Category: Fantasy Baseball (Page 33 of 48)

Athlete Profile: Alfonso Soriano

Alfonso SorianoThe unique combination of speed and power in Alfonso Soriano’s offensive game has only been rivaled in baseball by a youthful Barry Bonds. His critics have compared him to Juan Samuel, a free-swinging line drive hitter with power, but who also lacks patience at the plate.

Growing up in the Dominican Republic, Soriano lived by the island’s adage “You cannot walk off the island.” And he developed into a free swinger as a hitter, with speed to stretch doubles into triples. Most major league scouts have noted that Soriano needs to cut down on his strikeouts to be effective in the post-season. Pitchers will expand the strike zone on him come October, as Soriano rarely takes a walk.

Soriano slipped by all of Major League Baseball, to sign with the Hiroshima Carp in the Japanese League at the age of 18. His first professional season was not a success, as he batted only .191 on the year and technically “retired” from Japanese baseball.

Whatever he accomplished overseas caught an eye in the New York Yankee organization, as they signed him to a minor-league deal before the start of the 1998 season. And Soriano did not disappoint, as he hit .305 with 15 HRs, 68 RBIs, and 24 SBs for the Yankees’ double-A affiliate. Next season, his advancement through the organization included Soriano’s MLB debut on September 14, 1999.

He became a serious option to stay in the big leagues during spring training prior to the 2001 season. Being a SS by trade and Derek Jeter anchoring the position for the club, the Yankee front office decided Soriano should begin by taking fly balls in the outfield. However, 2B Chuck Knoblauch was still having difficulty throwing over to first base, and manager Joe Torre made the move to switch their positions. Suddenly, Soriano became the starting second basemen for the New York Yankees.

And once again he did not disappoint, as Soriano finished third in the American League Rookie-of-the-Year voting. His post-season was memorable, as Soriano hit a dramatic ninth inning home run to win Game Four of the 2001 ALCS against the Seattle Mariners. Do not forget his home run off of Curt Schilling in the top of the ninth that gave the Yankees a brief lead in Game Seven of the 2001 World Series. Only to be overshadowed by Luis Gonzalez’s bloop single to leftfield that gave the Arizona Diamondbacks a World Series championship.

His breakout season came the following year, as Soriano led the American League with 209 hits; he batted .300 with 39 HRs, 102 RBIs, scored 128 runs, stole 41 bases and was named to his first All-Star team. The following season, his inadequacies were exposed during the 2003 post-season, as Soriano batted .132 during the ALCS and World Series. Torre benched him in Game Five against the Florida Marlins due to his struggles at the plate.

After the season, the Yankees traded him to Texas in the deal that brought A-Rod to New York. Following two seasons in Texas, Soriano was shuffled off to Washington and subsequently moved to the outfield. His errors in the infield prompted his move to LF (under protest). It was one season in our Nation’s Capital, but what a season, as Soriano had the fourth 40-40 (HR-SB) season in baseball history. And he cashed in, as the Chicago Cubs signed him to an eight-year, 136 million dollar contract in the following off-season.

Soriano on the Web

Official Chicago Cubs Player Bio: Alfonso Soriano

Team’s official page; contains short bio, stats, and link to recent video highlights

Alfonso Soriano Wikipedia Page

Wikipedia page; contains short bio, career stats, and external links

Soriano’s News and Commentary

Soriano May Miss 4 to 6 Weeks

Soriano’s leg injury that sidelined him for six weeks

In Center Field, Soriano Has no Place to Hide

Soriano discusses his approach to the centerfield position

In Chicago, the $136 million question

Why Soriano was the answer to the Cubs playoff woes

Alfonso Says

Chicago Cubs Manager Lou Piniella on the importance of Soriano in the lineup:
”We’ve played four months of baseball — 16 weeks. Soriano’s been out for eight of them [including two weeks in April], and basically, he’s our biggest home-run bat. We were able to overcome it, to these guys’ credit, the way they’ve played. But sooner or later, it starts showing up, and it has.”

Soriano on his work ethic:
I’m working every day. I don’t have any choice. I just work hard every day and try to get ready.”

Soriano on hitting a game-winning home run:
“It’s great. I work hard for those moments. I like those moments. It’s special today. … That’s what I want to do, try to help the team win.”

Red Sox clinch playoff spot, eliminate Yankees

David OrtizWith their 5-4 victory over the Cleveland Indians Tuesday night, the Boston Red Sox did two things. One, they clinched a playoff spot in the American League. And perhaps more importantly in some BoSox fans’ eyes, they eliminated the New York Yankees from postseason play.

