Category: MLB (Page 338 of 448)

7/20 MLB Headliners: Angels rally to bury Red Sox

– In what perhaps could be the AL Championship Series preview, the Los Angeles Angels topped the Boston Red Sox 4-2 on Saturday. The Halos trailed 2-0 heading into the seventh, but a Vladimir Guerrero home run cut the deficit to 2-1 and then pinch hitter Erick Aybar tripled to right, scoring Torii Hunter, Garrett Anderson and Howie Kendrick to give L.A. an eventual 4-2 victory.

– With their 6-4 win over the Toronto Blue Jays, the Tampa Bay Rays sit 1.5 games ahead of the Red Sox in the AL East. The Rays hammered Jays’ ace Roy Halladay for five runs on eight hits over six innings. Matt Garza picked up his eighth win of the year, yielding no runs on two hits over 7.2 innings. It appears the All-Star Break served Tampa well.

– Pat Burrell went 3 for 5 with two dingers, two RBI and three runs scored, but the Philadelphia Phillies fell to the Florida Marlins 9-5. Marlins’ second basemen Dan Uggla hit his 24th homer of the year and Scott Olsen improved to 6-4 on the season.

– The Minnesota Twins absolutely gorilla-smacked the Texas Rangers 14-2. Joe Mauer hit his sixth dinger of the year, while Justin Morneau (15) and Delmon Young (4) each homered as well. Even though his ERA is floating north of 5.20, Livan Hernandez picked up his 10th win of the year. The Twins are now a half game out of first in the AL Central thanks to the Chicago White Sox’s 9-1 loss to the Kansas City Royals.

– The Chicago Cubs continue to slide in the NL Central after losing 4-1 to the Houston Astros. With their 6-5 win over the San Diego Padres, the St. Louis Cardinals are now only two games back in the division, while the Milwaukee Brewers are only three games back after topping the San Francisco Giants 8-5.

Brewers to acquire Ray Durham?

The Brewers could be on the verge of acquiring San Francisco Giants second basemen Ray Durham according to the Milwaukee Sentinel.

More likely, it’s a minor deal involving either Durham and/or Giants reliever Jack Taschner. It appears the Brewers are sending minor league outfielder Darren Ford in whatever deal is being hashed out because he was removed from the starting lineup with Class A Brevard County today with indications he is being traded.

In 87 games this season, Durham is batting .293 with three home runs, 32 RBI and a .385 on-base percentage. His acquisition would provide another alternative at second base to Rickie Weeks, who has struggled to a .218 batting and .322 on-base percentage this year.

Ford, 22, is one of the fastest players in the minors but plays centerfield, a position at which the Brewers are well-stocked. In 91 games with Brevard, he is batting .230 with 48 stolen bases in 59 attempts.

Obviously this wouldn’t be an earth-shattering acquisition, but I like what the Brewers are doing. Durham is one of the few Giants that’s actually been decent with the bat and he would be an excellent addition to Milwaukee’s bench. Plus, giving up a minor league prospect like Ford – one that is being blocked – makes this an even wiser move.

MLB’s biggest jerks of first half

FOX Sports.com ranked the top 10 biggest jerks of baseball’s first half.

10. Brett Myers
Hey, Brett, how you doing with those anger management issues? When Myers last made his case for biggest jerk in baseball, police were trying to determine if he’d hit his wife with an open hand or a closed fist. (His wife lobbied successfully to have the charges dropped.) Now he’s merely hurling obscenities at reporters.

5. Barry Bonds
There was a lot of debate within the Jerk Committee as to whether Bonds deserved a nomination. But the defending champion — and one of the all-timers — has to be given a chance to retain his title. Bonds’ only serious achievement in the first half was having 11 more counts added to his perjury and obstruction of justice indictment.

3. Alex Rodriguez
If the stories and allegations are all true — skipping out on his wife and newborn for liaisons with Madonna — Rodriguez has to be seen as the favorite for King Jerk of the first half.

1. Shawn Chacon
Chacon has a very strong case for First-Half Jerk thanks to his Latrell Sprewell redux with GM Ed Wade. While 94.5 percent of Americans may want to choke their bosses (the other 5.5 percent are unemployed, according to June stats), the rest of the country probably has a better case for assaulting a superior than the journeyman Chacon. Considering his career record (45-61, 4.99 ERA), shouldn’t he have been deeply indebted to Wade for putting him on a big league payroll? Apparently not.

