As most sports fans know it is now illegal to participate in online sports betting in the United States. The brilliant people at centsports.com have found a way to let sports fans get their fix WITHOUT violating the law or losing any of your own money.
I know you're wondering "What is centsports and how do I sign up?" Here is your answer.
Click here to sign up.
What is CentSports.com?
A: CentSports.com is just one of many places on the Internet where you can place bets on major sporting events.
What makes CentSports unique is that we're actually legal. Currently you can't run a gambling website from inside the U.S. This site is more like a fantasy-football game ... we give you a small amount of play-money to start out with ... you make bets with this, just like you could in Vegas ... but, again, you're just betting with 'play money'.
However, if you do well enough ... i.e., if you win enough of your play-money bets, we'll actually let you 'cash out' your play money for real money ... and maybe other stuff like t-shirts, CentSports gear, etc.
Q: Who developed / manages CentSports ... and why?
A: CentSports is being developed by a group of students and professionals based out of College Station, Texas. Given the location, most, though not all of us, are associated in some way or another with Texas A&M University.
The project started in response to last year's Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (which, shamefully, was officially termed the "Security and Accountability for Every (SAFE) Port Act of 2006" by congress ... look it up on Wikipedia). That bill made it illegal to use any online betting or gambling site that you could deposit money into, effectively shutting down all such sites which existed at that time.
For those of us who enjoyed sports betting, this was bad news. This project was our response to that. True, not as fun as real gambling, but it's still fun to play with free money, and hey, if you do well enough, we even reward you by paying out real money to our users.
Q: So how does it work?
A: It's simple ... when you first sign up for CentSports, we give you ten cents ($0.10) play money to bet with. You can use this to bet on almost any major college or professional sporting event (MLB, NBA and NFL games, etc.). Anything you win you keep and can use to place more bets, accumulating money as you go.
You can cash out whenever you want (as soon as you have a balance of over $20.00 play money) ... we're actually gracious enough to send you a check for your play-money account balance ... just straight up, dollar for dollar.
We've tried to replicate what you can do at real sports betting sites ... i.e., you can make standard line-type bets such as over/under, point-spread, and moneyline bets. In fact, we get our lines straight from Vegas ... any bet you make on CentSports could be made with any sports bookie in Vegas for the same odds if you were betting for real money.
Overall, the site makes more from advertising than people cash out ... though one of our goals in creating the site was to make sure that as much of the site's advertising revenue goes back to CentSports user as possible (after all, they're the ones who earned it by viewing ads in the first place!).
Friday, April 25, 2008
Operation Cent Sports
Monday, April 21, 2008
Smoltz goes for 3,000th Strikout
One thing that makes Smoltz a unique member of the club is the years he spent as a closer. Smoltz has 154 saves in 241 career relief appearances. Smoltz will become the only member of the club with more than 35 career saves. Second on the list is Hall of Famer Walter Johnson who saved 34 games in his career.
Smoltzie also distinguishes himself by becoming the 6th fastest pitcher to reach 3,000K's assuming he does it sometime soon.
The only pitchers who have reached this milestone in fewer innings are Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez, Nolan Ryan, Curt Shilling and Roger Clemens. Maybe we can get Isleib to write a story on the phenomenon of the strikeout pitcher in an effort to examine why the top of this list is so heavily laden with pitchers from the past two decades.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
"We're Going Streaking"
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Analyzing the Closer Situation
Juan Berenguer was 36 when the Braves induced 17 saves from him in 1991, the first season of 15 straight division titles. He was out of baseball a year later. Fellow veteran Alejandro Pena had closed a bit in the bigs before Cox turned to him, but he wasn't Dennis Eckersley, either. Lefties and right-handers alike got their chance for Cox, from Mike Stanton to Greg McMichael to Kerry Ligtenberg. Honestly, other than the John Smoltz experiment, which worked out beautifully, no other team has turned to unknowns to close the way the Braves had, whether or not they had so-called "closer" ability -- whatever that is. I'd say Mark Wohlers had it, and once in a while John Rocker did.
Manny Acosta could be next in the long line of anonymous Braves closers.Does Manny Acosta have it? Does it matter?
In a chat last week, I surmised that Acosta and Peter Moylan were each in line for saves after Rafael Soriano was placed on the disabled list with elbow tendinitis. I would've mentioned it in the April 9 Relief Efforts, but the Soriano injury came from nowhere hours after it was posted, naturally.
The Braves' theory was Moylan had his 2007 stats on his side for future opportunities, and Acosta was the one who had that closer stuff. In fact, Acosta would've been in line for a save a few days earlier when Soriano was originally scratched and had Cox's confidence, much to the surprise of many.
Now Moylan has joined Soriano on the shelf with a right elbow strain, and with a visit looming to meet Dr. James Andrews, I'd say you shouldn't expect the Aussie submariner back anytime soon, if at all this season. If there's any manager who wouldn't be worried about this, it would be Cox. Incredibly, a season ago this team had so many possibilities for closer who could have slid right into the role, but one by one, they all found their way somewhere else and not closing. It's all about the timing. Octavio Dotel sets up Bobby Jenks in Chicago. Joey Devine seems to have a future in Oakland. Tyler Yates, Oscar Villarreal and Chad Paronto would all probably be in line ahead of Acosta if they were still around. But they're not.
