When the 2009 MLB season comes to a close, the Chicago Cubs have announced that they will shop starting pitcher Carlos Zambrano in hopes of swinging a trade and dumping much of his monstrous contract. The question is, should the Mets be interested in the massive right-hander?
Chicago Cubs
15 September 2009
1 April 2009
(Note: originally posted on February 25.)
Each year, prior to the start of the MLB season, I use a unique mathematical system (one that I will not get into, because it's boring) to project the performance of every player and team. This season, in lieu of their significant offseason additions, I expected the Yankees to come out on top. Surprisingly, my expectations were wrong...
Posted by John Frascella | No comments yet
3-Chicago Cubs: 1B-Derrek Lee, 2B-Aaron Miles, 3B-Aramis Ramirez, SS-Ryan Theriot, and C-Geovany Soto.
Posted by John Frascella | No comments yet
28 January 2009
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30 September 2008
With the MLB playoffs set to begin, there is a subtle difference in the air compared to start of any other postseason. In the NHL, fans can potentially look forward to a great Canadians/Bruins series that is not only exciting, but has a historical kick to it. Likewise basketball fans always have the chance to see if the Suns can finally get past the Spurs and football fans love seeing the rivalry of the Eagles Vs the City of Philadelphia when the Eagles so much as get tackled for a loss.
Posted by Karol Kudyba | No comments yet
16 September 2008
The Mets have lost two in a row and three out of four, and have watched their lead in the NL East shrink to just a half game over the Phillies. New York's 13 remaining games include three with the Nationals, three with the Braves, four with the Cubs and three with the Marlins. You can't put an exact number on how many games the Mets will need to win the rest of the way in order to make the playoffs--one more than the Phillies will suffice. Mike Pelfrey, Johan Santana and Oliver Perez, the Mets' three most dependable starters, will likely combine for eight starts down the stretch, with Pedro Martinez, Jon Niese and anyone's guess filling out the remaining five. New York will need strong, deep outings from their big three, and lots of offense in the other five games in order to avoid leaving their playoff hopes in the hands of the bullpen. Of course, a little help from Philadelphia's opponents couldn't hurt, but the Mets need to be able to take care of their own business. If they can't win enough games on their own to hold their divisional lead, then they don't deserve to play baseball in October anyway.
Continue reading "Mets Cling To First Place With Lucky 13 Games Left"
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15 September 2008
I apologize to those of you who have missed reading my blog over the last couple of weeks. But I'm back with a vengeance, and I'll be writing through October and into the hot stove off-season.
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3 September 2008
I'm sorry I haven't been on here rigorously for some time. Life has caught up with me so to speak. I got a job at the local office supply store, I'm back in school, and so it pains me that my love affair with the Chicago National League Ballclub has been almost on hold.
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28 August 2008
With two outs in the top of the eighth inning it looked like the Mets would leave Philadelphia last night with their collective tail between their legs. Brad Lidge, who still hasn't blown a save all season, was warming up in the Phillies' pen, and the New York offense had only mustered two runs and 12 hits in the previous 16.2 innings, going back to the fifth inning of Tuesday's game. But Carlos Delgado, who had homered in the sixth to cut Philly's lead to 3-2, sliced a liner over the left field fence to tie the game at three and spark the Mets's offense. Carlos Beltran followed with an infield hit, and stole second. With first base open, Brad Lidge walked Ryan Church intentionally, but Daniel Murphy made him pay, doubling down the right field line to bring home Beltran with the go-ahead run. The hit parade continued with Brian Schneider's flare to left, which put the icing on the cake. New York's four-run eighth inning clinched a two-game split in Philadelphia, and catapulted the Mets back into first place by a half game.
