera, Mike Jacobs, Paul Konerko, Prince Fielder, Ryan Garko, Ryan Howard, Todd Helton
2008 Year-End Sports Review: What We Learned
Posted by Staff (12/27/2008 @ 7:02 am)
At the end of the year, it’s always interesting to look back at all that has happened in the world of sports over the last 12 months. 2008 brought us a host of compelling sports stories, including the culmination of the Patriots’ (unsuccessful) quest for perfection, a Bejing Olympics that featured incredible accomplishments by the likes of Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt and the Redeem Team, and, of course, Brett Favre’s unretirement, which managed to hold the sports news cycle hostage for a solid month or more.
As is our tradition, we’ve once again broken our Year End Sports Review into three sections. The first is “What We Learned,” a list that’s packed with a number of impressive feats. And when there are feats, inevitably there are also failures.
Don’t miss the other two parts: “What We Already Knew” and “What We Think Might Happen.”
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The New England Patriots weren’t so perfect after all. |
After rolling through the 2007 regular season unscathed, the Patriots entered the 2008 Super Bowl as overwhelming favorites to roll over the pesky, but seemingly inferior New York Giants. The Pats were just one win away from staking their claim as the best football team in NFL history. But thanks to a dominating Giants’ defensive line, an improbable catch by David Tyree, and a virtually mistake-free performance by Eli Manning, the unbeatable New England Patriots were beat. It’ll go down as one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history, and considering Tom Brady’s season-ending injury in 2008 cost the Pats a chance for redemption, it seems that many have forgotten how New England stood just one win away from perfection. – Anthony Stalter
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Michael Phelps is part fish. |
Eight gold medals in one Olympiad? No problem. Michael Phelps made the seemingly impossible look (relatively) easy en route to one of the most – if not the most – impressive Olympic performances ever. Phelps had to swim all four strokes, compete in both sprint and endurance races, and deal with the constant media attention and pressure that came along with his quest. Sure, NBC turned up the hype, but what Phelps accomplished is simply incredible. – John Paulsen

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Usain Bolt is part cheetah. |
First, Usain Bolt made Jamaica proud by setting a new world record (9.69) in the 100-meter sprint. Then, he broke the 12 year-old 200-meter world record with a time of 19.30 seconds. He showboated during the first race but cleaned up his act to win the second race in a professional manner. Some even say that Usain Bolt – not Michael Phelps – was the biggest story to come out of the Bejing Olympics. – JP

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The Big 12 has the best quarterbacks in the nation. |
The Big 12 housed some of the best quarterbacks in all of college football in 2008. Texas’s Colt McCoy, Oklahoma’s Sam Bradford, Missouri’s Chase Daniel and Texas Tech’s Graham Harrell were all considered Heisman candidates at least at one point during the season, while McCoy and Bradford are still in the running. Amazingly, Bradford and McCoy aren’t done; both will return in 2008. And although they don’t receive as much attention as the top signal callers in the conference, Kansas’s Todd Reesing and Baylor’s Robert Griffin certainly turned heads this year as well. In fact, the highly versatile Griffin is only a freshman and could make the Bears a very dangerous team for years to come. – AS
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Posted in: College Basketball, College Football, Fantasy Football, General Sports, Golf, Humor, March Madness, MLB, NBA, NBA Finals, NFL, NFL Draft, NHL, Soccer, Super Bowl, Swimming, Television, Tennis, The Olympics, Video, Women
Tags: 2008 Olympics, 2008 Super Bowl, 2008 Year End Sports Review, Aaron McKie, Aaron Rodgers, AL MVP Award, Al Trautwig, Alabama Crimson Tide, Albert Pujols, Alicia Sacramone, Amare Stoutamire, Angela Stafford, Anna Kournikova, Anna Rawson, Arizona Cardinals, Arizona Diamondbacks, Arizona State Sun Devils, Atlanta Falcons, Baylor Bears, Big 12, Big Ten, Bill Belichick, Bjorn Borg, Boston College Eagles, Brady Quinn, Brandon Webb, Brendan Shanahan, Brian Burke, Calgary Flames, CC Sabathia, Charlotte Hornets, Chase Daniel, Chris Bosh, Christie Kerr, Cleveland Browns, Cleveland Indians, Colt McCoy, Curtis Granderson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dallas Stars, David Beckham, Derek Anderson, Detroit Lions, Detroit Pistons, Detroit Tigers, Dustin Pedrioa, Dwayne Wade, Eli Manning, Elisha Cuthbert, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Gary Sheffield, Giants beat Patriots in Super Bowl, Graham Harrell, Green Bay Packers, Illinois fighting Irish, Jacque Jones, Jamacia Usain Bolt, Javaris Crittenton, Kansas Jayhawks, Kevin Love, Kurt Warner, Kwame Brown, LeBron James, Los Angeles Galaxy, Los Angeles Lakers, Matt Millen, Matt Ryan, Memphis Grizzlies, Mercury Morris, Miami Dolphins, Michael Phelps, Michigan Wolverines, Miguel Cabrera, Mike Miller, Milwaukee Brewers, Minnesota Vikings, Missouri Tigers, Natalie Gulbis, New England Patriots, New England Patriots undefeated season, New Jersey Nets, New York Giants, New York Knicks, New York Rangers, New York Yankees, Nick Saban, NL Cy Young Award, NL MVP, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, O.J. Mayo, Oklahoma City Thunder, Oklahoma Sooners, Oscar de La Hoya, Pau Gasol, Paula Creamer, Pete Sampras, Philadelphia Flyers, Philadelphia Phillies, Pudge Rodriguez, Rafeal Nadal, Rich Rodriguez, Rich Suhr, Rick Suhr U.S. Pole Vaulting, Robert Griffin, Roger Federer, Rudi Johnson, Rudy Gay, Ryan Howard, Sam Bradford, San Francisco Giants, Sarah Palin, Sarah Palin curse, Sarah Palin curses the Blues, Sarah Palin curses the Flyers, Sean Avery, Sean Avery sloppy seconds comment, Seattle Supersonics, SEC, Spygate, St. Louis Blues, St. Louis Cardinals, Super Bowl XLII, Tatum Bell, Tatum Bell steals Rudi Johnson's luggage, Texas Longhorns, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Tim Lincecum, Todd Reesing, Tom Brady, Tom Coughlin, Toronto Maple Leafs, Tracy McGrady, Usain Bolt, Wake Forest Demon Deacns, West Virginia Mountaineers, What We Learned: 2008, Wisconsin Badgers
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