Could Greinke be an option for Yankees if they can’t land Lee?
Posted by Anthony Stalter (12/01/2010 @ 11:00 am)
The bidding war between the Yankees and Rangers over Cliff Lee is about to begin. According to the New York Post, the Rangers are prepared to make an official five-year offer to Lee, but the Yankees are ready to go as high as $23 million annually to secure the lefty’s services.
But for a moment, let’s assume that Lee wants to return to the Rangers. Let’s assume that the millions of dollars that the Rangers are offering are more than enough to by-pass the trillions of dollars that the Yankees are willing to fork over.
What is the Yankees’ fallback plan?
The postseason proved last year that the Bombers need pitching. Who knows what kind of production they’ll get from A.J. Burnett next year and it appears as though Andy Pettitte is set to retire. CC Sabathia and Phil Hughes aren’t going to cut it by themselves.
So what about Zack Greinke? The Royals seem ready to trade the righty in order to restock their farm system and the 27-year-old won the Cy Young two years ago. Up until recently he wasn’t willing to waive his no-trade clause to play for a big-market team (which includes the Yankees, obviously). He’s had anxiety problems in the past and we’ve seen the Big Apple chew up and spit out pitchers like Javier Vazquez and Jeff Weaver before.
But a source told Jeff Passan of Yahoo! Sports that Greinke is now open to moving to a big-market club. That doesn’t necessarily mean he’s ready to take on New York, but if the Yankees miss out on Lee you can bet they’ll at least pick up the phone and see what it would take to land the right hander. He’s coming off a bad year but he has a 3.82 career ERA and a 1.26 WHIP, not to mention he’s only 27. (Compared to Lee, who is 32.)
The winter meetings get kicked off next week, so it’ll be interesting to see how the Cliff Lee situation plays out. It’ll be even more interesting to see what the Yankees do if Lee decides to return to Texas.
Posted in: MLB
Tags: Cliff Lee, Cliff Lee contract, Cliff Lee rumors, Cliff Lee Yankees, Headlines, Kansas City Royals, New York Yankees, Texas Rangers, Zach Greinke, Zack Greinke trade, Zack Greinke Yankees
2010 MLB Preview: AL Central
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/23/2010 @ 4:00 pm)
In order to help get you ready for the MLB season, we’re doing division-by-division rankings with quick overviews on how each club could fair in 2010. Next to each team, you’ll also find a corresponding number written in parenthesis, which indicates where we believe that club falls in a league-wide power ranking. Be sure to check back throughout the next two weeks leading up to the season, as we will be updating our content daily. Enjoy.
All 2010 MLB Preview Content | AL East Preview | AL Central Preview | AL West Preview | NL East | NL Central | NL West
Next up is the AL Central.
1. Chicago White Sox (9)
Some folks will think that this is too high for the White Sox – that they should be behind the Twins and out of the top 10 in terms of the overall power rankings. Some folks will say that Jake Peavy won’t be healthy all season and that the Chi Sox will once again falter as they try to live station to station on offense. Well, I say the folks that disagree with my opinion are friggin idiots. Harsh? Yeah, but it also needed to be said. I realize that I’m taking a risk by moving the Sox to the head of the AL Central, but really, it’s hard to argue that this division isn’t a crapshoot anyway. Every team has question marks heading into the season but at the end of the day, pitching makes or breaks a team. I realize Peavy missed all of last year due to injury, but the Sox were second in the AL in pitching last season with a 4.14 ERA without him. If he stays healthy, Peavy will only add to Chicago’s solid rotation (which also features Mark Buehrle, John Danks, Gavin Floyd and Freddy Garcia) and the addition of J.J. Putz should bolster the bullpen as well. Outside of injuries, the only thing that could potentially hold Chicago back this year is its offense. What do you mean that’s kind of a big deal? I’m banking that youngster Gordon Beckham develops quickly and that Carlos Quentin and Alex Rios return to form. I also think the Sox will get key contributions from the additions GM Kenny Williams made this offseason in Andruw Jones, Juan Pierre and Mark Teahen. I’m not expecting the Sox to magically transform into the Yankees of the AL Central, but I do believe they have enough offense to get by while their pitching carries them to a playoff berth.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: 2010 AL Central Predictions, 2010 MLB AL Central Preview, 2010 MLB Predictions, 2010 MLB Preview, Alex Gordon, Alex Rios, Andruw Jones, Asdrubal Cabrera, Billy Butler, Carl Pavano, Carlos Quentin, CC Sabathia, Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Indians, Curtis Granderson, Detroit Tigers, Fausto Carmona, Francisco Liriano, Freddy Garcia, Gavin Floyd, Gordon Beckham, Grady Sizemore, Jake Peavy, Jim Thome, Joe Mauer, Joe Nathan, John Danks, Jon Rauch, Juan Pierre, Justin Morneau, Justin Verlander, Kansas City Royals, Kerry Wood, Kevin Slowey, Mark Buehrle, Mark Teahen, Matt LaPorta, Max Scherzer, Miguel Cabrera, Minnesota Twins, Nick Blackburn, Noel Arguelles, Rick Porcello, Scott Baker, Travis Hafner, Zach Greinke
Royals’ Greinke wins 2009 AL Cy Young Award
Posted by Anthony Stalter (11/17/2009 @ 3:54 pm)
According to MLB.com, Kansas City Royals’ ace Zach Greinke was named the American League’s Cy Young Award winner on Tuesday after receiving 25 of 28 first-place votes.