Don't laugh. While everyone and their plumber rushes to the waiver wire to sign Acosta, a move I agree with, it's hardly assured Acosta will thrive in the role or be Cox's fancy. At this point, let's discuss what options Cox does have at his disposal.
Manny Acosta: It's not like he's been lights-out, you know. If he were, that certainly would make his transition to closing look smarter. As colleague Will Harris pointed out in his If You're Hardcore article late last week, Acosta has had control problems in the past, and it kind of looks like he still has them. He also gives up home runs. This doesn't mean he can't be a good closer, just that the chances seem great that he'll lose the role quickly. The other thing that would worry me if I was trading something good to get Acosta is that he's pitched only once since April 8, and before that his last appearance was April 3. Sure, the Braves have trailed a lot, but c'mon, get the guy work. Or is he hurting as well?
Blaine Boyer: I won't laugh if you name anyone in the current Braves bullpen as a contender for saves, by the way. Boyer doesn't have a track record for closing, but he leads the Braves in strikeouts. He's a relief pitcher. In 7 2/3 innings, Boyer has fanned 13, and I took a chance on him Tuesday in our office's 18-team auction league, just to make sure. There are so few free agents there. Why not? Boyer didn't walk people this spring, a nice change from his 2007 numbers at Triple-A Richmond, when he issued 50 free passes and struck out 62. The case can be made he was still working his way back from missing all of 2006 with shoulder surgery. I'll buy it. I think if Soriano and Moylan are out awhile, he's going to get chances.
Matthew Berry and Nate Ravitz talk with Buster Olney about the Indians' and Braves' closer situations among other topics in today's Fantasy Focus podcast. Listen to the Fantasy
Jorge Campillo: Um, who? Now 29, Campillo once threw hard and was an undrafted free-agent find by the Braves in 1996. He toiled in the Mariners' system much of this decade as a starter, and missed 2006 after Tommy John surgery. You might remember this guy as the one who threw at Vladimir Guerrero's head last September, earning a four-game suspension. He'll probably end up back in Richmond within a few days.
John Smoltz: Don't even think it. The Braves' rotation depth is being tested, and there's no chance Cox does a Brett Myers with his aging Hall of Famer and moves him back to the closer's role, unless the pitcher asks for it or injury dictates it. I don't think the balky shoulder he's dealing with will force a role change.
Anyone else?: Buddy Carlyle was recalled from Triple-A Richmond Tuesday, but I think it's Tom Glavine insurance for the rotation. Jeff Bennett is there, too, so maybe he's Chuck James/Mike Hampton insurance. Either way, I think Cox keeps them as starters. As for the lefties in the bullpen, Will Ohman has had enough trouble getting lefties out, but he could be a situational ninth-inning guy. Royce Ring was once thought to be a closer candidate when the Mets acquired him years ago, but he's been inconsistent and lacking command ever since. If Mike Gonzalez was healthy, he'd be next in line, but he had Tommy John surgery last June. You'll see and hear his name mentioned for a return this June, but I'll take August as the over/under. It takes more than a year for pitchers to come back and pitch well from this surgery.
Ultimately, I think Acosta gets the first chance, Boyer is lurking, and for all we know Soriano could return in two weeks or two months and usurp them both. I still think Soriano ends up leading the Braves in saves, with around 25.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Moylan hits the DL - Frank Wren hangs new sign outside of Turner Field
Monday, April 14, 2008
Braves light on arms - both starters and relievers
The Braves could stand to add a pitcher or two to both the rotation and the pen.
Tim Dierkes over at MLBTradeRumors.com has this entry about the situation
"With Tom Glavine ailing and the fifth starter spot an open audition, the Braves are facing a starting pitching shortage. The bullpen could use a hand as well, but one thing at a time.
Healthy, possibly available free agent starters include Roger Clemens, Russ Ortiz, Horacio Ramirez, Jeff Weaver, and David Wells. Obviously they all have warts - age, baggage, ineffectiveness. But if one of them can eat innings at a 4.50 ERA, it might make sense.
How about acquiring a starter via trade? Here are some names to ponder: Daniel Cabrera, Joe Blanton, Jason Marquis, Matt Morris, Dave Bush, Matt Belisle, Vicente Padilla, Robinson Tejeda, Jeremy Sowers, Kei Igawa, Kyle Snyder, and Kevin Correia. This list works for other clubs light on pitching, the Tigers for example."
I still think the Braves need to go after Jon Rauch.
Glavine injured - Braves fail to complete sweep
Catching up
Now that I know that people will continue to ask about these posts until I complete them :-), here we go. It's about the '82 Braves because all 5 players requested were on the team and they can be discussed somewhat together.