Kevin Youkilis hit a two-run dinger off of Cleveland starter Cliff Lee and also reached base three times on walks. Youkilis currently ranks fourth in the AL in RBI with 111.

Though the Red Sox are still in contention for the American League East title, their most likely entry into the playoffs will be as the Wild Card winner, which would earn them a AL Division Series matchup with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, a best-of-five set that would start in Anaheim on Oct. 1 or 2.

The AL will produce some great postseason matchups this year. The Rays, Angels and Red Sox all bring something a little different to the table and whichever team comes out of the AL Central (Twins or White Sox) will likely play an underdog role.

The Best and Worst MLB Players of All-Time

Bush League TV.com put together a list of the best and worst MLB players of all time for all 30 baseball teams.

Boston Red Sox
Dustin Pedroia2008 BEST PLAYER: Dustin Pedroia
Pure hustle. This tiny kid has won over RED SOX nation with his gutsy, balls-out play. He should never have to buy a beer in the Northeast US again. Not to mention boatloads of p—y.
2008 WORST PLAYER: Mike Timlin
Need a lead blown in the 7th? Mike is your man! He has lots of championship rings, which he’ll display on his middle finger at you while you call him a loser.
ALL-TIME BEST PLAYER: Ted Williams
The greatest pure hitter in baseball. Would have set many records and probably led the Red Sox to some titles if it wasn’t for a pesky little thing known as World War 2… He’s so damn good he’s in the Fishing Hall of Fame too.
*ALL-TIME WORST PLAYER: Eric Gagne
The French-Canadian closer was deadly as a Dodger, got hurt, stunk as a Texas Ranger and then stunk to HIGH HELL as a Red Sock. Boston couldn’t get rid of him fast enough…not sure why he’s even in the league anymore.
HONORABLE MENTION: Dave Roberts
His stolen base in Game 4 of the 2004 ALCS made the greatest series comeback possible.

New York Yankees
*2008 BEST PLAYER: Jason Giambi
He may be sorry about taking steroids, but he will NEVER apologize for that moustache.
2008 WORST PLAYER: Johnny Damon
America’s favorite traitor phoned it in and came up lame again. One of the key reasons the Yankees aren’t in the post-season for the first time since Jesus was seven.
ALL-TIME BEST PLAYER: Babe Ruth
It’s not known ans DiMaggio’s Pad or Mickey Mantle’s Place…it’s the House that Ruth built. The best ever. Period.
ALL-TIME WORST PLAYER: Jose Canseco
Oh Steinbrenner, have you ever met a bloated past-prime HULK that you didn’t overpay?
HONORABLE MENTION: Yogi Berra
When you look at the old dude today it’s hard to imagine he ever played baseball. He looks like a mix between Yoda and your grandpa, except twice as huggable.
HORRIBLE MENTION: Carl Pavano
So far he’s made $2.2 million per start this year. Remember that when you see how bad the economy is on the news. He’s spent more time on the DL than Eddie Murphy. (Look it up.)

Tampa Bay Rays
Carlos Pena2008 BEST PLAYER: Carlos Pena
It was almost Longoria until he got hurt down the stretch…but the smiling Cuban Pena’s 28 homers and 88 rbi’s (so far) have put the Rays at the top of the AL East.
2008 WORST PLAYER: Jonny Gomes
The Vanilla Ice look-alike is about the only disappointment on this overachieving team. He’s been hurt half the year, but he’s only batting .177 when healthy. One of those rare players that has helped his team by not playing on it.
ALL-TIME BEST PLAYER: Scott Kazmir
He’s young, he’s fearless, he’s strong and he has great stuff. It won’t be long before he’s the best player on a different team.
*ALL-TIME WORST PLAYER: Jose Canseco
He smacked 34 homers while hopped up on horse pills, hurt his back and wound up picking up a cheap championship ring with the Yankees. Not technically the worst player the Rays have had, but just a black-hole of a–holeness that invaded the clubhouse for a while.
HONORABLE MENTION: Wade Boggs
The great 3rd baseman played his last two years for the Rays and picked up his 3,000th hit at Tropicana Field.
HORRIBLE MENTION: Hideo Nomo
The leg kick wasn’t fooling anyone anymore in his last full year in MLB service. He’s still a god in Japan, he just can’t get a table at a Hooters in Florida.