I know Mariners ace Felix Hernandez was just as a good, but Greinke deserved this achievement. He was the most dominant pitcher in the American League, posting a league-best 2.16 ERA and 1.07 WHIP. He also struck out 242 batters and finished the year with six complete games.
Greinke also figured out a way to post a 16-8 record on a bad team that didn’t give him much run support or defensive help. Of course, the same could be said for King Felix, who had even less of an offense backing him up, but don’t forget that Greinke also had six no-decisions in which he allowed two runs or less. Two runs or less! That means had Kansas City scored just three runs in those games, he would have easily cleared the 20-win mark.
I would love to see what the 26-year old could do on a competitor, but Royal fans have suffered enough throughout the years and deserve to watch Greinke pitch every five days.
Photo from fOTOGLIF
Posnanski: Top 100 MLB Players
Posted by Anthony Stalter (07/22/2009 @ 12:24 pm)

Joe Posnanski put together a ranking of who he believes are the top 100 current MLB players at this moment (as in right now – not over the past two years, three years, etc).
Here is his top 10:
1. Albert Pujols, 1B, Cardinals
“Every hitter is human,” says pitcher Zack Greinke (No. 4). “Except Pujols.”
2. Joe Mauer, C, Twins
Could win his third batting title this year … no other American League catcher ever has won even one in history.
3. Hanley Ramirez, SS, Marlins
Advanced stats suggest he’s better defensively than people think. Offensively, he leads the league in hitting and might have another 30-30 season.
4. Zack Greinke, SP, Royals
Throws four plus pitches, all for strikes, leads the league with a 2.08 ERA, and has won 10 games for a team that has scored the fewest runs in the AL.
5. Chase Utley, 2B, Phillies
Crushes the ball, plays outstanding defense and, just as a fun side note, has led the league in hit-by-pitch three years running.
6. Alex Rodriguez, 3B, Yankees
Disastrous first half splattered with injuries, rumors and a low batting average … and the guy STILL has a 145 OPS+, good for seventh in the AL.
7. Tim Lincecum, SP, Giants
The Freak is pitching even better this year (10-2, 2.27 ERA, league-leading 159 K’s) than last year, when he won the Cy Young.
8. Dan Haren, SP, Diamondbacks
League is hitting .187 against him and he has a strikeout-to-walk ratio of 137-18. Baseball hasn’t seen anything like that since the heyday of Pedro.
9. Johan Santana, SP, Mets
He was 2-4 with a 6.19 ERA in six June starts and people screamed that he was done. But Santana is a demon in the second half … and sure enough he has not allowed a run in his last two starts.
10. Roy Halladay, SP, Blue Jays
Not sure where he will be pitching … but he will dominate. A handful of the people in the world can throw 93-mph fastballs that sink. A handful of people can pitch with pinpoint control. One man can do both.
It’s hard to argue Pujols being in the top spot and with how good Mauer has been this season (especially considering how there were huge concerns about his back in spring training) I’m not going to debate Posanski about his second slot either.
But I guess I’m a little confused about his ranking system overall. He says that he’s doing a top 100 of players RIGHT NOW (to use his exact phrasing of the words “RIGHT NOW”), but what does that mean? Over the past two weeks? Over the past couple days? Over the entire course of the season – what?
Because if it’s over the entire course of the season, he’s got A-Rod way too high and I don’t think Johan Santana should be ranked ahead of Roy Halladay either. Also, and I know I might catch some flack for this, but I think Lincecum is the best pitcher in baseball right now. Greinke has been absolutely phenomenal, but Lincecum just recently went 29 innings without giving up an earned run and could easily have 13 or 14 wins if it weren’t for the Giants’ pathetic use for an offense.
