Author: Jamey Codding (Page 2 of 25)

What to do with Chase Utley?

Chase Utley

All 2009 Fantasy Articles | 2009 Position Rankings

While Dustin Pedroia and Ian Kinsler both broke out in a big way last year, there is no second baseman I’d rather own than Chase Utley. That said, Utley is one of the toughest players to get a read on heading into draft season. There’s no doubting the Philly slugger’s studliness — his average season since 2005 is a cool .305-29-103-110-13, and there are few cushier gigs in baseball than hitting third in Philly’s stacked lineup. But after belting 25 homers before the break last season, Utley’s power evaporated in the second half thanks to a hip injury that required offseason surgery. He says he’ll be back in time for Opening Day and early spring training reports have been positive, but owners are still understandably concerned. When healthy, Utley is not only a surefire first-round selection but, considering the lack of depth at second base, he’s also a likely top-five pick in most drafts. How dramatically should the injury concerns affect his draft stock? I suppose that depends on how lucky you feel. Punk.

Albert PujolsThis situation is reminiscent of the cloud that hung over Albert Pujols last spring. News that the slugger was one errant throw or swing away from blowing out his elbow sent Pujols’ stock plummeting to the point where some owners were able to snag arguably the game’s best hitter in the second or even third round. Six months later, Pujols claimed his second MVP award after going .357-37-116-100 and playing 148 games. This year, Pujols is a consensus top-three pick.

Utley, meanwhile, has been going in the second or third round in most drafts despite the fact that his rehab to this point has been smooth and he’s still on target to start on Opening Day. Obviously, if he suffers a setback before the start of the season, then it’s time to worry, but at this point, all the talk of him missing some, most or even all of April seems to be overblown. All of which presents you, the informed fantasy owner, with a golden opportunity.

If you happened to be one of the millions of people who passed on Pujols last year, you were likely kicking yourself at the end of the season. Don’t make the same mistake again. My second base preview examines the position in more detail and shows just how little depth there is behind the top-tier performers. In fact, once you move past the top-five second basemen, things get pretty hairy. Sure, promising youngsters like Alexei Ramirez will still be on the board and Dan Uggla offers some serious power, but like just about everyone else at the position, Ramirez and Uggla come with their fair share of warts. All of which makes Utley that much more valuable.

We’re talking about a guy who hasn’t driven in fewer than 100 runs since 2004, a career .292 hitter who will fill up your power categories and also swipe 15 bags. There aren’t very many guys on draft day who can give you that kind of all-round production, and at second base, Utley stands alone.

So pay close attention to the reports coming out of Phillies camp this spring and, as long as everything remains positive, get ready to pounce when the best second baseman in the game falls into your lap much later than he should.

Why doesn’t Troy Brown have a job?

The NFL heads into Week 3 with, as usual, more questions raised than answers provided.

Why aren’t the Chargers 2-0?

Can the Patriots make a Super Bowl run without Brady? Will they even make the playoffs?

Is Aaron Rodgers really this good?

Was Brandon Marshall serious when he said in the preseason that he was going to catch 140 passes this year? Does he know he’s got 14 more games to get there?

Did Tatum Bell actually think he would get away with it?

Who killed Marc Bulger and Larry Johnson?

Did DeSean Jackson do it on purpose? No, seriously. The guy has a monster ego, so maybe he figured that dropping the ball before he crossed the goalline would make for a bigger story than a rookie simply snagging his first TD pass. …Okay, maybe not; but still….

Who put a voodoo hex on Seattle’s receivers?

But one of the more interesting questions floating out there is, why doesn’t Troy Brown have a job? He’s not a game changer by any stretch of the imagination, but he’s dependable. He’s also versatile, being able to play receiver or defensive back; battle-tested, having spent nine years in New England; and, of course, he’s a proven winner, playing a key role on three championship teams.

True, Brown is 37 and has a sketchy injury history, but wouldn’t he make sense to a lot of teams as added depth at receiver and in the secondary? Aren’t the Seahawks down three or 12 receivers? The Saints seem to make some sense, considering the Marques Colston injury and their leaky defense. As a Browns fan, I can personally vouch for Cleveland’s crummy play on each side of the ball, and with Donte Stallworth and Joe Jurivicius both down, there’s a need at receiver.

Of course, this all goes out the window if Brown simply isn’t healthy, but that doesn’t seem to be the case. Earlier this week, a Boston Herald report said that Brown was set to retire today, but now the Boston Globe says Brown is still on the fence.

“We’ll see,” [Brown] responded. “There’s always a chance [of playing].”

When guys like Koren Robinson are getting plucked off the scrapheap, how is it that Troy Brown is still unemployed?

