2009 MLB Preview: #3 New York Mets Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/31/2009 @ 11:00 am)
Click Here to see Previews of all 30 MLB Teams Offseason Movement: In a major effort to try and bolster their bullet riddled bullpen, the Mets signed top free agent closer Francisco Rodriguez, who saved a record 62-games last season for the Angels. The Mets also acquired reliever J.J. Putz, outfielder Jeremy Reed and RHP Sean Green in a three team swap with the Mariners and Indians. The club signed free agent starter Freddy Garcia, but after he gave up 15 runs in just seven innings this spring, they reassigned him to minor league camp. Livan Hernandez – yet another free agent signing – fared much better and will be the Mets’ fifth starter when the season opens. Casey Fossum, Alex Cora, Darren O’Day, Rocky Cherry, Connor Robertson and Cory Sullivan round out the rest of New York’s offseason additions. Top Prospect: Wilmer Flores, SS Outfield prospect Fernando Martinez also deserves mention here, but Flores is already showing potential at just 17 years old. Flores is light years away from the big leagues, but he’s already drawing comparisons to Miguel Cabrera in terms of his potential at such a young age. The Mets will likely move Flores along slowly and let him develop his skills. There’s absolutely no need to rush him, but he’ll get his opportunity to shine in the next couple of years. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: MLB Tags: 2009 MLB Predictions, 2009 MLB Preview, Alex Cora, Bobby Parnell, Brian Stokes, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, Connor Robertson, Cory Sullivan, Daniel Murphy, Darren O’Day, David Wright, Francisco Rodriguez, Freddy Garcia, Jeremy Reed, JJ Putz, Jose Reyes, K-Rod, MLB Preview 2009, Nelson Figueroa, NL East Predictions, Pedro Feliciano, Rocky Cherry, Sean Green, Wilmer Flores
Mikey’s Crystal Ball: preseason MLB award predictions Posted by Mike Farley (03/29/2009 @ 1:43 pm) It’s hard to believe the start of baseball season is next week. It seems like a very short time ago when the Phillies and Rays were playing a Game 5 of the World Series in frigid Philly, having to suspend it and pick up the next night. It seemed like nothing was going to stop that Phillies team, much to the dismay of this Mets’ fan. Anyway, it’s a fresh start and a clean slate and a whole lot of possibilities. Here are a few of those as I see them… NL MVP: David Wright, New York Mets—Am I playing homer? Yes. But this kid works really hard every off-season and consistently puts up big numbers, and he hasn’t even come close to showing his potential. This year Wright is going to show the world why the Mets have built their franchise around him, and he’s going to (finally) lead them to a World Series. AL MVP: Grady Sizemore, Cleveland Indians—Last year, Sizemore had a full season low batting average of .268 but racked up career highs in home runs (33), RBI (90) and stolen bases (38). Last season Sizemore finished 10th in the AL MVP voting but like Wright, he is on the verge of something huge, and he’s going to lead the Indians to the playoffs. NL Cy Young: Tim Lincecum, San Francisco Giants—I love a good short-guy-kicks-ass story, the kind where most scouts write someone off because of their size (5’10, 160 pounds), and then they go and prove everyone wrong except the team who drafted them. That’s Tim Lincecum, who won the NL Cy Young last season for the Giants, winning 18 of his team’s 72 wins, or ONE QUARTER of them. His stuff is absolutely sick, and at times just unhittable and he will coast to his second straight Cy Young. AL Cy Young: Daisuke Matsuzaka, Boston Red Sox—Last season, Dice-K went 18-3 but was largely overshadowed by Cliff Lee’s 22-3 masterpiece as well as by K-Rod’s record-breaking 62 saves. But this guy has taken over as the dominating shutdown starter in Boston after Josh Beckett battled inconsistency last year, and this year he’s going to roll to the Cy Young. NL Rookie of the Year: Micah Hoffpauir, Chicago Cubs—Last season, during the second straight historic collapse by the Mets, Hoffpauir was Babe Ruth for one game, going 5 for 5 with two home runs and five RBI. That was his only multi-hit game, but you don’t just have a showing like that by accident. AL Rookie of the Year: David Price, Tampa Bay Rays—Sure, the Rays optioned their young phenom to the minors recently, but don’t let that fool you. Once Price logs a few innings, he’ll be back in Tampa blowing hitters away the way he did in the ALCS against Boston last season. And he’ll find himself as the #2 or #3 starter before long. NL Manager of the Year: Jerry Manuel, New York Mets—When Willie Randolph was let go in New York last season, the Mets were 34-35. After Manuel replaced him, the Mets went 55-38 the rest of the way. Okay, they choked again down the stretch, but this year it’s Jerry’s team from the start, and he’s going to show everyone that his no-nonsense and player-friendly approach can win lots of games, as well as championships. It doesn’t hurt that he has two lights-out closers (K-Rod, JJ Putz) anchoring his bullpen now. AL Manager of the Year: Eric Wedge, Cleveland Indians—The Indians missed the playoffs last season after taking the eventual champion Red