MLB Hotstove 08

If I was Sabean, I'd be looking to make trades for Scott Rolen and Richie Sexson.

I wouldn't touch either of those guys with a ten foot pole. Expensive, injury-prone, or just plain mediocre.

Rumor has it that the Giants are interested in oft-injured former Angels IF Dallas MacPherson. Now that's a better kind of risk, assuming his back is sound and his agent, Scott Boras, doesn't ask for some ridiculous amount of money.
 
Ha! I'm ready.....although I am a Yankee fan first. That said, the NL West has the potential to be incredible.

That is refreshing actually. Most Yankee fans seem to be in a hurry to explain why baseball west of the Hudson is fundamentally irrelevant.

You're right. The Beltre experience was kind of frustrating though, what with him peaking in his walk year and then becoming too expensive.

He probably doesn't look too expensive now, does he? The biggest obstacle to re-signing Beltre wasn't the salary so much as the number of years he wanted. Five years is risky enough, but seven is a real crapshoot.
 
That is refreshing actually. Most Yankee fans seem to be in a hurry to explain why baseball west of the Hudson is fundamentally irrelevant.

Thanks. I've noticed the same thing with some of the more. . . outspoken Yankee fans. Baseball is, at its heart, a beautiful game, whether played by men in pinstripes or red socks or Dodger Blue or even purple. That's what I love about it--it's timeless, and gorgeous to watch.
 
Dodgers sign catcher named in Mitchell Report

With one-year deal for Bennett, they become first team to contract with player mentioned in Mitchell inquiry. He admits to HGH use but says it was to recover from injury, same as Pettitte's admission.

The Dodgers became the first team to sign a player named in former Sen. George Mitchell's report on performance-enhancing drugs since it was released last week, as backup catcher Gary Bennett on Monday agreed to a one-year contract with an option for a second season.

Bennett admitted to using human growth hormone, but like Andy Pettitte and Fernando Vina, who were also included in Mitchell's report, he said he did so only to recover from an injury.

Dodgers General Manager Ned Colletti said that the explanation Bennett gave him Friday convinced him that he was a one-time user and alleviated any concerns he had of awarding him a contract that will pay him $825,000 next season. Bennett's deal has a 2009 team option for $825,000 that can be bought out for $50,000.

Dodgers owner Frank McCourt hinted Sunday that such a signing could be on the horizon, saying, "I'd be more inclined to sign a player that may have been in the report but has explained his conduct and who we're convinced isn't doing anything right now than somebody who there's a great deal of suspicion about but whose name wasn't in the report."

Bennett confirmed in a conference call Monday that what was written about him in Mitchell's report was accurate. The portion that pertained to Bennett was on Pages 222-223 and included a copy of a $3,200 check that he wrote in 2003 to Kirk Radomski, a former New York Mets clubhouse attendant who pleaded guilty to steroid distribution. The check was signed July 13, 2003, which, coincidentally, was the day Bennett was punched in the face by Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals in a brawl.

Bennett, who was with the San Diego Padres that season, said Monday that he used HGH to heal a sprained right knee.

"I was just frustrated with the way my knee was feeling, and I was just hoping it would help me heal," Bennett said. "Rumors were around that it was the wonder drug, it would help you heal, help the injuries go away a lot quicker."

Bennett was referred to Radomski by Denny Neagle, whom he played alongside with the Colorado Rockies in 2001 and 2002, the report stated.

Radomski said that he sold Neagle steroids and HGH on five or six occasions from 2000 to 2004, according to the report. Bennett declined to say Monday whether he went to Neagle for guidance or Neagle sought him out.

Bennett said Monday he was unsure if the drugs expedited his recovery or if they enhanced his performance. A career .242 hitter, he batted .238 that season. He hit .252 in 59 games with the Cardinals in 2007.

"It wasn't like one day my knee was sore and I was sluggish and the next day I was like Superman," Bennett said.

The report said Bennett declined to meet with Mitchell, which Bennett confirmed Monday.

"All we had was an invitation," he said. "We didn't know what it was about, what the circumstances were. There were no guidelines, so to speak. I was unsure from that standpoint."

Bennett said he and his agent, Steve Schneider, warned Colletti ahead of time that his name could be in the report. Bennett, Schneider, Colletti and assistant general manager Kim Ng spoke Friday, the day after the report was released.

"He reached out to us," Colletti said. "He admitted that he made a mistake. Everybody makes mistakes. Nobody's lived a perfect life."

Pettitte made a confession similar to Bennett's.

But the New York Yankees pitcher's admission of HGH use in 2002 contained the inaccurate statement the injections of the drug he received were "not against baseball rules," baseball officials said Monday.

The report by Mitchell that named Pettitte among 86 players who used performance-enhancing drugs made clear that Major League Baseball has maintained since 1971 a policy that "prohibited the illegal use, possession or distribution of drugs, including the unauthorized use of prescription drugs."