The 1982 Braves as a whole are an odd team. Pythogoras puts 'em at 85-77, but they overachieved/lucked out enough to eke out a division title, the only one in between '69 and '91. Their offense was precisely average - 100 OPS+ - but thanks to Fulton-County Stadium they led the league in runs scored. The pitching was actually about the same, but boy did it look bad. This was like a less extreme '95 Rockies - not bad at anything, but boy did they look lopsided.
Runs per game, home/road: 4.79 (2nd)/4.33 (6th)
Runs allowed per game, home/road: 4.78 (11th)/3.89 (4th)
Unsurprisingly, this gave them a tepid home record - 42-39 - but they were 47-34 on the road, best in the league. Maybe they were just in the wrong park.
This was also Joe Torre's first year on the job for the Braves, right after Bobby Cox went to Toronto. Torre didn't do a lot other than watch Dale Murphy blossom (OPS+ in 1981: 101; in 1982: 142) and get an actual rotation. In 1981 it was primarily Niekro, Gaylord Perry, and Tommy Boggs, with nobody else claiming the other spots; in 1982 it was Niekro, Rick Mahler, Bob Walk, and former closer Rick Camp, who was moved to the rotation in June with at least decent results. Other things of note: Rafael Ramirez learning to hit at the major league level (.218/.276/.303 in '81, .278/.319/.379 in '82) and a 24-year-old Bob Horner playing 140 games. Claudell Washington, 27, and Chris Chambliss, 33, were the only regulars over 26. There was a lot of promise for the future with a young productive lineup that was already helping to win divisions.
What happened? Horner is still one of the only third basemen to play a huge amount of games at 3B before 26 and play fewer than that after turning 26; he's only 5 years older than Roger Clemens, but that's kinda hard to remember. Ramirez sustained his level of hitting for another year but then started striking out quite a bit more; it seems he had enough speed that he benefited by making a lot of contact, but with worse plate discipline came less contact, and he faded pretty quickly. He lasted with the Astros until 1992, showing that the 'Stros have allowed awful hitters to play SS for quite some time (Adam Everett, I choose you.) In contrast to Ramirez, Bruce Benedict had great plate discipline, but that's about it, and his barely-enough-to-survive hitting stopped being barely enough. 2B Glenn Hubbard, born on an AFB in West Germany, was a souped-up version of Ramirez, with a better overall hitting profile and well-known defense; he didn't have the speed, but he could punch a double and take a walk, and with good defense at 2B, that's a winning player. He was done by 1989, but he was a useful player for sure, and the beard and the card with the python on it are just icing on the nostalgia cake.
Claudell Washington, one of the "oldies" at 27, was an odd free agent signing to begin with (at least for what was considered a big salary at the time), but he had been reasonably productive in the majors since 19, so it's not necessarily a bad gamble to take on a guy like him. He actually had his best years with Atlanta, a nice combination of speed and power, but he was pretty much a left-handed poor man's Reggie Sanders, and those players are only useful when you have some studs in your lineup. Those would have been Murphy and Horner had one of these not tanked early...it also didn't help that young CF Brett Butler was traded as part of the package for Len Barker. Butler was one of those players that people thought he wouldn't succeed, but he did, and he could have done it for the Braves for a long time.
As for the other two on the team of note/requested posting...Pascual Perez, the eldest of the Pascual/Melido/Carlos Perez trio, didn't have a year in 1982 that screamed "I'll be good" (he was a PTBNL for Larry McWilliams, after all...not a hearty endorsement), but he went 29-16 over the next two seasons. His control completely deserted him in '85, however (51 walks in '83 and '84, but 57 in '85 in half the innings); he went 1-13 and his flamboyant character (which was abundant; he was nothing like the professional clean image of the '90s Braves, Halle Berry and l'affairs Chipper aside) wasn't enough.
And now we come to a completely different player, one who didn't fade out early - Gene Garber. Garber had a somewhat quirky career path. He was in the 20th round of the first-ever amateur draft of 1965, came up for some cups of coffee with the team that drafted him (the Pirates), was traded straight-up to the Royals for Jim Rooker after the '72 season (highly lopsided for the Pirates; Rooker came out of almost nowhere to win 67 games over the next 5 years - couldn't have been anticipated), and went from a fringe reliever in Kansas City to a powerhouse in Philadelphia, part of a sterling bullpen trio of himself, Ron Reed, and Tug McGraw that each saved a fair amount of games. Traded to Atlanta for the immortal Dick Ruthven (who was at least reliable in '80 for the Phils, which is all anyone cares about looking back), Garber was the immediate closer in Atlanta, but with bizarre results. After a 2.53 ERA as closer in '78, he had a 4.33 in '79, saving 25 games but with a 6-16 record, second in the league in losses as a reliever, which I'm guessing never happened before or since. This got him removed from the closer spot for two years, but in 1982 there weren't that many good options, and Torre putting Garber back as the closer worked like a charm; he went 8-10 but saved 30 games off a 2.34 ERA. By this time, he was 34, and his aging plus the Bruce Sutter signing meant that his career was going to matter less, but it was a slick move by Torre. Think about it - when closers have the S on their cape, they're fine until they lose it, after which they have a hard time finding someone to give it back to them. This was not Garber's path, and it worked very well for him and the Braves.