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27 August 2008
National League
Chicago Cubs (82-50), 1st place in NL Central: IN The Cubs currently have the best record in the majors, and the most balanced team in the NL, if not all of baseball. If Rich Harden stays healthy, the Brewers shouldn't be too big a threat to overtake the division lead.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | 1 comment
25 August 2008
The Mets blew leads of 3-0 and 4-3 on Sunday, and Pedro Feliciano gave up two solo bombs in the 10th inning to give New York their second straight loss against the Astros. Oliver Perez had just one rocky inning, allowing a sacrifice fly to Mark Loretta and a two-run homer to Hunter Pence in the fourth, but Aaron Heilman couldn't hold the one-run lead in the seventh. He allowed hits to both batters he faced, but was credited with recording an out when Fernando Tatis gunned Geoff Blum out at the plate in the seventh. The homers Feliciano allowed in the 10th came from two players who had combined for a total of three taters all season until their extra-inning blasts. You know you don't have your best stuff on a particular day when you give up a go-ahead home run to a defensive replacement (Brad Ausmus).
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | 1 comment
20 August 2008
The mystery of how Jerry Manuel will manage the bullpen was put on hold for a day, as Mike Pelfrey pitched his first career complete game Wednesday. Pelfrey didn't even seem to have his best stuff, but he worked economically throughout the game and kept his pitch count down. He only struck out three batters, mainly relying on aggressive Braves hitters putting the ball in play early in the count. The only blemish was the sixth inning, which still could have been much worse. Atlanta loaded the bases on a bunt single and two walks, but Pelfrey induced a double play grounder from Brian McCann, and he had a chance to escape with only one run allowed. But he bounced a wild pitch to the next batter and Yunel Escobar scored from third, before Mark Kotsay lined out to left to end the inning. Pelfrey settled down thereafter and cruised through the next three innings, retiring all nine batters on just 25 pitches.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | 1 comment
12 August 2008
Well, it's become quite obvious that the Mets desperately need to find someone else to close in Billy Wagner's absence. When Wagner had to miss a game against the Phillies three weeks ago with forearm stiffness, Duaner Sanchez dropped the ball. Since Wagner was placed on the DL last week, Heilman has been awful in two of his four ninth inning chances. In order to put an end to the bullpen's pattern of implosion, Jerry Manuel offered two other options after yesterday's game: Eddie Kunz and John Maine.
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11 August 2008
Since when is a four-run, seventh inning lead against a team 17.5 games out of first place not safe? Since the Mets' bullpen hit rock bottom.
The Mets' plan for Monday afternoon's makeup game against the Pirates was to get on top early and send Pittsburgh packing quickly. When David Wright knocked a three-run home run to right center in the first, and Pedro Martinez allowed only one run through six innings, the game seemed to be following how it was scripted. But then on came the New York bullpen.
Continue reading "Heilman Heads Up Another Bullpen Meltdown"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
5 August 2008
The Mets limped home from a disappointing 1-5 road trip with a slew of injuries. Marlon Anderson and John Maine were put on the DL over the weekend and Billy Wagner joined them today with a strained left forearm. Ramon Castro is still shaken up from the bizzare home plate collision on Saturday, and is listed as day-to-day with a sore ankle. Rather than make any external moves, the Mets have turned to their farm system for help. Although for the time being Jerry Manuel says he will use a bullpen by committee in the ninth inning, Eddie Kunz, the heir apparent to Billy Wagner, is on the major league squad and may get some looks in the closer role over the next two weeks while Wagner is out. Daniel Murphy, who was a third baseman in the minors but requested some work at second base and the outfield--a smart move, considering David Wright isn't going anywhere anytime soon--is getting the start in left field tonight agains the Padres. The Mets really love the way he hits, so he could be a fixture at the major league level for the remainder of the season and perhaps into the future. And rumor has it that the Mets are considering calling up Jon Niese to make a few starts in Maine's stead.