According to the Mitchell Report, Pettitte, 35, was on the disabled list because of elbow tendinitis from April 21 to June 14, 2002, when he called his personal trainer, Brian McNamee, and "asked . . . about human growth hormone."

McNamee, according to the report, had worked with Pettitte since 1999 and spent "about 10 days assisting Pettitte with his rehabilitation" in Tampa, Fla. McNamee possessed human growth hormone he had received from Radomski, the report said.

Mitchell characterized the use of that human growth hormone as "illegal" in his report.

McNamee recalled in the report that he had injected Pettitte with human growth hormone "on two to four occasions."

In his admission, Pettitte said he tried HGH twice to hasten his healing.

"If what I did was an error in judgment on my part, I apologize," Pettitte said in a statement released Saturday by his agent, Randy Hendricks. "I accept responsibility for those two days. . . . I felt an obligation to get back to my team as soon as possible."

Hendricks did not immediately return a telephone message left at his office Monday, and a spokesman for Mitchell had no comment.

Pettitte's statement that his HGH use was not against the rules ignores the sport's first drug policy, said a baseball source who requested anonymity because of potential discipline faced by Pettitte.

Former commissioner Bowie Kuhn crafted baseball's 1971 policy instituting "discipline for failure to comply with federal and state drug laws."

A formal drug policy wasn't included in baseball's collective bargaining agreement until after Pettitte's admitted use in 2002, and Major League Baseball didn't ban the use of HGH until 2005, when officials said it had been established the drug possessed obvious performance-enhancement abilities.

...

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-dodgers18dec18,1,3857363.story
 
Just heard on ESPN radio that Alex Rodriguez has signed with a new representative company, effectively eliminating Boras.
 
Just heard on ESPN radio that Alex Rodriguez has signed with a new representative company, effectively eliminating Boras.
NEW YORK -- Alex Rodriguez's desire to go it alone in contract talks with the Yankees drove a wedge between him and his longtime agent, Scott Boras.

The player revealed the depth of the hard feelings in a "60 Minutes" interview that aired Sunday, telling the CBS news magazine that he and Boras are not speaking to each other.

Rodriguez worked as his own agent in netting another record contract for himself -- $275 million over 10 years -- which was finalized Thursday. The three-time AL Most Valuable Player removed Boras from the negotiations after Boras announced Oct. 28 that his client would be opting out of his current deal.

When asked by CBS' Katie Couric to expound on his relationship with Boras, Rodriguez took his time before finally replying, "The whole situation saddens me a little bit. There hasn't been much back-and-forth talking."

When asked if he and Boras are speaking, Rodriguez said, "Not right now." Asked if that could change, he told Couric, "We'll see." Rodriguez said he had no contact with Boras during negotiations with the Yankees.

"60 Minutes" said Boras declined to be interviewed.

The 32-year-old Rodriguez won his third AL MVP award last month after hitting .314 with 54 homers and 156 RBIs. He said the way the opt out was handled -- during the Game 4 broadcast of the World Series -- was unsettling, and he understood why baseball fans and officials were upset with how it was handled.

"I was angered, upset, shocked, in disbelief," Rodriguez told "60 Minutes." "It was like a bad nightmare."

He said he and Boras agreed the slugger would opt out, but Rodriguez thought the move would be revealed after the World Series.

"When I realized things were going haywire, at that point I said, 'Wait a minute, I've got to be accountable for my own life. This is not going the way I wanted it to go.' So I got behind the wheel," he told "60 Minutes," according to the Post.

After opting out, Yankees senior vice president Hank Steinbrenner said New York would not negotiate further with Rodriguez because his decision eliminated the $21.3 million subsidy the Yankees were to receive from Texas from 2008-10, a figure negotiated at the time of the trade.

Rodriguez said once he did get in touch with Steinbrenner and his brother Hal, an executive vice president with the Yankees, it didn't take long to reach an accord. But the Yankees made it clear from the start of talks they would negotiate only if Boras wasn't part of them.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3157935
 
anyone see what shillings is saying about Clemens. Saying that he should give up his Cy Young awards if he doesn't clear his name. I am on my iphone so I will post the story when I get home. Personally I think he would keep his mouth shut. The man seems to crave attention, especially with that blog of his
 
Does anyone actually read that blog of his. Schilling should worry about his own career before solving everyone elses.
 
Now there are a couple of unbiased opinions :rolleyes: I could care what he says on his blog. All that matters is what he says on the field..Especially in October.
 
The dog ate it? Closer's canine reportedly chews on history

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The baseball from the final out of the 2007 World Series is at Jonathan Papelbon's home in Hattiesburg, Miss., according to the Hattiesburg American.

Well, part of it is.

The rest? You should ask the Boss.