According to Wikipedia, he now raises emus. I don't know what all the young flameouts are doing, but at least it's something. Can we make an emu the Braves' mascot? We could name it Gene...
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Stuff like this bothers me
In ESPN's pregame writeup of the Yankees-Royals game (Ian Kennedy was a last-minute scratch), they were talking about the various Yankee injuries, including Jorge Posada's shoulder that forces backup Jose Molina into action. In that writeup, Joe Girardi said something entirely unnecessary and probably false:
"Jose is an accomplished catcher," Girardi said. "That's why he's here. You can live with Jose."
http://www.baseball-reference.com/m/molinjo01.shtml
Perhaps Joe is confusing Jose with his brothers. Jose has played 407 major league games, with a .243/.279/.346 line. His most similar batters are John Marzano, Wiki Gonzalez, and his brother Yadier, according to B-R, although by adjusted OPS Yadier is better than Jose. Yes, better. I'll say it again: Yadier Molina is a better hitter than his "accomplished" catcher-brother Jose. For all catchers currently in the bigs with at least 400 career games, Jose's adjusted OPS is 36th of 40, just ahead of Gary Bennett, Paul Bako, Chad Moeller, and Alberto Castillo.
I only say all this to say: I hate when managers overhype mediocre players because they're their players. I have no idea about living with Jose, but he's not accomplished by any stretch of the imagination. Optimism is a fine thing in a manager, but saying stupid stuff is just...stupid.
When I went to the MLB winter meetings, I passed by Joe Girardi, in a passageway; we were about a foot apart. Despite my Yankee hatred, I played the Christian and didn't say anything that was on my mind. Maybe I could at least have said, "hey, catchers with OPS+ of 64 aren't accomplished, buddy." Probably wouldn't have registered with him, though...
Then again, Girardi's career numbers aren't that much better. Maybe if he feels accomplished, he has to say it about Jose too. Managerial dishonesty when it's that stupid is just inexcusable.
Probably writing this many words about it is inexcusable, too. Thus will I close the e-mouth of the blogosphere.
:-x
Bullpen Watch - Soriano's Elbow a Concern?
"Soriano had soreness in his elbow after pitching on Saturday and Sunday, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. "I'm just not taking any chances," manager Bobby Cox said about not making him available for Monday's game.
Spin: It was previously reported that the Braves were giving him the day off, but the report of elbow soreness is new and a concern after he missed time in spring training due to the same problem. While the ailment is likely minor, it's something to watch closely."
Avenging Southworth
If the Braves are 21 games over .500 at any point this year, the franchise will have achieved a milestone: it will have a .500 record over the course of history, the first time it would be true since June 3, 1923, with the 17-25 Braves charting their usual course in doom. This would be a stunning turnaround for a franchise that hasn't seen much glory outside our lifetimes.
From 1876, the Boston Red Stockings (later the Beaneaters, but tragically not the Gashavers) were one of the best organizations in baseball. Led by Harry Wright, the guy behind the Cincinnati Red Stockings (a theme, perhaps?) and professional baseball in general, they started off pretty well, tailed off, and roared back in the '80s and '90s, winning as much as the famed Hanlon/McGraw/Jennings law offices/Baltimore Orioles but not as loudly. Coming into the 20th century the franchise had a winning percentage of .585 - not shabby at all.
Then they stopped winning. The American League shook a lot of things up, but the American League entry in Boston (then the Pilgrims - the Sox wouldn't become the Sox until the NL club went under new ownership and ditched red to be the Doves after team owner John Dovey; the AL club took up the red immediately and never gave it back) didn't take a lot from their city rivals. What was more likely the problem was that Hall of Famer Frank Selee took his amazing scouting and managerial talent out of Boston and into Chicago, where he molded the Orphans/Cubs into winners and handed them over to Frank Chance for assembly-line pennant-winning. The Beaneaters won 102 in 1898 and lost 102 in 1906. Two of the merged teams of the era, the Giants who had inherited from the Orioles, and the Pirates pretty much buying the old Louisville team, combined with the Cubs to win every pennant in the NL from 1901 to 1913. It was a bad time to be a not-them fan.
When the Federal League came along and shook things up just like the American League had, things changed particularly in the NL, and so we get the Miracle Braves. Going into 1914, the franchise winning percentage was .506, a far cry from the .585 at the start of the century but still respectable. Three years of contention staved off the loser label, but the Braves couldn't keep up the winning and sank back into the muck.
On June 3, 1923, the Braves stood 3084-3084 as a franchise. They haven't seen .500 since.
