Month: July 2008 (Page 7 of 39)

Monday MLB Headliners: BoSox end Yankees’ streak

– The Boston Red Sox avoided a sweep at the hands of their rivals when they beat the New York Yankees 9-2 Sunday night. David Ortiz homered for the Sox and starter Jon Lester picked up his ninth win of the season. With the Tampa Bay Rays’ 6-1 loss to the Kansas City Royals, Boston is now one game out of first in the AL East, while the Yankees sit three games back.

– Mike Jacobs went 3 for 4 with two home runs, five RBI and two runs scored for Florida on Sunday, but the Marlins couldn’t hold on to a 5-0 lead and lost to the Chicago Cubs 9-6 at Wrigley. Derrek Lee (17) and Alfonso Soriano (16) each homered for the Cubs while former Notre Dame wide receiver Jeff Samardzija picked up his first big league save.

– With the Cubs’ victory, the Milwaukee Brewers dropped a game back in the NL Central after losing 11-6 to the Houston Astros. Jeff Suppan dropped to 5-7 on the year in a losing effort, but Ryan Braun did hit his 28th home run of the year. The difference in this game was a Geoff Blum two-run shot in the fifth that gave Houston an 8-4 lead.

– Johan Santana threw a complete game in the New York Mets’ 9-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. Santana gave up just one run on six hits and struck out five to improve to 9-7 on the year. He got help from Fernando Tatis (7), Ramon Castro (6) and David Wright (20), who all homered in the win. Albert Pujols hit his 20th dinger of the year in a losing effort for the Cards.

– The Big Unit picked up his fourth straight victory as the Arizona Diamondbacks swept the San Francisco Giants with a 7-2 win on Sunday. Chad Jackson (12) and Mark Reynolds (21) each homered for Arizona while Johnson gave up no runs in seven innings pitched. Barry Zito continues to be a waste of roster space and cold hard cash in San Fran, yielding six runs on six hits in just five innings of work to drop to 5-13 on the year.

– Oakland A’s starter Brad Ziegler set a MLB record for scoreless innings to start a career. After pitching two innings the A’s 6-5 win over the Texas Rangers on Sunday, Ziegler has not given up a run in 27 innings. Nice job rook.

Cashman: Yankees not after Barry Bonds

While he put on his best tap-dancing shows while answering questions regarding whether or not his club would acquire Barry Bonds, New York Yankees’ GM Brian Cashman essentially said he would not pursue the former Giant.

So when Cashman was asked on Friday if he had talked with Jeff Borris, the agent for Barry Bonds, he
quickly amended his instinctive response.

“I wouldn’t say,” Cashman said, before waiting a moment and answering definitively. “I have not. I don’t want to take this down the wrong path.”

That was as close as Cashman came to saying, unequivocally, that the Yankees would not pursue Bonds, the career home run leader. Bonds is dogged by legal issues but still hopes to play this season.

The Yankees discussed Bonds, among many other topics, at their organizational meeting Thursday in Tampa, Fla..

After signing former Mariners’ first basemen Richie Sexson and acquiring outfielder Xavier Nady from Pittsburgh, it wouldn’t make much sense for the Yankees to toy with Bonds. Still, the fact that Cashman didn’t openly deny that the Yankees would sign Bonds makes you wonder if the GM has something up his sleeve.

Manny Ramirez willing to accept trade

Boston Red Sox GM Theo Epstein recently said that if Manny Ramirez were willing to waive his no-trade clause, the club would be willing to trade the power-hitting outfielder. Well, apparently Manny is willing to waive the clause to play for somebody else.

“If the Red Sox are a better team without Manny Ramirez, they should trade me; I will not object,” said Ramirez in a telephone interview with ESPNdeportes.com on Sunday.

“I don’t have any preferences: I could choose a team that offers me the best conditions or one in the chase for the postseason. I don’t care where I play, I can even play in Iraq if need be. My job is to play baseball,” added Ramirez.

Ramirez, .298, with 16 home runs and 63 RBIs this season, returned to the Red Sox lineup on Saturday to face the New York Yankees after missing the two previous games due to pain in his right knee.

Love the third-person reference. The Red Sox don’t need this. They’re trying to win their third title in five years and are in the thick of a hot AL East race. If Ramirez doesn’t want to play in Boston anymore, then fine. The club should deal him for some high-end future prospects and move on. Yeah it creates a huge hole in the middle of the order, but sometimes distractions outweigh talent in sports.

Bears sign their offense to an extension

Chicago Bears GM Jerry Angelo said he would take care of receiver/ kick returner extraordinaire Devin Hester if he came to camp. And he kept his word.

The deal that Devin Hester showed up Friday to work out was finally hammered out Sunday, with the Bears agreeing to a four-year contract extension with the wide receiver/return man that could be worth as much as $40 million.

The contract, which locks up Hester with the Bears through 2013, includes $15 million in guarantees—the type of reward he was looking for after holding for two days in protest of a scheduled $445,000 salary. If Hester develops into the No. 1 receiver he believes he can be, then he will be able to trigger up to $10 million in escalators in the final year of the deal, according to a league source.

Hester becomes the 10th Bears starter and fifth Pro Bowl player the Bears have signed to a contract extension this off-season. It is believed this new contract will make Hester the highest-paid return man in NFL history.

For a franchise that has been criticized in the recent past for not taking care of their players, the Bears have done a nice job locking up their key players over the last two years. Some may think $15 million in guarantees is a little steep for a returner, but then those people clearly haven’t watch Bears games the past two years. Hester is worth every penny.

Was Brett Favre close to becoming a Buc?

How close was Brett Favre to becoming a Tampa Bay Buccaneer? According to the Tampa Tribune, thisclose.

The Bucs may not be sitting out the Brett Favre trade talks after all.

Though it was believed that the Bucs and Jets had both decided to wait until Favre reported to camp to renew any trade talks with the Packers, we are now hearing of a discussion between the Bucs and Packers that supposedly took place on Saturday. And the end result may be why the Favre saga is suddenly at a standstill.

It is believed that the Bucs and Packers were close to an agreement on compensation but that the agreement fell apart sometime on Saturday.

The sticking point is no doubt the Packers demand for a conditional draft pick that would become a No. 1 based either on Favre’s performance or his new team gaining a berth in the playoffs.

That has always seemed to be a rather hefty asking price and it seems the Bucs have balked at that. It is believed that the Jets are continuing to sit this thing out, and that may be where the Bucs are now.

As I wrote just days ago, Favre to Tampa makes sense. Although as the article points out, even if Favre can get Tampa to the playoffs, giving up a future first round pick seems a bit steep. Especially if Favre turns around and announces his retirement again after the 2008 season.

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