Say goodbye to LeBron, Cleveland

Braylon Edwards speaketh the truth:

“LeBron (James) isn’t a Cleveland guy. LeBron only plays for the Cavaliers, and who knows if he even likes the Cavaliers? He doesn’t like the Indians. He doesn’t like the Browns.”

The Browns receiver made his comments after LeBron James hung out on the Dallas sidelines during pregame warmups prior to the Cowboys/Browns game Sunday afternoon, hugging Terrell Owens and Adam “Don’t Call Me Pacman” Jones, chatting with owner Jerry Jones, and wearing a Yankees cap.

Of course, it was a Yankees cap that first had people questioning LeBron’s loyalty to his hometown. As a (tortured) Cleveland fan, I was pretty fired up when LeBron wore a Yankees hat to Jacobs Field for the Indians’ opening playoff game against the Yanks last year:

Cleveland is most definitely a football city, but LeBron is without question the face of Cleveland sports right now. That doesn’t mean that he has to root for every Cleveland sports franchise, but he crossed the line when he wore a Yankees hat to the game last night. That’d be like David Ortiz donning a Peyton Manning jersey during a Colts/Pats game in New England or, even worse, Tom Brady wearing a Yankees hat to a Sox/Yankees game at Fenway. You just don’t do it.

At the time, what irked me most wasn’t that LeBron wore the hat to the game, but that he taunted the fans — who are, of course, his fans during basketball season — by holding the hat above his head and egging on the crowd. It was an immature and classless move, and at the time I said that it spoke very poorly of his so-called loyalties to his hometown.

And now this.

As I mentioned previously, athletes are fans too, and they can root for whomever they want. I’m not ragging on LeBron for being a Cowboys fan or a Yankees fan or even a Bulls fan, all of whom he rooted for as a kid growing up in Akron. I do think it’s fair to call him a frontrunner, since all three of those teams were winning titles back then, but that’s not the point.

In fact, LeBron choosing to publicize his allegiances in front of Cleveland fans and, in the Indians/Yankees case, even taunting the fans in the process, isn’t even the point anymore. The point now, as Braylon Edwards pointed out, is simple: LeBron James isn’t a Cleveland guy. And that’s very bad news for the Cavaliers and their fans.

LeBron can opt out of his contract after the 2009-10 season, at which point the Cavaliers will be able to offer the star forward more money than any other team in the league. That may sound like a big advantage for the Cavs, and maybe it will prove to be. But working against Cleveland is the fact that LeBron’s contract with Nike will reportedly pay him more if he moves to a larger market like New York or LA. Maybe that’s just a rumor, because I haven’t found any concrete numbers on this, but it’s a widely reported rumor that LeBron has never bothered to shoot down. Add on top of that the fact that LeBron would make even more money in endorsements playing in a big city while also inflating his already enormous worldwide popularity, and however many more millions the Cavaliers can offer LeBron will look like chump change in the final equation.

And then, of course, there’s LeBron’s buddy Jay-Z, who just happens to be part owner of the New Jersey Nets. The Nets just happened to shed a bunch of salary by trading Richard Jefferson this offseason. They also just happen to be planning to move to Brooklyn and open a brand new arena in 2010. And Brooklyn just happens to be LeBron’s “favorite borough” in his favorite city of New York.

Throughout all of this city-wide “will he stay or will he go?” fretting, the one ace the fans thought they had up their sleeve was the fact that LeBron was a hometown guy who actually wanted to stay in Cleveland. Well, I’m not buying it, and neither is Braylon Edwards:

“He’s a guy from Akron who likes everybody but his hometown. I don’t know how that’s possible, but it is what it is, and he is who he is. You know, it’s LeBron.”

Preach on, Braylon.

Rudi Johnson stole Tatum Bell’s job; Tatum Bell stole Rudi Johnson’s luggage

After bolstering their backfield by signing former Bengals running back Rudi Johnson, the Detroit Lions informed Tatum Bell of his release. Shortly after that, Johnson informed Matt Millen that someone had made off with his bags:

Tatum BellJohnson left his bags outside CEO Matt Millen’s office while he met with team officials and, ultimately, worked out a deal with the team.

So when Johnson came back to get his bags, they were nowhere to be found. Johnson and Millen were stumped.

Enter the eye in the sky.

The team checked the videotapes generated by the team’s in-house surveillance system, and they quickly identified the culprit.

So who might it have been? None other than Tatum Bell, who lost his gig with the Lions after Rudi arrived.

Per the source, Bell took the bags to the house of a female acquaintance. When confronted on the matter, Bell offered up some cockamamie story that he thought the bags belonged to someone he knew. The girl, however, said that she hadn’t seen Bell in several months and he showed up out of the blue and asked her to keep the bags for a while.