It's hard to understand from our perspective, but the histories of the Braves and Phillies looked remarkably similar up until the '90s. From 1920 to 1950, the Braves finished next-to-last or last 14 times, the Phillies 22 times. Both changed their names in the FDR administration and changed them back in the mid-'40s. (Braves became Bees, Phillies became Blue Jays. No, really.) Both had their seasons of glory bunched with each other's for awhile - until Milwaukee, the Braves only showed up in the World Series in 1914 and 1948; the Phils were in 1915 and 1950. By 1990, the stats read:
Braves: 6 years in the playoffs, 4 World Series, 2 World Championships
Phillies: 8 years in the playoffs, 4 World Series, 1 World Championship
The Braves having won a lot in Milwaukee took a lot of Phillies-type phutility off the team image, but in terms of ultimate results the Braves hadn't done much better than the Phillies.
Until 1991.
Say what you will about only getting 1 Series ring from the Cox era, but more than anything the Braves were redefined as a team in history by winning with ridiculous consistency in the '90s. They could have continued to be in the Cubs/Phillies mold of losers (Cubs lovable, Phillies not so much) like they had been for most of their history, but two decades of winning can change a lot.
If the Braves can get to .500 for the first time in 85 years, that would just put a ! on it. Billy Southworth was an outfielder on that 1923 team and their best hitter; he would later guide the Braves to their 1948 pennant. A 92-70 record this year would say to history that brave Southworth shall not have been mortally wounded in vain.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
We've done it. We have Rick Rolled the Mets
Instead of declaring Astley the winner, the team will hold a live, run-off vote.
Tomorrow, during the eighth inning, they’ll play Never Gonna Give You Up, followed by Living on a Prayer on Wednesday, I’m a Believer on Thursday, Movin’ Out on Friday, Sweet Caroline on Saturday and Build Me Up Buttercup on Sunday.
…i actually like this solution…instead of just ignoring the FARK.com results, which are very real, Rick Astley and their efforts are recognized…however, as it was explained to me by the team, knowing full well that only a small, small percentage of those 5 million votes came from actual Mets fans, by playing the top six songs at Shea, the team can now gauge how their own, real fan base takes to each tune based on audience participation, which will ultimately determine the stadium’s new sing-a-long song…
…the funniest part about this entire thing is that, i never, in a million years, thought i would dedicate this much time and space to Rick Astley on MetsBlog.com…and i laugh every time i write his name…well played, FARK…well played, indeed…this may be one of the biggest Rickrolls ever…
Johnson's return to lineup pushes "El Matadore" Martin back to utility role
Hey
Glad to be part of the coup, everybody. From what I understand, my job here is to go all historically nerdy with Braves stuff, which I hope to do with aplomb. I'm all right with stats (I managed to sneak some statistical analyses through to Baseball Prospectus - smoke and mirrors, all), but I have more fun with the history of the game, so the PECOTA you'll hear about is less the BP projection system as it is Bill the utility player of glory. My best friend being an obsessive Braves fan should also help out. (You know you've got a good friend when you can give them an autographed Rafael Belliard card for birthday and they like it...)
In the next few weeks, I'll be doing a series for THT on early flameouts in the big leagues, those who played a lot of games before they turned 26 and then less than that afterward. There are a few Braves on the list, like Bob Horner and Max West, so I'm likely to write about them soon. If there's any Brave of yore (or even better, from the short-lived Boston Bees) you want me to write about, just send me an e-mail and more likely than not you'll get a blog entry on him.
And just to start off the Holy Fountain of Puns that shall flow forth freely from these frenzied fingers:
I'll take the Wally Berger with extra cheese and a salad with Brutons.
Frank Wren to Jon Rauch - "Can you hear me now?"
These post game wrap ups are going to start writing themselves pretty soon. I am going to just copy and past the following into each one of the posts.
"The bullpen once again wasted a quality start from the starting pitcher."
Last night was no exception. Following a stellar effort by Glavine (you can't expect much more than 6 1/3 shutout innings from a 42 year old) the bullpen once again managed to serve up a fat pitch to the best hitter in the opponents line up.
This is becoming a disturbing trend. I know I urged everyone to step off of the ledge just a few days ago but since then Soriano tried to blow a save on Sunday before being rescued by a tremendous defensive play from Tex and Blaine Boyer failed to protect a 1-0 lead in the 8th last night. It is really not the fact the Boyer blew the lead that is most concerning but the way in which he did it. After giving up a well hit double to Troy Tulowitski Boyer grooved a low 90's fastball down the center of the plate. With Holliday being the "professional hitter of leisure" that he is he punished the ball over the CF wall. Hitters like Holliday ARE going to make you pay when you serve one up on a platter.
If the poor bullpen play continues over the course of the next 7-10 games it might still be too early to jump off of a ledge but it will be time to start taking the elevator to the top floor.
I know many Braves' fans are relying on the return of Mike Gonzalez to bolster the pen but it would be a mistake to solely rely on someone returning from TJ surgery to ensure the team is able to make a playoff run.
However, Jon Rauch of the Nats would be the perfect fit for this bullpen. Checking in a 6'11" tall and 260 lbs he could also play part time for the Hawks. All kidding aside, as seen below Rauch is available and his 98+ mph heater could do wonders for the 8th innings of the future.
