Category: Fantasy Baseball (Page 41 of 48)

Big Papi out at least a month

According to the Boston Herald, the Red Sox are expected to be without David Ortiz for at least a month, if not longer.

In the midst of a 6-3 loss in the finale of the Sox’ four-game set with the Orioles, the Herald’s Tony Massarotti reported designated hitter David Ortiz [stats] would be out at least a month, and perhaps longer, with what the team later called a tear in the ECU tendon sheath on the top left side of his left wrist.

“(Ortiz) means so much to our club and he means so much to the game of baseball,” said Sean Casey, one of Ortiz’ possible replacements. “We’re going to have to do without him for a few weeks. We have a lot of good guys in here who will hopefully hold down the fort until David comes back in a few weeks.”

Besides the usual presence Ortiz has provided in the middle of the lineup, he also had been one of the team’s most consistent hitters of late until straining his wrist on a swing in the ninth inning Saturday night.

Tough break for the BoSox with the first place Rays in town for a three game set. The club called up Triple-A prospect Chris Carter, but it’s unclear if he’ll be the one to replace Ortiz in the lineup. Sean Casey, Coco Crisp, Jacoby Ellsbury and Jeff Bailey are likely to see increased playing time, too.

Whew! Fantasy leagues are safe for now

Fantasy fans everywhere can breathe a sign of relief. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to hear a case from Major League Baseball that would require all fantasy sports leagues to pay a high data-licensing fee.

Fantasy sports companies like Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), CBS (NYSE: CBS) Sportsline and others can now breathe a sigh of relief: the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear an appeal from Major League Baseball and its Players Association that, if successful, could have given these leagues the ability to control the lucrative fantasy-sports business via high data-licensing fee. This tussle has been going on for some years now…the situation began in 2005 when MLBAM acquired the rights to represent the MLBPA in licensing, decided to limit its licenses for fantasy baseball and refused to grant one to St. Louis-based CDM Sports, which then filed suit. CDM won the suit in federal court last year.

Wall Street Journal: Fantasy-sports companies and the leagues had a mostly peaceful relationship through the 1990s, and these companies paid licensing fees of 5% to 10% of revenues for the rights to the players’ names and statistics. Deals with the largest companies produced nearly $1.5 million a year, the story says. But three years ago, MLB tried to limit the number of companies that could use its statistics, even though they were readily available from variety of sources, and that’s when CDM filed the lawsuit.

LA Times: The justices’ decision was a setback not only for baseball players, but for other professional athletes who maintained that outside companies had no right to “exploit players’ identity for commercial gain.” The NFL, NBA and NHL had supported baseball’s players and owners in their appeal to the court.

We all know what this is about… money. The leagues see sites like ESPN, CBS and all the other mom-and-pop fantasy sites making a profit on what they perceive to be their product, and they want a (big) piece. But the fantasy sites have a strong argument that they are only using players’ names and stats, which are readily available for free on the internet. The sites are then providing consumers with a fantasy league and all the services and features that entails.

It always amazes me when professional sports leagues fail to see the big picture. Fantasy football has helped to explode the NFL’s fan base, yet the league wants to make it more difficult and more expensive for fans to own a fantasy team. Why doesn’t the league just appreciate the increased revenue produced from its higher ratings? Why must they squeeze every last cent out of us? I don’t mean to single out the NFL, but if there has been any league that has benefited from free, available fantasy sports, it’s the NFL.

Of course, I shouldn’t be surprised. This is the same league that repeatedly gives exclusive rights to Sunday Ticket to the highest bidder, leaving millions of fans out in the cold.

Highlights from the Wednesday that was

NBA Playoffs Game 5: Celtics 106, Pistons 103

John Paulsen has the scoop on this game, but here’s what angry Sheed had to say about the refs:

NHL Stanley Cup Game 3: Penguins 3, Red Wings 2

Welcome to the NHL Stanley Cup Finals, Penguins.

MLB Musings:

Cubs 2, Dodgers 1. Outside of the Phillies, is there any club playing better than the Cubs right now? And although he’s a circus act in left field, is there any player hotter at the plate than Alfonso Soriano?

Giants 11, Diamondbacks 3. What is going on with the D-Backs? They’ve lost three in a row, are 3-7 in their last 10, and are on the verge of being swept by the Giants. They can’t lose to Barry Zito on Thursday can they? No, no way.

Mariners 1, Red Sox 0. Erik Bedard finally arrived in Seattle (7.0 IP, 2 hits, 0 ER, 8 K’s). Holding Boston’s lineup to only two hits is damn impressive.

Phillies 6, Rockies 1. Chase Utley is a man-child. He’s got 17 home runs on the year and it’s only May 29.

Hank gets his way: Chamberlain to start for Yankees

The time has come for Joba Chamberlain. Yankees’ part owner Hank Steinbrenner is getting his way, as the highly touted pitcher will move into the club’s starting rotation once he’s groomed for the role.

He won the debate about Joba Chamberlain, who officially is on his way to becoming a starter. Steinbrenner stopped all the speculation about Chamberlain remaining in the bullpen as a setup man, albeit the most dominating setup man in the business.

Manager Joe Girardi kept Chamberlain out there for two innings and 35 pitches at the end Wednesday night and revealed afterward that the lad wasn’t out there just to get some exercise. He is being stretched out to start games.

That’s what Hank always wanted and what he had, coincidentally, said in an interview with mlb.com yesterday afternoon.

“This was the plan all along,” Girardi said after the game, with the same straight face he had used when he had hinted on Saturday that Chamberlain could remain a reliever for the rest of the season.

Well, nobody should be surprised. It was only a matter of time before Chamberlain moved into the rotation anyway and once Hank made it public knowledge that he wanted the kid to start, an announcement was soon to follow. Girardi must love management telling him how to run his club.

Steinbrenner meddling with Joba’s role?

New York Yankees co-chairman Hank Steinbrenner wants setup man Job Chamberlain to be in the starting rotation, like, yesterday.

“I want him as a starter and so does everyone else, including him, and that is what we are working toward and we need him there now,” Steinbrenner said Sunday by telephone. “There is no question about it, you don’t have a guy with a 100-mile-per-hour fastball and keep him as a setup guy. You just don’t do that. You have to be an idiot to do that.”

This is good news for Joba fantasy owners. If the new boss wants to see Chamberlain out there every five days, more than likely the Yankees’ coaching staff is going to oblige. This kid has nasty stuff and everyone is waiting on pins and needles to see what he can do as a starter.

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