Ah, anytime someone gets the chance to make fun of Jose Canseco, I’m in.

NL Cy Young Watch: Brandon Webb

Brandon WebbSan Francisco Giants (68-83) at Arizona Diamondbacks (74-76)

First Pitch: 9:40 PM ET
Starting Pitchers: Jonathan Sanchez (9-10, 4.47 ERA) vs. Brandon Webb (20-7, 3.28)

Cy Young Watch:
Webb became the National League’s first 20-game winner in his last start, allowing five hits in eight scoreless innings in a 3-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds. But before earning his 20th win, Webb was 0-3 with a 12.51 ERA in three previous starts.

Webb will face a struggle Giants club that has totaled just one run in the first two games of the four-game series with the Diamondbacks. Webb will try to improve on his 12-5 record and 3.25 ERA in 25 starts against the G-Men. San Fran is just 7-9 this season against Arizona, so Webb has an outstanding opportunity to get to 21-5 on the season and help his cause for NL Cy Young.

The Giants will counter with Sanchez, who is 1-1 with a 7.24 ERA in three starts against the Diamondbacks this season. The left-hander is 1-4 in six career starts against Arizona.

Make sure to check out our Athlete Profile on Brandon Webb.

Athlete Profile: Brandon Webb

Brandon WebbIf there’s one quality baseball fans are often short on, it’s faith. Even more so, general managers and coaches are guilty of this deficiency. You can see it displayed in the fine print of your local newspaper: so-and-so is sent down to Triple A, while so-and-so is called back up. The phrase “testing the waters” comes to mind when it should probably be “he’ll come around.”

Never has the last expression been more relevant than in the case of Brandon Webb. After having a promising rookie year in 2003, Webb’s following season was horrific, as he lost 16 games as a starter for the Diamondbacks. But the organization was faithful to the talents they witnessed in his rookie year. Come 2005, he was out of his prior slump, posting a 14-12 record. The Diamondbacks rewarded the youngster with a contract extension through 2010.Webb responded to this gesture of loyalty with a phenomenal year in 2006, an overall performance that rivaled the club’s best from the likes of Johnson and Schilling. Finishing with a record of 16-8 and a 3.10 ERA, his consistency not only earned Webb his first All-Star appearance, but more importantly, his first Cy Young Award. In 2007, Webb continued to pile on the accolades, as he threw for 42 1/3 scoreless innings, the 12th longest streak in major league history.

Webb’s ability has not wavered. He currently leads the National League in wins and is the rock of the Diamondbacks’ shaky roster.

Much of Webb’s success can be traced to his fatal two-seam sinker, a pitch that literally antagonizes the batter into making a haphazard swing. Sport Illustrated has called Webb’s sinker arguably the filthiest pitch in baseball and compared it to Mariano Rivera’s cutter, Barry Zito’s curve, and Brad Lidge’s slider.

Imagine, Webb initially wanted to be a rock star. In an ironic twist of fate, it was a wild pitch that hit Brandon on the knuckle, forcing him to quit guitar for the time being. Lacking a hobby, he pursued baseball.

Webb on the Web

ESPN player page for Webb
ESPN page; contains stats and bio.

Rotoworld player page for Webb

Rotoworld page; contains bio, career stats, and updates on Utley’s impact as a fantasy player.

Brandon Webb’s K Foundation
Contains information on his organization that helps chronically ill children in Arizona. Includes bio, news, and event updates.

Latest on Web

Webb is a contender to win the NL Cy Young this season, which would be his second in three years. He currently leads the National League in wins and is one of Arizona’s strongest assets in their playoff pursuit.

News and Commentary

Stack Magazine Interview with Brandon

Webb discusses his workout regimen and pre-game strategy.

MLB.com: Webb takes home NL CY Young
This article examines Webb’s 2006 season success.

azcentral.com: Diamondbacks pull contract extension
Diamondbacks and Brandon Webb don’t agree to terms through 2013.

Webb Says

On when people ask how he throws his sinker

“I’m like, ‘Dude, I hold it on the two seams and throw it.’ It’s basically just my natural arm action.”

On getting over a bad game

“I learned that you need to have a short memory in this sport. After a bad pitch, a bad inning or a bad game, you have to forget about it. That’s one thing I’ve really tried to improve.”

On pre-game butterflies

“I get nervous every time I step on the field,” he says. “If I didn’t get nervous, it would mean I didn’t love what I was doing.”

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