Tim Dierkes, over at MLB Trade Rumors, informs us that Rauch is not the only reliever on the market. Just this past week Dierkes outlined a cacophany of "available" relievers who could step in and help the pen immediately. You can find the article here but I will provide Dierkes' list of available bodies below.
Jon Rauch and Luis Ayala of the Nationals. As I've written, Rauch is the one to chase. John Perrotto says the Tigers have "strong interest" in him. But with Chad Cordero in questionable health, will Jim Bowden weaken his pen in the short term?
Ron Mahay and Yasuhiko Yabuta of the Royals. Neither free agent signee will be traded anytime soon. But the Royals' pen might have the depth to overcome the loss of one of them in July, and desperate teams always overpay for relievers near the deadline. Something to monitor later in the season.
Kevin Gregg of the Marlins. Gregg had his ERA wrecked early by a bad appearance at the tail end of a blowout at the hands of the Mets. He's affordable, decent, and even comes with the closer tag.
Joaquin Benoit of the Rangers. He's signed through '09 and was quietly solid last year.
Mike Wuertz of the Cubs. It's been said that the Cubs would only include Wuertz in a major deal. Maybe so, but he's pretty far down on the depth chart given his abilities.
Brad Hennessey, Tyler Walker of the Giants. Hennessey is a pitch-to-contact type who's given up an astounding 12 hits in three innings so far. He's not exactly at peak value.
Alan Embree, Huston Street of the A's. Billy Beane is expected to extract a huge bounty for Street later this summer if he does trade him. Street's allowed runs in his first three appearances though.
Chad Bradford, Jamie Walker, George Sherrill of the Orioles. Right now the O's are just enjoying first place. In a couple of months they might have the best trove of available relievers.
Brian Fuentes of the Rockies. They can't spare him.
Damaso Marte, John Grabow of the Pirates. Marte's last appearance was encouraging; he'll have to continue building up value.
Jose Valverde, Doug Brocail of the Astros. Richard Justice wonders whether Drayton McLane could order a roster teardown if things are looking bleak a few months from now. Valverde could fetch a couple of quality prospects.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Please Welcome our Newest Contributor
Big news everyone, we would like to introduce to you our newest contributor and the biggest coup so far for S&S.
His name is Brandon Isleib and he is one of the finest baseball historians in the Southeast and dare I say the country. . . at least for his age demographic.
You can find his work on the Hard Ball Times as he is one of their feature columnists.
Of particular interest are the following articles from the Young Mr. Isleib
The Flukes that Flopped - The Agonizing Life of a Brief Contender
Sir Bert the Obscure - How a HOF case became a popularity contest
The B-Squad of the A-Team - Could the worst All Stars of a particular year beat that year's best team?
Peavy - "My Hands are Clean" - Baseball History "Meh . . .big deal"
"There's no way you could have a foreign substance on your hand that's black. I don't know what you could put on your hand. My whole hand was covered, the picture I saw. Wouldn't that come off on a ball? How could you throw a ball with pine tar on your hand?"
The best take the situation we have come across so far comes from GasLampBall.com
"See, to me... the spitter is like a lost dark art. It's against the rules to be sure, but if it were really such a terrible thing, they wouldn't have grandfathered in all of the guys who openly threw spitters after the pitch was banned. And even now, it lives on in the hearts of slightly evil pitchers. Jake Peavy harnessing the unholy powers of hell to do the holy work of defeating the Dodgers. He's like Ghostrider or Hellblazer or Spawn or something.
Carry on, young Jake! Work your dastardly magic!"
Bill Doak
Phil Douglas
Dana Fillingim
Ray Fisher
Marv Goodwin
Burleigh Grimes
Clarence Mitchell
Dick Rudolph
Doc Ayers
Ray Caldwell
Stan Coveleski
Red Faber
Dutch Leonard
Jack Quinn
Allan Russell
Urban Shocker
Allen Sothoron
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Smoltz outduels Johan, Tex saves the day - Braves win 3-1
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Pen Rested, Offense Smoking, Braves Look to Steam Roll Mets - Again.
NYM: LHP Johan Santana (1-0, 2.57 ERA)Santana was in control throughout his Mets debut against the Marlins on Monday. If not for a two-run home run by Josh Willingham, he would have escaped unscathed. As it was, he allowed three hits and two walks and struck out eight in seven innings. But the Marlins' batting order and that of the Braves bear little resemblance. Santana threw 100 pitches and fatigue didn't appear to be an issue.
Tidbits
Help Rick Roll the Mets !!!
Do you want to help?
The New York Mets are allowing people to vote for what sing-a-long song they will play during the eighth inning of their final season at Shea Stadium.
They did not include Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up" as an option, but they included an "Other:" field for people to suggest a different song.