But hey, as with any ranking, you can debate every slot 1 through 100 and I like the feature on a whole.
Posted in: MLB
Tags: Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, best mlb players, Chase Utley, Dan Haren, Hanley Ramirez, Roy Halladay, Sports lists, sports rankings, Tim Lincecum, top 100 mlb players, Zach Greinke
Five Deep Sleeper Teams for the ’09 MLB Season
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/26/2009 @ 4:10 pm)

I know this guy (I’ll stop short of calling him a friend but wouldn’t hesitate to pick up the phone if he called) that at the start of all the major sporting seasons will throw out his list of “sleeper teams” to watch out for.
What’s funny about this guy is that he knows if he’s wrong he’ll never be called out because hey, they were just sleeper teams anyways right? But if he’s right, well hell, he’ll look like some kind of sports sleeper team Nostradamus.
This is the same guy that’ll pick a No. 16 seed to beat a No. 1 every year in the March Madness Tournament, so on the rare chance it happens he’ll have the opportunity to say that he called the upset of a lifetime. The funny thing is that he would have been wrong the previous 34 years of predicting 16’s over 1’s, but that would be beside the point.
Anyway, this piece is dedicated to him – the “Sleeper Team Guy.” For fans, there’s nothing like predicting a perennial loser (i.e. the 2008 Tampa Bay Rays) to rise from the ashes and make a postseason run no matter what sport it is. And with Opening Day right around the corner, I think it’s a perfect time to hand out some potential sleeper candidates of my own.
Below are five deep sleepers to make a postseason run this year in baseball. Most pundits assume that none of the five will finish better than third in their respective divisions, which is why I can get away with calling these teams “deep sleepers.” If any of them make the playoffs, I’ll wax poetically about it in my sleeper teams piece next year. If none even sniff a postseason berth, then in honor of “Sleeper Team Guy” don’t expect me to admit I was wrong. Yeah, that’s right – accountability is for losers.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: 2009 MLB Predictions, 2009 MLB Preview, 2009 MLB Sleeper Teams, 2009 MLB Sleepers, Aaron Rowand, Anthony Stalter, Bengie Molina, Brandon McCarthy, Cameron Maybin, Chris Davis, Cincinnati Reds, Coco Crisp, Dan Uggla, Dusty Baker, Edgar Renteria, Edinson Volquez, Edwin Encarnacion, Florida Marlins, Fred Lewis, Gaby Sanchez, Gil Meche, Hank Blalock, Hanley Ramirez, Homer Bailey, Ian Kinsler, Joey Votto, Johnny Cueto, Jorge Cantu, Jose Guillen, Josh Hamilton, Josh Johnson, Kansas City Royals, Kevin Frandsen, Matt Cain, Matt Harrison, Michael Young, Mike Jacobs, Pablo Sandoval, Randy Johnson, Randy Winn, San Francisco Giants, Sleeper Baseball Teams in 2009, Texas Rangers, Tim Lincecum, Travis Ishikawa, Vincente Padilla, Willy Taveras, Zach Greinke
2009 MLB Preview: #25 Kansas City Royals
Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/18/2009 @ 2:49 pm)

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Offseason Movement: The Royals signed free agents 1B Mike Jacobs, 3B Willie Bloomquist and RHP Kyle Farnsworth, while acquiring OF Coco Crisp from the Red Sox in exchange for Ramon Ramirez. The club also signed RHP Kyle Farnsworth, formally of the Tigers.
Top Prospect: Mike Moustakas, INF
Moustakas is a high-A prospect selected with the second overall pick in the 2007 draft. Moustakas played shortstop at the collegiate level, but his arm strength will allow him to move over to third base at the next level. He struggled hitting the ball at the start of last season, but finished with a respectable .272 average in 496 minor league at bats. As long as his hitting continues to improve, he should move through the minors this year and get a shot at the big leagues in 2010.
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Posted in: MLB
Tags: 2009 Kansas City Royals Outlook, 2009 Kansas City Royals Preview, 2009 MLB Predictions, 2009 MLB Preview, 2009 MLB Team Previews, Brian Bannister, Coco Crisp, Gil Meche, Horacio Ramirez, Joakim Soria, Jose Guillen, Kyle Davies, Kyle Farnsworth, Luke Hochevar, Mike Jacobs, MLB Preview 2009, Sidney Ponson, Zach Greinke
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