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29 July 2008
Monday night in Miami was an all-around bad experience for the Mets. John Maine cruised into the fifth inning with a 2-0 lead, and looked just fine to the naked eye. But after Maine missed with a 1-0 fastball to John Baker, Jerry Manuel, Dan Warthen and Ray Ramirez, the trainer, jogged out to the mound to consult with Maine. He appeared to say he was fine, and stayed in the game for the time being. But after his next pitch to Baker left the yard for a solo home run, and his 1-2 pitch to Marlins pitcher Ricky Nolasco chased Endy Chavez to the warning track to make the catch, Manuel and Warthen decided they had seen enough, and pulled Maine in favor of Carlos Muniz. Maine is listed as day-to-day with shoulder stiffness, and Warthen said he was most concerned that Maine might develop further injuries if he tried to compensate in his delivery to protect his shoulder. In all likelihood Maine will miss a start in order to rest his shoulder, and hopefully pitch again next week. After the game Manuel was adamant that Maine will not pitch through any pain.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
27 July 2008
When the bullpen blew the game after Santana's eight stellar innings on Tuesday, fans and media types alike griped that the ace should have finished the game. Saturday night's 14-inning marathon necessitated a long outing from Santana, and he answered the call, this time by pitching a complete game six-hitter, to put the exclamation point on the Mets' 9-1 win in the rubber game of the series against St. Louis. The lone blemish on his masterful performance was Albert Pujols' seventh inning solo home run, but as Aaron Heilman learned early Sunday morning, you sometimes just tip your cap when that man hits one out.
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26 July 2008
Neither the good nor the bad version of Oliver Perez showed up on Thursday at Shea--the spectacular version came to play against the Phillies. Perez struck out 12 batters over 7.2 innings, including six whiffs of Chase Utley and Ryan Howard, as he out-dueled Jamie Moyer, who pitched a gem of his own. Carlos Delgado came through with the big hit, a two-run double off the previously unhittable J.C. Romero, in the eighth, and Billy Wagner nailed down the win in the ninth with his 26th save. Fittingly, Jimmy Rollins, who did not start because he arrived an hour late to the ballpark, made the final out of the game. After Tuesday night's ninth inning meltdown, the bullpen tossed 4.1 scoreless innings, including back-to-back saves by Wagner, and the Mets took two of three from Philadelphia, despite losing the first game of the series. New York is now 9-4 against the Phillies this season.
Continue reading "Mets Continue to Roll Behind Delgado, ..."
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
22 July 2008
When the Mets traded for and signed Johan Santana in January, tonight's game was exactly what they had in mind. The ace will take the mound tonight at Shea to face the Phillies, who are tied with the Mets atop the National League East. Tonight would be a perfect situation for the type of start Mets fans are itching for out of Santana. Overall, despite his 3.10 ERA, Santana's season has been a disappointment to this point. His 8-7 record is mediocre, his strikeout rate is down, his batting average against is up, and his solid ERA is also misleading in that it does not reflect the grand slam he allowed to pitcher Felix Hernandez of the Mariners. Santana has only pitched into the eighth inning once this season, and Duaner Sanchez ultimately blew that game in the ninth. Tonight is an opportunity for Santana to turn his sub-par season around, and show Mets fans that he is worth his exhorbitant contract
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | 1 comment
18 July 2008
A few relatively minor items to cover with the moves made by a few teams recently. What might they mean in the second half? I’ll try and puzzle this out.
Tony Clark, who experienced a career resurgence the day he put on an Arizona Diamondbacks uniform back in 2005, hs returned to the cozy confines of Chase Field. Petco, where hitting a homer is as hard as hitting the lottery, wasn’t as kind to the aging Clark as Chase has been, so he’ll certainly improve on his 2008 line of .239/.374/.307. His 32:19 K:BB ratio, as well as hs 165-point difference between BA and OBP, will tell you his batting eye is fine, and some power should follow.
Posted by Street Reporter | 2 comments
15 July 2008
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One of the All-Star Break traditions: Reassessing our predictions from the first half of the season. Some of mine have changed, some have stayed the same—and some were just damn wrong. Living in the West, I will take the contrarian position and roll from west to east in my choices.
Posted by Street Reporter | 3 comments
13 July 2008
The other big trade that happened recently was the Cubs’ acquisition of the oft-injured Rich Harden from Oakland. This move is typical of Oakland’s business model, which involves shedding young stars before they get too expensive, often in exchange for other young or undervalued stars. In this way, they’re similar to the Florida Marlins, except that the Marlins tend to load up for concentrated runs at the championship (they have as many championships in the last decade as big-market Boston, and more than the Cubs have in the past hundred years), while the A’s tend towards consistent competitiveness.
