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Rumors for July, 2011

Are the Chicago Cubs shipping Aramis Ramirez to the Los Angeles Angels?  Buster Olney of ESPN says there are rumors swirling around about a possible deal, but sources close to him say that there have not been any discussions involving the aforementioned parties.

Ramirez, 33, is hitting .298/.346/.497 with 15 home runs and 51 RBIs in 86 games for the Cubs this season.  He’s in the final year of his five-year contract.  He’s owed roughly $7 million for the remainder of the season.

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Categories : trades
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According to a Tweet by Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News, the Texas Rangers have released Manny Delcarmen and Seth McClung from Triple-A Round Rock.

The Rangers signed Delcarmen on June 2. The 28-year old was 3-4 with a 4.99 ERA and 38 SO in 57 appearances for the Red Sox and Rockies last season.

The 30-year-old McClung last pitched for the Brewers in 2009 and went 3-3 with a 4.94 ERA in 41 games (2 starts).

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Jul
13

Twins release LHP Andrei Lobanov

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The Minnesota Twins have released left handed pitcher Andrei Lobanov according to Kevin Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus.

Lobanov had a 6.79 ERA in 53 innings for the Twin’s Class-A team this season. In four Minor League seasons, all with the Twins organization, he was 8-11 with a 3.83 ERA in 162 innings throughout 83 games, nine starts.

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Marlins’ President of Baseball Operations Larry Beinfest spoke to the press today about where the Marlins stand on the trade deadline. Here’s what he said (via Juan C. Rodriguez of the Sun-Sentinel):

“Right now it’s a little bit undetermined. I don’t see major, major things happening at this point, but you never know what happens the last two weeks of the month. First and foremost, we need to grind away and dig ourselves out of this.”

“I never really consider ourselves sellers. I think you’re always buying something, it just may be something different…The way we look at it is this: the month of June was rather unfortunate. It put us in a tough position. Obviously, we’ve played well of late and are continuing to dig out, but that’s kind of where we’re at. We’re still in digging-out mode…We need to continue to grind away and hopefully start to make up some ground we lost so terribly in the month of June and then we’ll see.”

“I think it’s important to recognize that our goal was to win this year and at the same time as a by-product of winning to build momentum into the new ballpark. That’s still our goal. We want to make sure we have a strong second half and build momentum as we head to that park. If you look at a lot of pieces of this team, we see them as components in the new ballpark.”

“In terms of huge moves, who knows, but from a big picture view, there are a lot of pieces on this team we covet and think are going to be big parts of this team for years to come…I don’t see dramatic changes ahead as we try to build momentum. What I see is more health. We need guys to continue to grow and step up and be consistent.”

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Categories : trades
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Yesterday, about two hours after the All Star Game ended, the New York Mets and the Milwaukee Brewers completed the first major move leading up to this year’s July 31 trade deadline. And the Mets could be ready to make another one.

It has been rumored that outfielder Carlos Beltran could be dealt before the deadline, and according sources close to Jon Paul Morosi of FOXSports, the Giants are among Beltran’s most serious suitors.

Kevin Kernan of the New York Post writes that the Giants would love to put Beltran in left field, and that the Giants could deal pitching prospect Zack Wheeler to the Mets, who would have to eat most of Beltran’s contract.

Yesterday, we learned that Brian Wilson wants Beltran in San Francisco as long as he isn’t the one shipped to Queens for him. “He’s a pretty awesome hitter,” Wilson said. “I have no qualms about it. Come on over. I don’t want to be the guy that’s traded, though. OK? Let’s make sure that doesn’t happen.”

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Sports Illustrated’s Jon Heyman asked Bengie Molina yesterday if he had plans to play in 2011. The veteran catcher said “no”, but added that he’s not retired yet, with emphasis on “yet”.

After Buster Posey’s injury, we learned that Molina was willing to play for the Giants if they would’ve called. “heck yeah,” he said.

The 36-year-old veteran catcher can still play at a high level, so teams should not dismiss him.  With the Giants and the Rangers over 118 games last season, he hit .249/.297/.326 with 5 home runs and 36 RBIs.  This was a sharp drop from 2009 where he hit .265/.285/.442 with 20 home runs and 80 RBIs over 132 games.