Johnson eventually retrieved his bags and, reportedly, charges were not filed.

Times are undoubtedly tough for Bell right now. Jobless and with a reputedly poor work ethic, it may be quite some time before he lands another NFL gig. He was understandably desperate. And pissed. But the silver lining here is that Bell solidified his legacy with this one brilliant decision. He’ll no longer be remembered as an over-hyped, underachieving fumbler. Now, he’s the guy who stole Rudi Johnson’s luggage. How sweet is that?

Meanwhile, Lions fans should be grateful that Rudi didn’t have to pursue Bell on foot, since recent history suggests his hammy wouldn’t have survived the chase. In which case the Lions may have once again been in the market for a running back, and since Tatum Bell already knows the system….

Have the Browns already turned into a pumpkin?

On the heels of a 10-6 season and following trades for Shaun Rogers and Corey Williams, many people were expecting big things from the Cleveland Browns this year. In fact, not only have many fans, prognosticators and other media folk predicted an AFC North title for Cleveland, but some truly brave souls even touted the possibility of a Super Bowl appearance for a team that hasn’t won a playoff game since 1995. Following Monday night’s embarrassing (for the team and its fans, anyway) 37-34 preseason loss to the Giants — a game that saw the defending champs dominate Cleveland’s starters on their way to a 30-3 lead early in the second quarter before the benches tightened up the final score — those calling for greatness from the 2008 Browns may need to rethink their stance.

In fact, we don’t need to dig too far into the archives to find a prime example of a chic preseason pick that proved it wasn’t ready for prime time. One year after finishing 3-13, the New Orleans Saints won 10 games in 2006 and advanced all the way to the NFC Championship Game. They featured an explosive offense led by a prolific quarterback (Drew Brees) who took advantage of a slew of top-notch weapons (Reggie Bush, Marques Colston, Deuce McAllister) en route to a Pro Bowl season and a shiny glass slipper heading into the 2007 campaign.

But the Saints’ Cinderella story went belly up from the get-go, losing 41-10 to the champion Colts on the season’s opening night and then dropping their next three games to start 0-4. New Orleans finally got into the win column in Week 6 against the Seahawks and then won their next three games to pull back to .500 at 4-4, but that would be the highlight of their uneven season, finishing out of the playoffs at 7-9. A season-ending knee injury to McAllister certainly didn’t help matters, but the biggest problem for the Saints was a defense that allowed more points (388) than the offense scored (379).

A closer look at New Orleans’ schedules for 2006 and 2007 reveals a troubling similarity: the 10 teams the Saints beat in 2006 had a combined .425 winning percentage (68-92), and the six teams they lost to owned a .520 winning percentage (50-46). In 2007, the seven teams they beat had a .437 winning percentage (49-63) while the nine teams that beat the Saints again owned a .520 winning percentage (75-69). What does that mean? For the most part, the Saints beat the teams they were supposed to beat in 2006 but couldn’t hold their own against the league’s better teams during the regular season. And while a 10-win season and an NFC Championship Game appearance were legitimate reasons for optimism heading into 2007, the trend held true last year, only this time it produced three fewer wins. In other words, the Saints weren’t a decidedly worse team in 2007 than they were in 2006, but they weren’t any better either, and they also weren’t as lucky.

So what does this tell us about the 2008 Browns? Maybe nothing, maybe everything. Cleveland beat 10 teams last year with a dreadful combined winning percentage of .343 (55-105), while the six teams they lost to sported a .572 percentage (55-41), a group that included the 16-0 Patriots. So just like the Saints before them, the Browns beat the teams they were supposed to beat but fell short against better competition. And just like the Saints, the Browns stuffed the stat sheet with breakout QB Derek Anderson taking full advantage of weapons like Braylon Edwards, Kellen Winslow and a revitalized Jamal Lewis while the defense was routinely gashed for big plays and big points.

Simply put, if the Browns want to prove their backers right and avoid the letdown that plagued the Saints last year, they’ll need to play better against better competition, especially on the defensive side of the ball. And they’ll need to do it on a much bigger stage, with the team scheduled for five primetime games throughout the season, including three on Monday night against the Bills, the Eagles and, ominously, the Giants. Beyond that, there are precious few gimmes on the schedule, with games against the Cowboys and Steelers to open the season, and matchups with the Jaguars, Redskins, Titans and Colts as well.

Cleveland is certainly talented enough to challenge for the AFC North crown and make a run in the playoffs, but so were the Saints last year. If this is going to be the kind of magical season that fans on the Erie shores have been waiting on for ages, the Browns will have to show more than they did Monday night.

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