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Rumors for March, 2010

Here are your Thursday afternoon PRO Rumors:

Categories : Uncategorized
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According to Doug Miller of MLB.com, the Seattle Mariners have sent right-handed pitcher Miguel Celestino to the Boston Red Sox to complete the January trade for first baseman Casey Kotchman.

Trade from January 5, 2010:

Team Acquires
Red Sox Utility Bill Hall
RHP Miguel Celestino
Cash
Mariners 1B Casey Kotchman

Celestino, 20, was 5-3 with a 4.73 ERA in 13 games (12 starts) for the Mariners’ rookie-level Arizona Mariners of the Arizona League in 2009.

Categories : trades
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3/18 11:05: According to Bob Dutton of the Kansas City Star, the Rockies are showing interest in reliever Juan Cruz.

Cruz, 31, was 3-4 with a 5.72 ERA in 46 games for the Royals in 2009. He’ll make $3.25 million in 2010 and there is a team option for $4 million in 2011.

3/18: 10:05: According to a source close to Troy Renck of  The Denver Post, the Colorado Rockies have interest in free-agent reliever Joe Beimel.  The report says that the Rockies are in need of a left-handed relief pitcher since closer Huston Street is expected to start the season on the disabled list and Franklin Morales will be transitioned to the closer role. Other Rockies left-handers Randy Flores and Jimmy Gobble have been going through injuries.

Beimel, 33 in April, pitched in 26 games for the Rockies in 2009 after he was traded from the Washington Nationals last July. It’s been reported in a recent days that the Mets have an interest in his services.

The deal may be a long shot, as Renck also reports that Rockies owner Dick Monfort has said the team does not have much payroll flexibility.

Categories : free-agent
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Buster Olney of ESPN The Magazine says that the Chicago Cubs are actively seeking a reliever, but he says the pickings are slim.

Olney suggests that Jason Frasor (who also may be coveted by the Twins) and Scott Downs of the Toronto Blue Jays are available. Downs carries a $4 million salary which could price him out of any trade negotiations unless the Blue Jays want to carry some of that liability.

The other day, Pete Caldera, staff writer for The Record, suggested that Chad Gaudin or Sergio Mitre of the New York Yankees could be traded depending on how the Yankees want to move forward with the fifth spot in their rotation.

Categories : trades
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Joe Strauss of STLToday.com says that the St. Louis Cardinals have dropped hints with slugger Albert Pujols that the club may not be able to retain him if he is determined to be the game’s highest-paid player. Pujols will be a free agent after the completion of the 2011 season.

Reports back in January have said that Pujols will be in the $20+ million range since Mark Teixeira ($22.5 million per year) and Alex Rodriguez ($27.5 million per year) are the two closest players that one can compare with Pujols. Strauss says that the Cardinals have not offered him any deal exceeding Rodriguez’s average annual salary, and Strauss guesses that the team will not reach those numbers.

So from Pujols’ perspective, do you take less than top dollar even though you may be the game’s best player? If you’re Pujols’ agent, Dan Lozano of the Beverly Hills Sports Council, do you take a smaller deal that does not re-set the salary ceiling?

Strauss predicts that there is more than a 20 percent chance that Pujols stays. He says that the Cardinals’ best chance would have been to sign Pujols before the 2010 season. The Cardinals will be losing leverage as the season progresses since by dragging the negotiations out Pujols will swing the power balance in his favor. The Cardinals would be in a good position to trade him as early as possible so the receiving team could use him for potentially two playoff runs rather than one run in 2011 before he becomes a free agent. The longer Pujols new team has to use his services will require a bigger exchange in prospects that will be sent the Cardinals way.

Categories : negotiations, trades
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Good morning! Here are your Thursday PRO Rumors:

  • One National League scout said that Cincinnati Reds rookie Aroldis Chapman is the team’s best pitcher. “How can they think about starting him in the minors?” Chapman went three innings, alloing one run and one hit in his third outing of the spring. (John Fay, Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle says that Giants’ catcher Buster Posey is “about a seven” (on a scale of 1 to 10) playing first base. Schulman says that the team is giving Posey a longer look at first base to determine if he’s going to make the 25-man roster out of camp. Posey is hitting .375 this spring compared to the newly signed Giant Aubrey Huff, who is hitting .241 this spring.
  • Anthony Mccarron of the New York Daily News says that it is unlikely that the Mets’ Fernando Martinez will make the team’s Opening Day roster despite having 10 RBIs, hitting .538 and slugging 1.115.
Categories : team
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We all make mistakes. True. Surely we all can agree that at certain times in our lives we’ve done something stupid that has caused us embarrassment of some kind. Parking tickets, speeding tickets, getting caught cheating on a test in high school; these are things that can be classified as mistakes, mistakes we learn from.

What cannot be classified as a mistake is using, and thusly being tested positive for, cocaine.

That, is a crime.

By now everyone has to have heard about Texas Rangers Manager Ron Washington testing positive last summer for his use of cocaine. Managers, like players, under the new collective bargaining agreement are subject to drug testing to ensure the “integrity of the game.” Washington says, once he got word that he was to be tested, approached the Rangers and Major League Baseball to confess what he had done and to offer his resignation. The Rangers after what I’m sure – what I hope – was a long discussion about the legal implications, the ethical implications, and the moral standing of the franchise, decided to keep Washington on as its manager.

Now that is a mistake.

