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Rumors for Boston Red Sox

Here’s a running list of injury updates around the Major Leagues:

– The Boston Red Sox placed right handed pitcher Aaron Cook on the 15-day Disabled List after receiving 11 stitches in his right knee due to a home plate collision with Orioles’ Chris Davis reports Danny Picard of CSNNE.com. “I can’t try to have him pitch,” manager Bobby Valentine said. “He’s had shoulder problems in the past. If the stitches come out, there could be an infection. It’s just the only thing we can do at this time. He’d like to pitch. But it’s not going to happen.”

– Nationals right fielder Jayson Werth fractured his left wrist yesterday while trying to field a liner according to Bill Ladson of MLB.com. Early reports say that he’d be out for at least six weeks but reports are surfacing that it will likely be more like 12 weeks before he returns.

– According to Andrew Marchand of ESPNNewYork.com, Mets shortstop Ruben Tejada suffered a quad strain yesterday when he “fell awkwardly to the ground,” after laying down a bunt in the fourth inning of yesterday’s game. There’s still no word if Tejada will require a DL stint.

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The Boston Red Sox have agreed to a Minor League deal with right handed pitcher Mark Prior according to Jon Heyman of CBSSports.

Prior, 31, last pitched in the Major in 2006 with the Cubs. He has a career record of 42-29 with a 3.51 ERA, 1.1 HR/9, 3.1 BB/9 and 10.4 SO/9 in 657.0 innings with the Cubs.

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The Boston Red Sox have decided to promote veteran right hander Aaron Cook to their Major League team according to sources close to Rob Bradford of WEEI.com. Cook wasn’t called up yesterday and had 24 hours to exercise the opt-out in his contract, but as Bradford says, “the team does not plan on losing the 33-year-old via free agency. ”

Bradford adds that several teams were interested in trading for Cook, but were informed that the team planned to promote him. Bobby Valentine said that Cook will be a part of the Red Sox bullpen. The 33-year old pitcher went 3-0 with a 1.89 ERA in 33.1 innings, five starts for the Red Sox’s Triple-A team.

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The Red Sox did not call up Aaron Cook by midnight (which was the deadline in his contract), WEEI.com’s Alex Speier reports. Cook though can still end up with the Red Sox as he has 24 hours to exercise the opt-out in his contract. The team would then have 48 hours to respond by calling him up or trading him.

Speier does note that Boston will work out an agreement to keep Cook and will eventually call him up, though no agreement is in place. In five Triple-A starts, Cook has posted 1.89 ERA with 13 strikeouts and 11 walks.

Back in January, Cook signed a minor league deal after spending the 2011 season with the Rockies.

In 2008, Cook posted his career year while with the Rockies where he went 16-9 with a 3.96 ERA as he was healthy that season and had his sinkerball working for him.

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The Boston Red Sox received bad news today when they learned outfielder Carl Crawford will miss about three months with a sprained ulnar collateral ligament in his left elbow, Gordon Edes of ESPNBoston.com reports.The injury Crawford has, often results in Tommy John surgery.

Carl Crawford was examined by the Red Sox medical staff,” the statement released by the team read. “He was diagnosed as having a left elbow ulnar collateral ligament sprain. A conservative treatment protocol was recommended. Carl was also examined by Dr. James Andrews who was in agreement with the assessment and plan. Carl received a Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) injection and will be shut down from baseball activity during the initial phase of his treatment.”

Crawford, who signed a seven-year $142 million contract with the Red Sox after the 2010 season, struggled in his first season in Boston and will miss a significant portion of his second season. Crawford made $14 million last season and is set to make $19.5 million this season. So far, Boston has paid Crawford about $22mm ($6mm signing bonus included) and have received 11 home runs, 56 RBIs and 129 hits. Not including his signing bonus, Crawford made about $1.4mm per home run, $285k per RBI and $124k per hit.

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Categories : Injury
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Here’s a running list of injury updates around the Major Leagues:

– Right handed pitcher Mike Pelfrey is scheduled to visit Dr. James Andrews according to Andy Mcullough of the Newark Star-Ledger. There’s a possibility that the right hander will require Tommy John surgery.

– Brewers starter Chris Naverson will require season ending surgery according to Adam McCalvy of MLB.com. The surgery will repair Naverson’s partially torn rotator cuff and will require 6-9 months of rehab adds McCalvy.

– According to Sean McAdam of CSNNE.com, outfielder Carl Crawford is still experiencing soreness in his left elbow and will have to pay a visit to Dr. James Andrews. McAdam adds that the date of the visit is still unknown.

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The Baltimore Orioles have agreed to a Minor League deal with veteran Bill Hall. He will take recently traded, Josh Bell’s spot in the Orioles’ Triple-A team.

Hall, 32, is a career .248/.307/.436 hitter with 124 HR’s, 439 RBI’s and a 92 OPS+ in ten seasons in the Majors with the Brewers, Mariners, Red Sox, Astros and Giants.

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Baseball is definitely a game of strategies, and most of the time, the team with the better strategy wins the game. When I say strategy I don’t mean just bunting, ordering a hit and run, squeeze play, etc. The strategy begins with assembling the team. If you don’t put a good team on the field you’re not going to win.