That Brett Myers write up was rough – and incredibly fair. The guy can dole out jokes in the offseason, but when he starts the season 3-9 with an ERA just south of 6.00, he acts like a be-yotch.

Saturday Morning Headliners: Sabathia dominates again

– C.C. Sabathia is now 3-0 as a member of the Milwaukee Brewers after pitching a complete game four-hitter in a 9-1 win over the San Francisco Giants. Sabathia gave up just one run (an Aaron Rowand solo HR) and struck out 10. Thanks to a 2-1 Cubs’ loss to the Astros, the Brewers gained a game in the NL Central.

– Garrett Anderson went 4 for 4, knocking in five RBI and two runs scored in the Los Angeles Angels’ 11-3 romp over the Boston Red Sox. John Lackey improved to 7-2 on the year after allowing just three runs on five hits over seven innings. Manny Ramirez and Kevin Youkilis homered in the loss.

– With Boston losing, the Tampa Bay Rays took advantage by topping the Blue Jays 2-1 thanks to Ben Zobrist’s two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh. The Rays sit a half game up on the BoSox in the AL East.

– Alex Rodriguez hit his 20th home run of the year in a 7-1 Yankees’ rout of the A’s. Mike Mussiana – once demoted to the pen last year – is now 12-6 on the season.

– Thanks to a Cubs loss, the St. Louis Cardinals are now only three games out of first in the NL Central after beating the San Diego Padres 11-7. Rick Ankiel and Ryan Ludwick each hit their 22nd dingers of the year and Yadier Molina hit a two-run RBI single in the eighth to break a 7-7 tie.

– The Mets’ 10-game winning streak was snapped as Bronson Arroyo (8-7) and the Cincinnati Reds defeated New York 5-2. Jay Bruce hit his seventh homer of the year. With the Philadelphia Phillies’ 4-2 win over the Florida Marlins, the Mets are now one game back in the NL East.

Top 10 MLB Earners of All-Time

My source for this information only goes back as far as 1985, but really, what players are making now in a single season may have been a career’s worth back then anyway. So here are the top earners of all-time, and naturally there are several active players on here.

1. Barry Bonds ($188,245,322)—Are you kidding? Almost $200 million over the course of his career? And you surely can’t put an asterisk on that statistic. But how much of Barry’s nest egg has gone and will go to legal fees?

2. Alex Rodriguez, ($170,416,252)—A-Rod signed that ridiculous 10-year, $250,000 contract with Texas back in 2001, and I believe he’s still honoring said deal with the Yankees. That’s a lot of money spent for zero World Series rings, isn’t it?

3. Randy Johnson ($152,449,473)—The Big Unit has earned it all, and has been maybe the most feared pitcher in the game over the last fifteen seasons. My favorite stat is that Johnson struck out 1417 batters between 1999 and 2002, an average of 354 per season, and won four straight Cy Young Awards in the process.

4. Greg Maddux ($143,845,000)—In most areas, a $500,000 home would be pretty freaking nice. If your lifetime salary can afford you 286 of them, that’s just insane.

5. Manny Ramirez ($143,328,346)—Think about this. Man-Ram is still only 36 and I’m guessing he’s got at least five more seasons left in him. And over sixteen seasons he’s averaged .312 with 40 homers and 132 RBI per season. Holy crap.

6. Gary Sheffield ($140,682,244)—Sure, this guy has hit the snot out of the ball, but in 2007 Sheff hit .265 with 25 homers and 75 RBI. Is that worth $11 million?

7. Derek Jeter ($139,630,000)—He’s not a power hitter per se (200 career homers over 14 seasons), but a leader on a consistently great team, and arguably the game’s most popular player today.

8. Ken Griffey Jr. ($139,070,987)—If anyone on this list has been underpaid, it’s this guy. He currently has 605 home runs and is the epitome of class.

9. Pedro Martinez ($134,446,234)—Pedro is on his last leg, or make that arm, with the Mets in 2008. But when he was with Montreal and Boston, he had some of the most wicked stuff I’ve ever seen.

10. Mike Mussina ($133,462,590)—I was going to say that $11 million, his 2008 salary, is ridiculously high. But Mussina is on pace to win 19 games for the Yanks when they need him the most. And he’ll take the Steinbrenners’ money all day long.

Source: Baseball Reference

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