It shouldn’t come as much of a shock I guess. Major League Baseball is fairly well known for its, um, problems, throughout its history. It’s no secret that professional athletes as a whole are not looked at as beacons of moral authority considering their social behaviors. (That is not to say all players have this reputation. Or even most. Or even some. But we admire them for their physical talents more so that who they are or what they stand for. And that’s, okay, I suppose.)

It shouldn’t come as much of a shock that behavior like this – while I’m sure was taken seriously in the moment and maybe even still today behind the curtain of public relations – is being treated casually as a person that just happened to make a bad decision at one point, and that’s that.

It certainly isn’t that. It certainly isn’t something that should allow a person to keep his six-figure job being the face of an organization. It certainly isn’t something that should be reason to keep Washington in a position as a highly public figure and as the focus of the community. This wasn’t merely a mistake.

But, if by saying this, am I then saying people don’t deserve second chances? No. People do, they absolutely do. How else can we expect to evolve as a society if we don’t allow people to make mistakes and then move forward from them? But this isn’t a mistake. It’s certainly not a mistake that even the purist of character can overcome. This shows bad judgment. Bad judgment in the worst way. And something so egregious, something so flippant to the natural order of society and disrespect to your standing in a community, shouldn’t be met with a shoulder and a hug. We’re all allowed to grow and move forward, but that doesn’t mean we’re allowed to do something as bad as this and then to keep our jobs. Being a Major League manager is not an entitlement.

There are excuses being made every day for professional athletes. Tiger Woods was given the excuse that he was “only human” and he wasn’t perfect. Athletes that commit crimes of violence are often given the way out of “well, it was in the heat of the moment.” Ron Washington was given “he made a mistake.”

I admire – or better put, I’m glad – that Washington is not shy about taking blame for what he’s done. That’s nice. I don’t know who else there would be to put the blame on. And I find it nice that the Rangers players are all standing behind their manager. Though, I’m not sure what else they’re supposed to do or say. I guess I am just disappointed.

Disappointed that while yes, it does say something about the organization of baseball to stand by someone that has screwed up, it says so much more that there isn’t any kind of legal ramifications or punishment being handed down. Washington and the Rangers are just allowed to say they’re sorry and move along as if there’s nothing to see here. (Perhaps those are to come and they’re being deliberated. To that point, I’m not sure, and I’m just speaking from a knee-jerk reaction. Though, if they were to render some kind of punishment, I’m not sure what they’re waiting for, it was nine months ago.)

Sometimes fans talk about the need for politicians, celebrities, athletes, to be held to a higher standard, as being a role model for the youth of American. No, they just need to be held to a standard. Ridiculously poor judgment is a fire-able offense. And being “only human” means making mistakes, but never committing a crime in the first place.

Categories : editorial
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Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton just cannot catch a break. According to ESPN.com, on Tuesday,Hamilton was checked out by an endodontist and was told he has gum problems and possibly a root canal issue. This comes a day after being hit in the left hand by a pitch the day prior.

Fortunately, for Hamilton and the Rangers, his X-rays came back negative. Hamilton just hasn’t been the same since his magical movie-script season in 2008 when he hit .304 with 32 home runs and 130 RBIs, second only to Phillies’ slugger Ryan Howard who had 146 RBIs that season. Last season Hamilton was injury-riddled, and missed all of June and was not himself most of the season. His numbers were way down, as he hit a measly .268 batting average, hit only 10 home runs and drove in just 54 runs.

Hamilton could have fallen victim to the infamous sophomore slump last year, but he needs to have a comeback year this year if the Rangers want to contend in the AL West. With the additions the Mariners have made this division will not be an easy one to win.

Categories : Injury
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Colorado Rockies closer Huston Street felt pain in his right shoulder, and will undergo an MRI exam, according to ESPN.com. Monday Street said his arm felt fine, but the following day he started to feel pain in his throwing session. The Rockies are holding their breath as they just signed Street to a three year deal worth $22.5 million in January. Street saved 35 games last year for the Rockies in 37 attempts.

The Rockies need Street’s arm to hold up and be that solid closer to shut it down in the ninth if they want another chances at a playoff run.

Categories : Injury
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Joba Chamberlain was potentially one more bad start this spring from possibly being sent to the bullpen or even to triple-A.  Prior to today, Chamberlain sported a 27.00 ERA (after today 16.20 ERA).  Challenged to “pick it up” and show the Yankees something special, Chamberlain answered the call with four strong innings of one-run ball against the Phillies at Bright House Field, keeping in competition to serve as New York’s fifth starter to open the season.  Chamberlain worked so efficiently, the Yankees had to ask the Phillies to come back to the plate in the bottom of the ninth inning, even though Philadelphia had already put the finishing touches on a 6-2 victory. Given three more outs, Chamberlain quickly dispatched those batters, too.

Chamberlain is battling not only Phil Hughes, but also Alfredo Aceves, Chad Gaudin and Sergio Mitre, to stay out of the bullpen and the Minor Leagues to begin the season. While some might have considered him the early favorite, two rocky starts put that in serious doubt.  Aceves, Mitre and Hughes all sport ERAs of under 3.00 and have been performing at a higher level than Joba until today.  Chamberlain will have at least one more start before Girardi would like to iron out the fifth-starter mix by March 25 or 26, so that the pitchers who will be heading to the bullpen have time to get ready.  Information from Bryan Hoch of MLB.com was used in this story.

Categories : team
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