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12 July 2008
Still playing ketchup here, trying to make up for a four-day absence from the blog, so I want to start with the big trade of last week, the CC Sabathia swap. The usefulness of this deal to the Brewers is a little dubious, as CC is likely to be a half-season rental, but let’s break it down:
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11 July 2008
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This time last week the Mets were 4.5 games behind Philadelphia entering their pivotal four-game series with the division leaders. After Johan Santana gave up a 2-0 lead and Duaner Sanchez allowed the winning run in the ninth, the horizon looked bleak for the orange and blue. However, since that devastating defeat, New York has racked up six straight wins and the Mets now find themselves just 1.5 games back of the Phillies in the NL East. During the winning streak the Mets have scored an average of seven runs per game while yielding only three per contest, including back-to-back shutouts of the Giants on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Continue reading "Mets Go For Seven Straight Tonight at Shea"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
10 July 2008
Another day brought another win for the Mets this afternoon, as they ran their season-high winning streak to six straight. Fernando Tatis snapped a 3-3 tie in the seventh inning with his fourth home run of the year, and his second go-ahead shot in the last five days. The bullpen was lights out for the third straight day and hasn't allowed a run since almost giving back a 10-1 lead on Monday in Philadelphia. The sweep of the Giants was the Mets' first such feat since they took three straight from Washington from April 15-17, unless you count the three-game series at Yankee Stadium that was started in May and finished in June. The Phillies rebounded from a 2-0 loss in St. Louis on Tuesday to beat the Cardinals in two straight, so the Mets are currently 1.5 games out of first place heading into a three-game series against Colorado this weekend.
Continue reading "Dust Off Your Brooms, Tatis Comes Through Again"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
9 July 2008
Sell high on these 3:
1) Rich Harden, SP, Chicago Cubs: It's only a matter of time before he lands on the DL again, which is exactly what Billy Beane was thinking when he dealt Harden yesterday. He's been lights out so far this year, but with his track record you're better off quitting while you're ahead.
Continue reading "Pelfrey and the Mets Finally Make It Easy"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
8 July 2008
"It's not a game, it's an arms race" - Kanye West and Fallout Boy belt this hook over and over again on a recent hit with that same title. In that context, Kanye and the Fallout Boy guys are referring to the battle of musical artists not only surviving in a competitive worldwide market, but one with hindrances around every music sharing online ripping program. While that's an issue for another day and another blogsite, it's relevance is crucial when talking about the current state of Major League baseball and the National Basketball Association.
Continue reading "From the NBA to MLB, the Arms Race Has Begun"
Posted by Anthony "The Moneyball" Moniello | No comments yet
7 July 2008
The Cubs wrapped up a key road trip on Sunday in St. Louis, and signs of an end to a slight June swoon may be developing. After winning the series with the arch rival Cardinals, a series that should have definitely been a sweep, the health of ballclub is rising.
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6 July 2008
Geovany Soto C – Chicago Cubs
Soto has shown that not only is he by far the best hitting Rookie Catcher since Mike Piazza, but a team leader as well. He catches for a club who has faced some adversity with the pitching staff, the arm troubles of ace Carlos Zambrano, the suddenly human Carlos Marmol, and the lefty without a command and a big league address, Rich Hill. But despite the strenuous measures that the Puerto Rican rookie has endured so far, his poise has kept him as a producer. He’s on pace for around 25 homers, 100 runs driven in and over 40 doubles. That is a stellar season for any catcher, not one of a 25 year old rookie.