Sox to 7 games the year before. The Tribe plays well in odd numbered years as of late—going 93-69 in 2005 and 96-66 in 2007. This season, with the additions of Kerry Wood, Mark DeRosa and Carl Pavano, Cleveland is going to surprise a lot of folks. NL Comeback Player of the Year: Eric Byrnes, Arizona Diamondbacks—Byrnes was way off his career averages in 2008, hitting a paltry .209 with 6 homers and 23 RBI. He has nowhere to go but up, and this season I have a feeling Byrnes’ numbers are going to match his intensity on the field. AL Comeback Player of the Year: John Smoltz, Boston Red Sox—After season-ending shoulder surgery in June of 2008, the Braves finally let one of the cornerstones of their franchise go, as the free agent pitcher signed with the Sox. He won’t see the mound until June, but Smoltz threw in the bullpen this week and showed no signs of pain. He’s going to make the Braves sorry—really sorry. Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB Tags: AL Comeback Player of the Year, AL Cy Young, AL Manager of the Year, AL MVP, AL Rookie of the Year, Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Babe Ruth, Boston Red Sox, Carl Pavano, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, Cliff Lee, Daisuke Matsuzaka, David Price, David Wright, Eric Byrnes, Eric Wedge, Grady Sizemore, Jerry Manuel, JJ Putz, John Smoltz, K-Rod, Kerry Wood, Major League Baseball, Mark DeRosa, Micah Hoffpauir, MLB, New York Mets, NL Comeback Player of the Year, NL Cy Young, NL Manager of the Year, NL MVP, NL Rookie of the Year, Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants, Tampa Bay Rays, Tim Lincecum, Willie Randolph, World Series
Five MLB storylines to watch in 2009 Posted by Mike Farley (03/01/2009 @ 10:46 am) The A-Rod steroid mess is finally boiling over, the World Baseball Classic is fast-approaching and making GMs and managers nervous, and the 2009 regular season is a little over a month away. It’s hard to believe we crowned the Phillies world champs a third of a year ago, but time does fly like Jose Reyes around the bases. With that, let’s look at some interesting questions that beg to be answered in 2009: 1. Who will be the surprise team this year? Last year it was the Tampa Bay Rays, who not only won the ridiculously competitive AL East, but also beat the Red Sox in the ALCS to reach the World Series, which they eventually lost to the Phillies. In 2007, the Colorado Rockies won 21 of 22 games after September 17, including sweeping the Cubs and D-Backs in the playoffs before losing to Boston in the Fall Classic. In 2006 it was the Cardinals who squeaked into the postseason with an 83-78 record, ultimately winning it all. Who is going to do it this season? Or will it be a big-market, big-money World Series match up such as Yankees/Mets or Red Sox/Cubs? It’s almost impossible to say I told you so at this point to this type of question, but here are the teams I’m telling you to keep an eye on: Indians, A’s, Giants, Marlins. 2. How will the choking of recent seasons affect the Mets, Cubs and Angels? The Mets’ bullpen imploded two years in a row, and GM Omar Minaya went and picked up not one, but two lights-out closers in K-Rod and JJ Putz. Still, the Mets are not going to have an easy go of things in the NL East, and their lineup and starting rotation are bordering on suspect. The Cubs and Angels keep beating everyone up in the regular season only to flame out early in the playoffs. Do these two teams lack what it takes to win, or has the luck and clutch hitting of other teams been their demise? Honestly, you can’t keep talented teams like these three down for very long, and I expect all of them to be playing deep into October this time around. Read the rest after the jump...Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB Tags: 2009 regular season, A-Rod, A.J. Burnett, AL East, AL West, Arizona Diamondbacks, baseball, Boston Red Sox, CC Sabathia, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, Colorado Rockies, Detroit Tigers, Florida Marlins, JJ Putz, John Smoltz, K-Rod, Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers, Manny Ramirez, Mark Teixeira, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, NL Cy Young, NL East, NL West, Oakland A's, Philadelphia Phillies, Roger Clemens, San Francisco Giants, Scott Boras, St. Louis Cardinals, Steroids, Tampa Bay Rays, Tim Lincecum, World Baseball Classic
Hot Stove League: Pitchers Flying Off Shelves Posted by Mike Farley (01/17/2009 @ 8:05 am) This past week, John Smoltz officially signed with the Red Sox and the Braves inked Derek Lowe to a four-year, $60 million deal, something Atlanta’s rival New York Mets could not match. Imagine that. But what runs deeper here is that the second and even third tier of pitchers continue to be signed and many position players remain team-less. Less than a month before pitchers and catchers report, here are some of the big names still available: Manny freaking Ramirez, Adam Dunn, Bobby Abreu, Ken Griffey, Orlando Hudson, Frank Thomas, and to a lesser extent, Kevin Millar (20 homers last season) and Orlando Cabrera. To put this in perspective, the Astros signed pitcher Russ Ortiz to a minor league deal a few days ago, the Dodgers signed reliever Guillermo Mota, the