What to do
Go to the Fan Forum: 8th Inning Sing-A-Long Vote page and enter: Never Gonna Give You Up - Rick Astley
Friday, April 4, 2008
Blessing in Disguise
The Braves' bullpen caught a break tonight and received some much needed rest as a result of severe thunderstorms in the Atlanta area. Atlanta is fresh off a three game series in which a club record for number of pitchers used was broken. Tonight's games has been rescheduled as a part of a doubleheader on May 20th. More on this here.
Braves solve Hampton's Injury Woes
Braves-Mets Preview
The Braves open an early and important series with the Mets tonight and are looking to bounce back from a rough 1-3 start with the losses coming against the Nationals and Pirates (that is just painful to type).
4/5 Mike Pelfrey (0-0)
4/6 Johan Santana (1-0)
The following are two stories regarding tonight's starters from mlb.com.
Hudson to take on Met's in opener
Maine tries to duplicate Spring Success
As well as an article outlining the importance of the series and the ramifications of the NL East standings that always follow when the Braves and Mets meet on the field.
NL East rivals early meeting will set tone
3 Deep Breaths - Rumors of the Braves' Demise Have Been Greatly Exagerated
- Texeira will not bat .105 all season. It's only been 4 games, cut the guy some slack. If he's still batting below .250 at the end of the month I will start to be concerned.
- The Braves are 0-3 in one run games. This is another trend that will not continue for two reasons. First, we will not see 120+ 1 run games (current pace) and second, the bullpen though not spectacular has not been as bad as it seems.
- The Bullpen - Right now the bullpen is exhausted. We have multiple pitchers who have pitched 3 days in a row. Once the pen gets on a regular schedule and gets consistent roles AND REST things will settle down.
- Chuck James will likely join the rotation soon. While he is not a top tier pitcher he can provide the team with close to 200 innings which should help the bullpen significantly.
- James has won 11 games each of the past 2 seasons. There's no reason to think that he can't do so again.
Now that I've reassured everyone here are a list of concerns that I have after the first 4 games
- The SP's have to pitch more than 5 innings. Through the first 4 games only Huddy has made it out of the 6th inning. With Smoltzie and Tommy being 40+ and Jair a rookie one would have to think we are going to see a lot of 5/6 inning starts.
- Why are we carrying 3 catchers? Either Corky or Pena needs to be sent down as Bobby needs an extra arm in the pen until the roles get settled and everyone is back on their regular pitching schedule
- Kelly Johnson's knee- I'm concerned that this injury will linger all season and force him to change his game. KJ will likely be less aggressive on the base paths as he attempts to stay healthy and in the line up. It will not be surprising at all to see a platoon develop with KJ and Prado. Mark Bowman's latest article on MLB.com (found here) suggests than KJ would be willing to go on the DL now if it will prevent him from missing a significant amount of games throughout the season. Here's the problem - KJ's knee has been hurting for over a year. If an entire winter was not enough to make the pain go away how will a two week stint on the DL relieve the pain?
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Hampton Injured - Least Shocking News of the Millenium
You just can't make something like this up because it just would not be believable given the past 3 + years of Hampton's medical history, so I will give you the news exactly as it was presented during the TV telecast. "Mike Hampton injured his left pectoral muscle while warming up just 10 minutes before the opening pitch." Seriously? What does this guy have to do to get the baseball gods to smile upon him? Hopefully the injury is as minor as the groin pull Hampton suffered during spring training. If that is the case then Hampton likely would not miss his next start. Let's be real honest though . . . does anyone expect the Hampton will pitch more than 30 or 40 innings before suffering yet another injury?
I almost posted around 3 this afternoon that Hampton had fallen out of the hot tub and injured his pitching hand but I held off as I thought I would wait and post a "feel good" story about Hampton's comeback from injury. I should have followed my first instinct.
"They've Got That Swag Back"
PIT: LHP Zach Duke (0-0, -.-- ERA) Coming off a disappointing season, Duke impressed by going 2-1 with a 3.32 ERA in five Spring Training appearances. The 24-year-old southpaw allowed four earned runs in 5 2/3 innings during his only start against the Braves last year.
Tidbits- Hampton had some success during Spring Training with a curveball similar to the one he had early in his career. ... According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Braves manager Bobby Cox managed in his 50th different stadium during Sunday night's season opener at new Nationals Park. He is the first skipper to reach that mark since the 1800s. The Braves dropped the first two games of the season for the for the first time since the 2003 season, during which they ended up winning 101 games.
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Spring Roundup
- Kodi Burns shined by starting by going 13/16 for around 200 yards; Burns' first incompletion came on his 12th pass attempt during which he was under heavy pressure from Sen'Derrick Marks.
- Kodi Burns was impressive on the ground with a number of 5+ yard runs and a handful of 10+ coming mostly from fake handoffs in the shotgun.
- Burns' struck WR James Swinton for a 11yd touchdown which was the first score of the scrimmage.
- Burns' third completion went to WR Montez Billings who subsequently turned the ball over by fumbling.
- Burns' longest pass of the day came on a 50 yard pass to WR Chris Slaughter.
- Throughout the scrimmage, Burns was on the field as a part of two touchdowns for the Tigers.