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1 July 2008
Jim Hendry's is rumored to be going after C.C. Sabathia, A.J. Burnett and Coco Crisp. Those three potential tradable players are an interesting trio. Burnett has all but courted the Cubs himself, and Coco Crisp is a moveable piece in Boston with the ability to play centerfield on the North Side. But do we need another Kerry Woodesque, injury prone, has-been in Burnett? No. Do we still need a lefthanded centerfielder in Crisp? No, Edmonds has shown that there is still plenty of tread left on the tires. So with the recent arm trouble of the heart of the ballclub, Carlos Zambrano, there is no way we should not throw everything we have at Cleveland for pitcher C.C. Sabathia. Sabathia would be a huge acquisition for the boys in blue, and could be reminiscent of a trade that brought a certain someone from Cleveland in 1984 for Joe Carter. C.C has won the Cy Young, he's started games for the US National Team, he's won playoff games, and he's only turning 28 years old this month. He is a guy we can piece together with Zambrano, and finally give Z some protection. Lilly has been solid, but is he a cemented ace or #2 guy? No. Having Big Z and Big C.C. going back to back would be deadly. Carlos is the power throwing righty with the fierce demeanor, and C.C. is the cool, calm, competitive lefty that is as poised as anyone. It would be our own variant of Drysdale-Koufax, and Schilling-Johnson.
Posted by Michael Castillo | No comments yet
30 June 2008
All right. Are you ready for this? As the All-Star break approaches, the Tampa Bay Rays have the best record in baseball. That’s right. At 49-32, they’re a half-game ahead of Boston, the Cubs, and Anaheim. Whoa. Is this one of the signs of the apocalypse?
Posted by Street Reporter | 5 comments
24 June 2008
How about that Jim Edmonds? Jimmy Ballgame. Jimmy Baseball. The Man, the Myth, the rival swapping Legend that is Jim Patrick Edmonds. Just a mere nine months ago he was a villain, walking through the halls of the nemesis kingdom that is St. Louis. I find it hard to believe that we've adopted him as our own, but I'm at peace with it, and you should be too.
Posted by Michael Castillo | No comments yet
12 June 2008
Two huge injury developments last night--one to one of the best all-around hitters in the game, and the other to an outfielder who's been red-hot the past few weeks. Both injuries should have big implications to their teams, one likely more than the other, and to the NL Central.
Posted by Street Reporter | 1 comment
11 June 2008
One of my other writing gigs is at The Asian Reporter, where I write reviews, features, and a monthly column on Asian-American sports issues. Each spring, I write a preview about the prominent Asian major leauge baseball players, and that preview has grown considerably. This past year, I gave up trying to chronicle all of the probable Asian players and concentrated on the most prominent ones instead.
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21 May 2008
HOUSTON DEFEATS CUBS 5-3 ON A CARLOS LEE HOME RUN AS HOUSTON TAKES SERIES
After the Cubs went 8-2 on their latest home stand which made their record at home 19-8, it seems as if they forgot how to play anywhere else. After losing to the Astros 5-3 and losing the series, the Cubs find themselves 9-11 away from the friendly Confines. If a team wants to find themselves in the post-season, they need to win the big games on the road. In a series that had playoff atmosphere, both teams were out to make statements. The Astros were louder than the Cubs according to Shawn Chaccon, who got the decision in the victory. "One message the Cubs might get out of it is, 'We're here. We're here to compete. We're going to battle,'" Chacon said. "'It's not the team it was last year. Basically, it's going to be a tough team to beat the whole year.'"
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
8 May 2008
The Reds went all homer-happy over the Cubs last night, and Edinson Volquez twirled a gem on the mound, leading the Reds commentators and Steve Phillips on ESPN to go all gushy on them, proclaiming the future is now and they're gonna take the NL Central. Is this the case?
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6 May 2008
Continue reading "Cubs lose 5-3 after having bases-loaded with 1 out"
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4 May 2008
After the Cubs had one of their best records in April in 1969, the start of May is starting to resemble the collapse towards of the season in 1969. In one their toughest weeks this season, nothing looked pretty as the Cubs just won two out six against there NL Central rivals the Brewers and the Cardinals. In a week that could have seperated them from everyone else in the divison, the Cubs are now looking up towards the Cardinals who now have a 1 1/2 lead over the Cubs. Lets quickly recap this horrible week the Cubs have endured.