If he could talk, he might say it was delicious. But the most he'll say is "woof."

"Boss," you see, is Jonathan Papelbon's dog. Boss likes to play with baseballs. And Boss found the baseball that Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek gave the closer after he struck out the Rockies' Seth Smith to clinch Boston's second World Series title in four years, the newspaper reported.

And Papelbon was left with a common excuse for not doing one's homework to explain what happened to a historic baseball artifact.

"My dog ate it," Papelbon told the newspaper. "He plays with baseballs like they are his toys. His name is Boss. He jumped up one day on the counter and snatched it. He likes rawhide. He tore that thing to pieces.

"I'll keep what's left of it," he told the paper.

After the 2004 World Series, the Red Sox and first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz haggled over custody of the ball that produced the final out of the team's Series championship in 86 years. Both sides eventually decided to give the ball to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.
rofl5.gif
 
Would someone please tell Schilling that being a great pitcher does not mean anyone else cares what he thinks? He's frankly sounding jealous of Clemens.
 
Gagné won a Cy Young? They should take that away too. But not on the grounds of roids. On the grounds of him sucking ass.

He won one, in 2003, when he was the best pitcher in the National League. If they took away every award from a player who later sucked, it'd get pretty ugly out there! :rolleyes:
 
I'm not a fan of schilling doing commercials for John McCain. Shut yer yap and keep pitching. But talking about Clemens or other baseball related stuff is fine.
 
I'm not a fan of schilling doing commercials for John McCain. Shut yer yap and keep pitching. But talking about Clemens or other baseball related stuff is fine.
If we are lucky maybe Schilling might have to eat his words someday.
 
Prior to the Padres. 1 year, $1 million. Low risk, high potential--not a lot of money by MLB standards, and if he is healthy (a BIG if!) the Padres have themselves a terrific pitcher.

The NL West looks like it is going to be great.
 
Interesting move, made even more interesting by the Padre's earlier signing of the Dodger's similar rehab proposition from last season, Randy Wolf. If everything comes together they'll have a great rotation -- but they are relying on the performance of some pretty old and iffy arms. I won't say that I'm wishing them luck. ;)
 
I won't say that I'm wishing them luck. ;)

Gee, I can't imagine why! ;) (Gotta agree with you on that, though!)

Yes they are--relying on old arms. Maddux is how old? :eek: Then again, the Padres have lately been consistently in the running, and part of that has been their ability to pick up players like Wolf and Prior and get something out of them.
 
Gee, I can't imagine why! ;) (Gotta agree with you on that, though!)

Yes they are--relying on old arms. Maddux is how old? :eek: Then again, the Padres have lately been consistently in the running, and part of that has been their ability to pick up players like Wolf and Prior and get something out of them.

Without looking it up, I'd say that Maddux will be 43 this year. The Randy Wolf experiment didn't work out for the Dodgers last year. Successfully pulling pitchers off the scrap heap is a lot about luck, and also a little about desperation. Note also, Prior won't be available to pitch until May at least.
 
Steinbrenner says Yankees' offer to Twins 'still the best one'

There is still a chance for the Yankees to receive a belated holiday gift.

Trade talks between New York and the Minnesota Twins for Johan Santana decreased to a murmur in December. Now, with Hank Steinbrenner back in the office, the push is on for a resolution to the pursuit of Santana once and for all.

Steinbrenner told the New York Daily News, "We're not desperate, so we're not going to chase anything."

But, he added, "In the next two weeks, we're going to have to get everything done."

According to the Daily News and the Boston Globe, the New York Mets and the Boston Red Sox remain in the hunt for Santana, a two-time Cy Young Award winner.

"I think the Twins realize our offer is the best one," Steinbrenner told the Daily News in a telephone interview. "I feel confident they're not going to trade him before checking with us one last time and I think they think we've already made the best offer."

Multiple reports have speculated the Yankees' offer includes pitcher Phil Hughes, outfielder Melky Cabrera, pitching prospect Jeff Marquez and another prospect. Steinbrenner would not comment, but he did say, "It's still the best one. And let's face it, we're the best able to handle the kind of contract [extension] Santana will be after."

The Mets have said they will not include Jose Reyes in any offer, but they have various prospects that could be in the mix, including pitchers Mike Pelfrey, Philip Humber and Kevin Mulvey and outfielders Carlos Gomez and Fernando Martinez. The Red Sox scenario includes one with Jon Lester, Coco Crisp, Jed Lowrie, and Justin Masterson being proffered.

"I either have to do it [a Santana deal] or don't do it, same thing for the Red Sox, I guess," Steinbrenner added. "I think the Twins would like to keep him, so I don't think there's any hurry on anyone's part. It all depends on what he asks for in an extension. You obviously have to be very careful with pitchers, for obvious reasons."

http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3179641
 
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