Angels inked Darren Oliver for one year, and the White Sox brought back a Bartolo Colon who is on the downside of his career. Clearly, it’s a pitchers’ market this off-season, and it’s almost mind-boggling that Ramirez has gone almost three full months without being signed. Part of the problem here is that the big spenders (ahem, New York teams) have blown their collective load on the likes of CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett, Mark Teixeira, Francisco Rodriguez, etc., leaving a team like the Dodgers the likely scenario for Man-Ram in 2009, which at the end of the day is probably best for both sides anyway. But some of those other guys are going to have trouble finding work, or they are going to take a recession-friendly deal from a team they wouldn’t have signed with otherwise. It’s already happened with Pat Burrell in Tampa and Jason Giambi with Oakland. In other more recent news, the Red Sox avoided arbitration with Kevin Youkilis on Thursday, agreeing to terms on a four-year deal. And the Dodgers finally released beleaguered outfielder Andruw Jones, who the Braves are considering bringing back for the league minimum salary. The Braves are also mulling over whether to bring back injury-plagued LHP Tom Glavine for one more season. Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB, Rumors & Gossip Tags: A.J. Burnett, Adam Dunn, Andruw Jones, Atlanta Braves, Bartolo Colon, baseball, Baseball Rumors, Bobby Abreu, Boston Red Sox, CC Sabathia, Chicago White Sox, Darren Oliver, Derek Lowe, Francisco Rodriguez, Frank Thomas, free agency, Guillermo Mota, Hot Stove League, Houston Astros, Jason Giambi, John Smoltz, K-Rod, Ken Griffey, Kevin Millar, Kevin Youkilis, Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers, Major League Baseball, Man-Ram, Manny Ramirez, Mark Teixeira, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Oakland Athletics, Orlando Cabrera, Orlando Hudson, Pat Burrell, recession and baseball, Russ Ortiz, Tampa Bay Rays, Tom Glavine
Hot Stove League: New York, New York (Burnett Officially Signs With Yankees) Posted by Mike Farley (12/13/2008 @ 9:26 am) I know this was Vegas, which comes with its own set of distractions, but come on. We all expected a lot more to happen at the MLB Winter Meetings this past week than the Yankees giving CC Sabathia the equivalent of a small planet and AJ Burnett significant real estate on said planet (the Yanks made the latter official Friday afternoon with a 5-year, $82.5 million deal), as well as the Mets signing the best closer out there (K-Rod) and trading for a second one (JJ Putz) to be their set-up guy. Unless the Orioles and Reds swapping Ramon Hernandez and Ryan Freel, or the Rays and Tigers trading Edwin Jackson for Matt Joyce gets your blood flowing, it was kind of a disappointing week, especially if you live 40 miles or more outside of the New York metro area. We still have Manny Ramirez without a team, and the very real possibility that he could just stay with the Dodgers. Really, doesn’t that make the most sense for this guy’s, um, easygoing, personality and playing style? Meanwhile, the stakes for Mark Teixeira have been upped by none other than the Washington Nationals, who are believed to be offering the free agent slugger eight years at $20 million per. That sounds to me like agent Scott Boras trying to just be Scott Boras. We all know Tex is going to wind up in Boston, Baltimore, or back with the Angels. And as if Cubs’ fans haven’t suffered through enough misery lately, GM Jim Hendry decided to pull the plug on the Jake Peavy trade. He just didn’t want to inherit as much salary as the Padres wanted him to, and he surely didn’t want to throw Mark DeRosa on a plane to San Diego as part of the deal. Now, the Angels have been mentioned as a team that might pursue Peavy, and you definitely can’t count the Yankees out either. Oh, and by the way, the Yankees have turned their attention to in-house “old reliable” Andy Pettitte now, and have not ruled Ben Sheets or Derek Lowe out yet. Wow. Meanwhile, the Mets spent so much on closers that they literally had nothing left to go after Lowe. Instead, GM Omar Minaya is talking to the Cubs about a trade for Jason Marquis, and/or re-signing Oliver Perez or Pedro Martinez. There could be a lot more moves on the horizon, but in a week expected to have a lot of fireworks, the hot stove fired up in New York and nowhere else. Stay tuned though, because deals are known to happen into January, and some, like Ramirez and Teixeira signing, could lead a domino effect for more moves. Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB Tags: A.J. Burnett, Andy Pettitte, Baltimore Orioles, Ben Sheets, Boston Red Sox, CC Sabathia, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds, Derek Lowe, Detroit Tigers, Edwin Jackson, Francisco Rodriguez, free agency, Hot Stove League, Jake Peavy, Jason Marquis, Jim Hendry, JJ Putz, K-Rod, Las Vegas, Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers, Manny Ramirez, Mark DeRosa, Mark Teixeira, Matt Joyce, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Oliver Perez, Omar Minaya, Pedro Martinez, Ramon Hernandez, Ryan Freel, San Diego Padres, Scott Boras, Tampa Bay Rays, Washington Nationals, winter meetings
|