- Chris Todd finished the scrimmage with 10 completions on 18 attempts for a total of about 141 yards; Theoretically, Todd should have been 12/18 in that two well thrown balls were dropped by WR Terrell Zachery and Charles Olatunji.
- Todd's longest pass of the day came on a 10 yard strike to WR Rod Smith who went on to race 55 yards to the 6 yard line.
- Todd was at the helm for one touchdown and one fieldgoal for the Tigers.
- Neil Caudle had a less than stellar start bythrowing three straight incomplettions, one of which was intercepted by DB Zac Etheridge with a 19 yard return and another was nearly intercepted by DB Ryan Williams.
- A positive note on Caudle came with a well thrown ball to WR Terrell Zachery for a 52 yard touchdown.
- The only time during the entire scrimmage in which Auburn went under center occured with Caudle at quaterback. The formation vas very "Wing-T like" which was as surprising for me to see it as it probably is for you to hear it. The tigers proceded to run two running plays out of the formation for short gains on both.
Wide Receivers
- Chris Slaughter led receivers with the most receptions (5) and with his route running ability, it will be a necessity to get Slaughter on the field and the ball to him.
- Rod Smith had the most yards receiving (9o), one of which was a 25 yard reception with a skillfull run at the end of the play
- Chris Slaughter 5 (68yds)
- James Swinton 4 (36yds)
- Quindarius Carr 2 (41yds)
- Tommy Trott 2 (35yds)
- Rod Smith 2 (90yds)
- John Cubelic 2 (32yds)
- Terrell Zachery 2 (83yds)
- John Cubelic 2 (32yds)
- Vincent Cook 1 (9yds)
- Tristan Davis 1 (13yds)
- Brad Lester 1 (5yds)
Running Backs
- All but two of Auburns running plays came from the shotgun. With the majority of those being draw plays.
- RB Ben Tate showed that he is fast enough for the spread offense with a number of quick scampers. Tate can still pound the ball as indicated by a hard collision with DB Walter McFadden on his way to a touchdown run inside of the 10 yard line.
- The longest rush of the day came from a 69 yard touchdown scoring run from RD Tristan Davis. Davis showed signs of returning to form with some of the quickness that he diplayed in 2006 against Kentucky.
- Walk on RB Anthony Jemison may never be a big contributor for Auburn during his tenure, but the Sophomore showed alot of fight in refusing to go down on a collection of rushes.
OTHER NOTES:
- Wes Byrum connected on field goals of 53 and 39 yards, while missing one at a distance of 41 yards.
- Chris Todd was under center for the first series which went three and out with a 5 yard pass to Tommy Trott and two run plays out of the shotgun.
- The third series for Kodi Burns consisted of three straight run plays.
- Auburn lined up in the shotgun formation once inside the 10 yard line with Todd and again at the 2 yard line with Caudle. Both plays resulted in a tackle in the backfield and a loss of yards. It will be interesting to see the route that Auburn goes with in these type situations once the Fall comes around.
- LB Josh Bynes was in on a number of plays on defense and it was apparent from the few blitzes he was involved in that he will be a very special player one day.
- LB Chris Evans was involved in a number of big hits with the hardest coming against a run play from under center.
- DB Jerraud Powers and Michael McNeil were in on a few key pass breakups and continued their consistent play in pass covereage as they have for the majority of spring practice.
- The most intriguing play of the day occured with Kodi Burns in the shotgun with an empty backfield and QB DeRon Furr in the slot position. The two motioned, switched roles and Furr ran a QB draw behind a block delivered by Burns on DB Jerraud Powers.
Jurrjens shines in ATL debut as Braves drop Hammer on Bucs 10-2
- Frenchy had a great at bat in the 2nd inning. After patiently working the count to 3-2 he sat kept his weight back on a change-up and drove the ball through the right side of the infield. Fantasy owners take note. If Frenchy can increase his walk rate (he almost doubled it from 2006 to 2007) and hit the ball the other way he could raise his avg to close to .300
- Of course just as I type the above note Frenchy jumps on the first pitch in the 6th and hits a week ground ball to the 3rd baseman. Still - it's nice to improvement.
- We say this every night at SNS but Escobar hits the ball from foul line to foul line. I see a batting title in his near future.
- Matt Diaz got contacts in the offseason to improve his depth perception. Though this was done for purposes of improving his defense one can't help but think it will also benefit his hitting.
- Brayan Pena rocks the double ear flapped batting helmet- that's a look that is tragically under utilized.
- Royce Ring is likely to be a situational lefty for the pen - hey, every team needs one. To all young lefties out there; if you can throw hard enough to break a pane of glass and can keep it in the strike zone you too can pitch in the league for a dozen years.
- Texeira hit a DEEP 408 ft HR to CF that would have left virtually every park in the league
- Yunel hit a 378 ft HR to left center. If he can continue to hit for power while maintaining his average the Braves have a chance to put a dynamic offense on the field for the next 150+ games. This would give them a significant advantage in October as teams win playoff games with power hitting and power pitching.