Month: August 2008 (Page 35 of 50)

Red Sox acquire Indians starter Paul Byrd

The pitching-starved Boston Red Sox acquired Cleveland Indians’ starter Paul Byrd in exchange for a player to be named later or cash. Boston’s rotation has been weakened by an injury to Tim Wakefield (15-day DL) and the struggles of youngster Clay Buchholz.

The Red Sox are awfully familiar with Byrd.

Byrd was at Fenway Park for Game 7 of last year’s American League Championship Series on the day the San Francisco Chronicle reported he had used human growth hormone from 2002 to 2005. He then said before the game that he had used HGH for a medical condition but that he never injected the banned drug without a doctor’s prescription.

“I have nothing to hide,” Byrd said about two hours before Game 7, in which Boston clinched the ALCS with its third straight win. “Everything has been done out in the open. I have a reputation. I do not want the fans of Cleveland or honest, caring people to think that I cheated.

“Because I didn’t.”

Byrd is 7-10 with a 4.53 ERA this season, but he’s been outstanding since the All-Star Break, going 4-0 with a 1.24 ERA. Byrd will be a free agent at the end of the season, so the Tribe did a nice job getting something in return for the 37-year old vet.

Sixers/Iguodala reportedly agree to six-years, $80 million

I estimated that Andre Iguodala’s value was $12-$13 million per season. Sources are saying that the Philadelphia 76ers locked Iggy up to a deal worth $13.3 million per season.

The athletic and exciting 6-6 forward/guard has improved his scoring average in each of his first four seasons, and promises to be a mainstay on a Sixers team that recently signed former Clipper big man Elton Brand to an estimated $82 million free agent contract.

If the Sixers had not been able to sign Iguodala, the 24-year-old could have played this season for them after signing a qualifying offer, which would have made him an unrestricted free agent next summer. In that scenario, the Sixers could have lost their most exciting young star without any compensation.

Iguodala and the team had an opportunity to work out a contract extension last summer but could not come to an agreement. Talks this offseason moved slowly until the last 24 hours, when, sources say, the team significantly increased their offer.

Maybe the Sixers saw my estimate and decided to up their offer. A guy can dream, can’t he?

Good signing for the Sixers. Iggy is a talented player, but he’s probably a better fit as a sidekick than being “The Man.” Now that Elton Brand is in Philly to be “The Man,” Iguodala should thrive alongside him.

Last year at this time, who would have thought that the Sixers would be coming off a solid playoff performance and a ballsy signing like the Brand acquisition? Very nice job thus far by new GM Ed Stefanski.

Hank Stienbrenner is an idiot

The new genius running the Yankees had this to say recently:

The Yankees are missing starting pitcher Chien-Ming Wang, who likely will miss the rest of the season because of a foot injury, and Joba Chamberlain, who hopes to return from right rotator cuff tendinitis. Phil Hughes and Ian Kennedy have missed most of the season.

“I think it’s very simple, we’ve been devastated by injuries. No team I’ve ever seen in baseball has been decimated like this. It would kill any team,” Steinbrenner said. “Imagine the Red Sox without [Josh] Beckett and [Jon] Lester. Pitching is 70 percent of the game. Wang won 19 games two straight years. Chamberlain became the most dominating pitcher in baseball. You can’t lose two guys like that.”

New York also is missing catcher Jorge Posada, out for the year after shoulder surgery, and left fielder Hideki Matsui, out since June 22 because of a knee injury.

“It’s not making excuses. It’s reality. That’s part of the game. That’s clearly our problem,” Steinbrenner said.

Make an excuse, and then claim you’re not making excuses. Brilliant. Also, in Hank’s world, no other team ever had it this bad. Huh?

Of course, Steinbrenner doesn’t address his own complicity regarding Joba Chamberlain. He pushed hard to have Chamberlain moved to the rotation from the bullpen. The Yankee coaching staff tried to be patient with Chamberlain, but eventually they made the move.

The problem here is that you had a hard-throwing reliever who was conditioned to work short relief. Of course it was tempting to put this huge talent in the rotation, but they had a great thing going with him in the bullpen. He was a dominating force. Moving him to the rotation was risky. You always risk arm trouble with hard-throwing pitchers when you increase their innings dramatically.

It may or may not have been a smart risk to take, but the risk was there. His injury, therefore, wasn’t a matter of bad luck. It was a calculated risk, and Hank and the Yankees took the risk and got burned. Hopefully the injury won’t be too serious.

Defensive Team By Committee: Home Sweet Home

I just posted a DTBC article that named the Seahawks/Bills as my favorite DT combination for 2008. But what about those fantasy owners that utilize a week-to-week DTBC approach? (Each week, they pick up a mediocre defense that has a great matchup instead of carrying the same defense all year.) Back in January, just as the playoffs were in full swing, I explored the effect of home vs. away for mediocre fantasy defenses.

So what’s the bottom line? Well, if you’re going to pick up a new defense each week to take advantage of a great matchup, go for one that is playing at home. A defense playing at home is going to post, on average (at least for 2007), 54% more fantasy points against the worst 10 offenses than a similar defense playing on the road. Intuitively, this makes sense. Mediocre defenses are likely to play better in front of their home fans and bad offenses are likely to play worse on the road. And the numbers back it up.

The greatest sports dream jobs

BUSH LEAGUE TV complied a list of the greatest sports dream jobs. (Uh, other than being the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders’ massage therapist because that one is too easy.)

Equipment Manager, Oakland A’s, 1980’s:
It’s an easy day at work…pick up a bag of drugs, some ankle tape, some toilet paper and a vat of Old Spice on your way to the ballpark…the pay is mediocre but the parties are insane and you’ll probably get to write a book if you live through it.

Power Forward, Chicago Bulls, 1980’s and 1990’s:
You are the back-up to the greatest basketball player who ever lived. Stay loose my friend, we need 7 good minutes so MJ can cold kick it live with Luther Campbell for a bit before he jets in the early 4th quarter. Remember, you have fouls to give.

General Manager, Green Bay PACKERS, 1960’s and 1970’s:
It’s easy, do what Lombardi says as fast as you can. Make sure the paperwork gets done right. Voila. You are a champion.

The one about the Oakland A’s equipment manager is pretty damn funny.

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