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Categories : Retirement
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According to Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports, the Texas Rangers have placed right handed pitcher Scott Feldman on outright waivers and the waiver expires at 1pm ET.

Feldman made his final rehab start on Sunday and he was 3-1 with a 4.03 ERA in his rehab stint at Triple-A (he’s coming off microfracture knee surgery). If a team claims Feldman they will inherit his contract adds Rosenthal. He’s set to make $4.4 million this season, $6.5 million in 2012 with a $9.25 option for 2013.

Rosenthal says that Feldman could be a reasonable gamble for a team in need of starting pitching. In 2010, the right hander was 7-11 with a 5.48 ERA in 141.1 innings throughout 29 games, 22 starts.

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Categories : Placed on waivers
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Jul
13

All Star Game history and facts

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In the middle of the All Star break festivities, we at PRO Rumors wanted to provide you with a little history about the games, and a list of cool facts that you can brag about to your friends today.

The first All Star game was played in 1933 at Comiskey Park (former home of the White Sox), Chicago. The American League won the game 4-2 and Babe Ruth became the first player to ever hit a home run in an All Star game after hitting a two-run homer in the bottom of the third off Bill Hallahan.

His teammate Lefty Gomez was the first pitcher to ever win an All Star game. Frankie Frisch was the first National League player to hit a home run in an All Star game.

At the beginning of the All Star games, the manager of each League selected the entire team. In 1947, fans were given the opportunity to vote on the eight starting position players for the first time, although the experiment lasted only ten seasons.

In 1957, Reds fans stuffed the ballots and elected a Red to every position except first base. MLB Commissioner, Ford Frick, stepped in and removed two Reds from the lineup and as a response fan voting was discontinued.

For the next 12 years, players, coaches, and managers were given the authority to elect starting position players. Then in 1969 fan balloting for the starting eight was restored in an attempt to modernize marketing of baseball.

Facts:

– Of the eighteen players who started the 1934 game only Wally Berger is not in the Hall of Fame.

– The same year, Carl Hubbell of the New York Giants struck out Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie Foxx, Al Simmons and Joe Cronin in succession at the Polo Grounds.

Brooks Robinson (1966) and Carl Yastrzemski (1970) are the only players to be named All Star MVP while playing for the losing team.

Fred Lynn 1983 hit the first Grand Slam in an All Star game.

– In 1991, Cal Ripken Jr became the first and only player to win the Home Run Derby, All Star MVP and American League MVP the same year.

– In 2000 Derek Jeter became the first player to win the All Star game and the World Series MVP in the same year.

Ichiro Suzuki hit in 2007 the first inside-the-park home run in an All Star game.

– “They invented the All-Star Game for Willie Mays,” Ted Williams once said, and he was right. Mays is the all-time leader in runs (20), hits (23), triples (3, tied with Brooks Robinson), steals (6) and total bases (40, tied with Stan Musial) in All Star games. He played in 24 All Star games.

This year’s facts:

Carlos Beltran became the first National League Designated Hitter while playing in a National League park.

– With Prince Fielder’s homer in the bottom of the fourth, the Arizona Diamondbacks became the only team without a home run in an All Star game.

Jair Jurrjens is now the player with more “j’s” in his name to play in an All Star game.

Now sit back and enjoy your day off. Information from Wikipedia and an article written by Roger Schlueter of MLB.com was used in this article.

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Categories : Fun, blog
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The St. Louis Cardinals have agreed to a four-year, $27.5 million deal with left handed pitcher Jaime Garcia according to Jon Heyman of Sports Illustrated. The deal also includes two options and an announcement could come today adds Heyman.

Last week, we heard rumors that the Cardinals and Garcia could have been close to a multi-year deal, although Cardinals GM, John Mozeliak, didn’t comment about it.

“I can tell you that any contract discussions that we have with any player will be done privately, and when we have an announcement, we’ll have an announcement,” Mozeliak said.

This deal will cover Garcia’s three years of arbitration eligibility plus his first year as a free agent. This season, Garcia is 8-3 with a 3.23 ERA in 111.1 innings for the Cardinals.

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Categories : Top Stories, contract
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Just because it was one of the more classic baseball-related interviews ever, check out the video in case you missed it:

Justin Timberlake talking about Joe Buck and beer at the All-Star Game.

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