Also, by putting a team on the field I’m not talking about spending huge amounts of cash. I’m talking about analyzing what you have on your team, what you need, and optimizing your players’ best attributes in order to win ballgames. And that last part of the strategy is what were going to take a look at.

Usually later in games, managers face the decision on whether to use a pinch-hitter, or not, in order to potentially score runs. There’s no way to know beforehand if a hitter is going to get a hit, double, home run or if he’s going to strike out when you send him up to the plate as a pinch hitter. Even if you have a guy who is 10-10 against a specific pitcher that doesn’t mean he’s going to be 11-11 after that particular AB. It only means that the odds are in his favor, but after all they are odds.

Now, there are managers and General Managers that have embraced this new philosophy about advanced stats (sabermetrics), and are using them to gain an edge in the competition. When I mean edge, I don’t mean they are always going to win, I just mean that the odds will favor them slightly more. After all they are statistics, not facts.

If I were a manager, I would use all the information available to gain an edge over my opponent. It doesn’t matter what kind of information, every piece of information can be useful, and pinch-hitting is no different. For example, to maximize the use of a pinch-hitter you could use stats, unless you want to go with the player with the hot streak, or the one with better overall numbers.

Stats that could be used for pinch-hitting could variate depending on what you’re looking for. If you want your pinch hitter to reach base at the beginning of an inning go with the player with highest OBP, but if you’re trying to drive in a run there are a number of advanced stats that might come in handy.

Baseball Prospectus presents a stat called OBI% (Others Batted In Percentage), that is “the fraction of runners on base who were driven in during a batter’s plate appearances.” This stat won’t credit a hitter when hitting a home run (OBI = RBI – HR). With this stat you know how effective a player is when driving in runs.

Now, the guys from Baseball Prospectus take this stat a little bit further to give us the R1BI%, R2BI% and R3BI%. Each one of this stats measure the percentage of runs batted in from the different bases. This stat makes a ton of sense. For example, players with high R1BI% are all sluggers, players able to drive runners from first base.

Among the leaders in this department we have Curtis Granderson, Evan Longoria, Mark Teixeira and Adrian Beltre. To understand a little bit more this stats, I’m going to compare Granderson with Victor Martinez using 2011 data.

Granderson has a career .495 SLG and Martinez .469, also Granderson has 30 home runs more than Martinez in 598 less AB’s. Martinez has 533 career strikeouts in 4,279 AB’s while Granderson has 917 strikeouts in 3,681 AB’s. Martinez has also a higher career OBP (.370) than Granderson (.345). What you can take away from these stats is that Granderson is a better slugger than Martinez, but not as versatile as him.

That’s why Granderson is more likely to drive in a runner from first base (11.2%) than Martinez (6.5%), but when you analyze the percentage of runners driven home from second base Martinez (25%) is better than Granderson (17%), and when you compare them again in R3BI% the difference between them is even bigger, 54.9% for Martinez and 39.7% for Granderson.

Now, what does this tells you as a manager? It tells me that depending on where the runner is located I would go for a slugger with a chance to bring him home from first base with one swing, or a more versatile hitter that is more likely to bring him home from second or third base. Again, this is not a fact, this is just information being used in order to maximize the use of your resources, or, using stats to unfold a better strategy.

Lastly, the make-up of a player is very important for a pinch hitter as some younger players have a hard time waiting around all game and staying ready for potentially one at bat towards the end of the game. This is why most successful bench players are older player that have been around for a bit.

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The 4-9 Boston Red Sox have acquired Marlon Byrd and cash from the Cubs for Micheal Bowden and a player to be named later, Gordon Edes of ESPN Boston reports.  Nick Cafardo of The Boston Globe was the first to report the teams were close to a deal. The cash will likely cover most of the $6.5mm still owed to Byrd.

Boston has been exploring the outfield market since they lost Jacoby Ellsbury to a dislocated shoulder.

Earlier this week, we heard that the Red Sox were scouting veteran outfielder Scott Podsednik who is playing for the Phillies’ Triple-A team.

Byrd has gotten off to a very slow start this season accumulating 3 singles in 47 at-bats. He hit .276 with 9 home runs and 35 rbi’s last season in 482 at-bats.

Byrd has had success in the AL when he played for the Rangers from 2007-2009. With the Rangers, he hit .295 while totaling 402 hits in 1364 at-bats.

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Here’s a running list of injury updates around the Major Leagues:

– Right handed pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka will begin his rehab assignment next Monday with the Red Sox’s High-A team at Salem reports Alex Speier of WEEI.com. Matsuzaka’s pitch limit will be about 75 pitches. “Daisuke feels really good,” manager Bobby Valentine said. “He’s ready to start dealing with competition rather than rehabilitation.”

– The Chicago Cubs have placed reliever Kerry Wood on the 15-Day Disabled List with right shoulder fatigue according to Carrie Muskat of MLB.com.

Dustin Moseley said that shoulder surgery would probably be his only option according to Dan Hayes of the North County Times. Last week, Padres manager, Bud Black, said that an MRI on Moseley’s shoulder showed “damage to the rotator cuff and changes to the labrum.”

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Categories : Injury
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