Continue reading "Rough Week for Cubs spells Rough Road Ahead"
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
1 May 2008
For many baseball fans, last night wasn't a great night to watch baseball, as blowouts predominated early on. But, because of the beautiful game that is baseball, only three of them continued in their lopsided fashion, with the best of them highlighted by a homer from Micah Owings, the best-hitting pitcher in baseball, whom teammate Conor Jackson said had the "best pop" of anyone on the team. And all of them showed something about the winning and losing teams, proving that any baseball game is worth watching, even when it doesn't seem exciting.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
31 March 2008
Hard to know what to make of the flurry of predictions regarding the fortunes of the Boston Red Sox and all of the other teams which make up Major League Baseball. The predictions right here on this site are sort of mixed. You get a self-proclaimed Boston hater (all sports) predicting that the Sox won't even make the playoffs, which even on the face of it seems a little ridiculous. Even I wouldn't count the Yankees out. This guy figures the Yankees to win it all, beating the Indians, Mariners and then the D-Backs. Yeah, well good luck with that.
Posted by Skip Maloney | 1 comment
19 March 2008
Chicago Cubs
Can Kerry Wood stay healthy in the bullpen?
After watching Wood miss significant time due to injuries each of the last four seasons, it seems obvious that he is not going to make it as a full time starter and stay healthy. So now the Cubs are attempting to move him to the bullpen in an attempt to get a full season out of him. When he has been healthy, he is nothing short of dominant and pitching only one inning at a time, he should really be able to let it fly. So far in Spring Training the initial reports look good.
Posted by Joe Sauer | No comments yet
1 March 2008
Chicago Cubs pitcher Jason Marquis is competing for the final two spots in the starting rotation. If he does not make the rotation, he would probably end up in bullpen. In his first start during spring training he went 2 innings, gave up 2 runs, both earned, along with 3 hits. However, it wasn't his arm that hurt his chances of winning a spot in the rotation. Rather it was his mouth. Jason Marquis does not feel he should be competing for a starting job. He said he signed as a Cub because he thought he would be guaranteed a starter every year. "That's my ultimate goal, that's how I think I help the team the most. Obviously, we'll see what happens when it's time for them to make their decision," Marquis told reporters. Marquis was asked how he would feel if he did not make the rotation and ended up in the bullpen. he replied, " As much as I want to be here in Chicago, and I love it, I love the fans and the stadium, I also have a family to worry about, too. I could take my services elsewhere if that's the case, and I could help another team in that capacity as a starter. My value doesn't lie in the bullpen in my mind."
Continue reading "To Start or To Not to Start: Marquis Sounds off"
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
27 February 2008
As the Cubs open up their first spring training game on Thursday against the San Francisco Giants, there are three stories we should look at while this game is going on. These will also be the stories throughout spring training.
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
25 February 2008
If you are reading this title, your heart probably sank and it has shattered all the chances of the Cubs making it to the World Series. Put away those tissues and turn that frown around because good old Zambrano is not hurt, but in perfect health. But will he stay that way? Below, I have posted my top ten predictions on what will happen during the Cubs season. If any of these do happen you wish would not happen, please do no send me hate mail. Enjoy!
Posted by Ryan Neiman | 2 comments
After having 120 different lineups last season, Sweet Lou Piniella wants to find the right combination during spring training. His latest idea is probably one of the best he has came up with since juggling everyone around. Lou suggested Fukudome would bat third, followed by Lee and Ramirez. The whole lineup would probably look like this: Soriano, Theirot, Fukudome, Lee, Ramirez, Derosa, Soto, and Pie. It is a great combination of speed at the top and power in the middle. "I've been thinking about our lineup and what makes sense and what we can try," Piniella said Friday. "Let me warn you, it's only Feb. 22, so there's plenty of time to adjust this thing."
Continue reading "POTENTIAL 3,4,5 HITTERS: FUKUDOME, LEE, RAMIREZ"
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
19 February 2008
WILD CARD
San Diego Padres
PLAYOFF PICTURE
NLDS
Chicago Cubs defeat Colorado
Mets defeat Padres
ALDS
Cleveland defeats Boston
Detroit defats Angels
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet
18 February 2008
Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet

