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Monthly ArchiveMarch 2008



Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Prince Batting Third This Year

The Chicago Tribune reports that the Brewers will bat Prince Fielder third and Ryan Braun fourth in the lineup — the reverse of what they did for much of last season. “Braunie has done a nice job of making it work,” Milwaukee manager Ned Yost said. “If Braunie can take the same steps that Prince took in his second year, in terms of plate discipline, that’s a big key to our offense. He’s one of those special hitters, he’s very smart and has great hitting instincts. I don’t think he’ll have any trouble with the adjustment. They’re going to pitch around Prince at times and when they do, I want Braunie to make them come right after him. If they don’t throw him strikes, he’s going to have to take his walks and let Billy Hall and Corey Hart back him up.” Fielder didn’t shown much of a power swing this spring, and he’s battling the fly right now, but no worries. He will be locked in starting Monday. He has lineup protection, so Fielder should be in for another potential 50-homer season. He still remains an elite Fantasy 1B. (CBS Sports)

I blame the move to vegetarianism.  Growing boy needs protein.

Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Hatteberg Gets Opening Day Nod

The Cincinnati Enquirer notes that Scott Hatteberg will get the Opening Day start at first base against Arizona Monday, but Dusty Baker is not considering him the regular first baseman over Joey Votto.

Killer quote: “The regular first baseman is who’s playing that day,” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. Joey has great upside potential,” Baker said. “But Hatteberg had a great spring.”

Hatteberg hit .386 this spring, while Votto underwhelmed at .205. “Votto came on strong at the end,” Baker said. “You wish he’d done a little better. The fact that he’s here is based on what he did last year.” Whoever starts at first base will likely hit in the seventh spot of the batting order. “I need someone down there swinging the bat good,” Baker said. “(Adam) Dunn had a fair spring in the fifth spot. Edwin (Encarnacion) struggled all spring in the sixth spot. You don’t want to have that many guys in a row who aren’t on top of their game.” Until one wins the job over the other, there are better NL-only starters than mixed-league for now.

(CBS Sports)

Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Teixeira Hits Long Double

Braves 1B Mark Teixeira connected for a crucial double in the top of the ninth inning Sunday at Washington, and the ball just missed clearing the fence in deep right-center for a home run. He finished the game 1-for-4 with a strikeout. Teixeira is historically a slow starter, and the trend continued this spring as he hit only .211. However, he has the potential to hit .300 with 40 home runs over the course of a season, so stick with him if he starts slowly again in 2008. (CBS Sports)

Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Box Score - Day 1 - March 30th

Yesterday’s Stats (3/30/08)

Player                       BA HR R RBI   SB
------------------------ ------ -- - --- ----
Jones, Chipper 3B ATL    0.2500  1 1   1    0
Teixeira, Mark 1B ATL    0.2500  0 0   0    0

Player                      ERA  K S   W WHIP
------------------------ ------ -- - --- ----
Moylan, Peter RP ATL       6.75  2 0   0 0.75

Overall Standings

Rank Team                Batting Pitching Total Dif  Behind
---- ------------------- ------- -------- ----- ---- ------
 1   Goodfellas          39.5    29.0     68.5  68.5 0.0
 2   Atomic Roadrunners  40.5    23.0     63.5  63.5 5.0
 3   Get Off Kong!       34.0    29.0     63.0  63.0 5.5
 4   Uncle Lester        32.5    29.0     61.5  61.5 7.0
 5   Shoeless Jews       26.0    29.0     55.0  55.0 13.5
 6   Cover Zero          22.5    29.0     51.5  51.5 17.0
 7   Stanimals           20.0    29.0     49.0  49.0 19.5
 8   Misogynistic Padres 20.0    28.0     48.0  48.0 20.5
 9   X-Men               20.0    26.5     46.5  46.5 22.0
 10  The Pi Train        20.0    23.5     43.5  43.5 25.0

Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

In Case You Missed It - Moylan Gives Up Walk-Off

Covered in the Live Blog a few minutes ago:

Braves setup man Peter Moylan took the loss in the season opener Sunday at Washington, allowing a solo home run to Ryan Zimmerman in the bottom of the ninth inning. He pitched 1 1/3 innings, allowing only the one hit and striking out two. Moylan was downright unhittable at times in his first full big-league season, going 5-3 with a 1.80 ERA and giving up just 65 hits in 90 innings. The Braves plan to lean on the side-armer out of the pen this year, so consider him a viable Fantasy option in leagues that use true middle men. (Rotoworld)

Posted on March 31, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Andruw Sits in Final Tuneup

From CBS Sports:

Dodgers OF Andruw Jones sat out the spring finale Sunday against the Red Sox because of a cramp in his leg. Manager Joe Torre said he could have played, but wanted to stay on the safe side. Jones struggled for consistency all season during his last campaign with the Braves in 2007. He hit .222, and his 26 homers was his lowest total since hitting 26 in 1999, his third full season in the majors. Jones will be motivated for a big season after a disappointing sendoff in Atlanta. Consider him a comeback candidate in Fantasy. We assume he’ll be fine to open the season.

Posted on March 30, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Live Blogging Opening Night - Game Action

Top of the First:

Odalis (remember when he was a youngin’ in Atlanta’s system?) faces Kelly Johnson. Odalis’s tag is sticking out, off-center at the 8pm spot around his neckline. That’ll be annoying for the rest of the night. Strikeout! The Pi Train is in First Place! Cover Zero is 0-1 on the night.

During the Yunel Escobar at-bat, Miller and Morgan discuss Odalis Perez’s tag, with lots of close-ups. Enjoy, Paul Lukas! Chipper’s on-deck. Escobar walks. There goes The Pi Train’s WHIP.

Chipper: dummy. First-pitch lazy fly to right field. AaRr is now 0-for-1 on the season. Mark Teixeira’s up.

Teixeira: Backwards K. Full-count, then watched it groove down the middle. Then he mouths off a bit that he didn’t like the call. It’s going to be a long season. AaRr is now 0-for-2 on the season. Last Place.

Bottom of the First:

Oy - Christian Guzman gets the first hit in Nationals Park history, a slap bouncer into right field. Looked a lot like Scott Posey’s first hit ever for the Marlins.

Hudson then tries to pick-off Guzman, goes past Teix, Guzman goes to third. Bobby Cox looks like he threw up a bit in his mouth.

Milledge K’s. Alex has tied Barry in pitching.

Oh, boy. Joe Morgan just said that Hanley Ramirez has everything - power, speed, defense. Defense? The Miller said that Morgan finished 2nd in the ROY voting to Jim Lefebvre. Zimmerman is still up. And he strikes out.

X-Men takes the lead in pitching with two strikeouts. Nick Johnson up.

Gametime temperature is 49 degrees. Meanwhile, it’s 82 in Phoenix, and the Dbacks open up AT Cincinnati.

Broken-bat shot to right field for Johnson. Drives in the first run in this ballpark. RBI to Get Off Kong! Johnson stretches it to a double against Francoeur’s arm. 1-0 Nats. Austin Kearns up.

Another base hit to right. Johnson beats the (wide) throw from Francoeur. 2-0 Nats. Uncle Lester on the board with a hit and an RBI. X-Men: 2 ER. Paul LoDuca up.

Interesting stonework behind home plate - grays and greens.

The Braves’ navy cap today does not have any red in it - all navy field with a stark white stylized “A”.

Lastings Milledge better lay of the sunflower seeds.

LoDuca taps out a grounder to Chipper. End of inning.

After one inning, the standings: Get Off Kong, Uncle Lester, Goodfellas, everyone else, then Pi Train and X-Men.

Top of the Second:

Jeff Francoeur - first-pitch tapper to Zimmerman at third. Almost missed it with B-roll of Nationals’ arrival at the stadium. Next up, Brian McCann.

McCann line shot off the fence. Hard bounce to Kearns and the relay throw gets McCann out by two steps at second. Single, Error on advancing it to a double. I’m liking these high angles at the ballpark (as well as the High-Def). Next up, Matt Diaz.

Firm grounder to Belliard at second base. Seven pitches, three outs.

Bottom of the Second:

Elijah Dukes flew out to center on the first pitch. Next up, Ronnie Belliard.

Belliard grounded out to Chipper, who was playing on the grass (up). Morgan and Miller are jawing about Yankee Stadium, and the 1977 All-Star game, where Morgan hit a HR off of Jim Palmer.

Odalis Perez strikes out. Another seven pitch inning.

Standings after two innings: Get Off Kong!, Uncle Lester, Goodfellas, Cover Zero, everyone else, Pi Train, then X-Men.

Top of the Third:

Perez starts pitching while ESPN is still in billboards. First up, China-Doll Mark Kotsay.

Kotsay pops up to shallow right. President Bush is in the booth - sounds a little timid. Bush and Morgan met in 1994 prior to the first game in Arlington, when Bush was a co-owner. Tim Hudson is the batter.

Hudson flies out down the first-base line. Top of the order, Kelly Johnson.

Apparently George Bush warmed up in the tunnel with Jose Rijo. Good to know Bowden has collected all the former Reds. Barry Larkin is also an advisor to the team.

Kelly Johnson lines to center. Cover Zero gains some points. Next up, Yunel Escobar.

Whoops, Odalis Perez gets Johnson in a pickoff-turned-rundown play. Three outs.

Bottom of the Third:

Christian Guzman up. Broken bat flare to center, caught by the China Doll. Next up, Lastings Millege.

First pitch, ground out to Teixeira. Next up, Zimmerman.

Zimmerman at least worked the count a little. Grounder up the middle. Escobar handles it, does a 270, and gets him by a step. 1-2-3

No change in the standings after three innings.

Top of the Fourth:

Yunel Escobar grounds to Belliard at third. One down. Chipper up.

Hey, Chipper didn’t swing at the first pitch. 1-0. 2-0.

LINE DRIVE HOME RUN TO CENTER! “A rope!” said President Bush. “Blasted that thing, didn’t he.”

Teixeira up. 0-1, 0-2, 1-2, SHATTERED BAT, grounds to shortstop. Francoeur up. Odalis Perez has fixed his tag, btw.

Long at-bat, followed by a dink hit by Frenchy. Rolls down the line, bounces off of the third base bag, and then rolls foul. Fair ball. “Infield hit.” McCann up.

Can of corn to center for McCann.

Ah, Bush is catching the game, and heading to the Ukraine tomorrow. End of inning.

Bottom of the Fourth:

Ah, Brewers’ Sausage-like Presidents race. Thomas Jefferson trips and falls, Lincoln almost trips over him.

Nick Johnson up. Long fly, just short of the warning track - caught by Kotsay. Next up, Austin Kearns.

Kearns chopper, snagged by Hudson. LoDuca up.

Weak grounder to short. Three down.

Standings after four innings: ATOMIC ROADRUNNERS IN FIRST, Get Off Kong, Uncle Lester, Goodfellas, Shoeless Jews, Cover Zero, Misogynistic Padres, Stanimals, X-Men, The Pi Train.

Top of the Fifth:

Matt Diaz up. Grounder to shortstop . . .right through Christian Guzman’s five-hole. Man on first. Mark Kotsay up. I don’t think Kotsay is even activated for the week. Yep, Misogynistic Padres activated him at utility for the week. Fly-out to left. Tim Hudson up.

Hudson bunts nicely, Diaz moves over to second base. Top of the order - Kelly Johnson up.

Johnson grounds out to first. Still 2-1 Nationals.

Bottom of the Fifth:

Elijah Dukes, grounds out to Chipper Jones. He’s 0-2 and has seen TWO pitches tonight. Ronnie Belliard up.

Chopper to shortstop, just past a shallow-playing Chipper. Two down. Rob Mackowiak pinch-hitting for Odalis Perez. The Pi Train’s pitching evening is over.

Mackowiak grounds out to second base. Hudson’s cruising.

After five innings, the standings are: 1. Roadrunners, 2. Kong, 3. Lester, 4. Goodfellas, 5. Shoeless, 6. Cover Zero, 7. Miso Padres, 8. Stanimals, 9. X-Men, 10. Pi Train.

Top of the Sixth:

Chipper Jones retrospective by Peter Gammons. Gammons - “Sure-fire Hall of Famer, best OPS of any 3B - ever.”

Saul Rivera is pitching. I always thought it was pronounced “Sawl” like the Jewish name, but it’s really “Sa-uul”.

Willie Harris replaces Elijah Dukes in left field, part of a double switch. Miller hasn’t realized this yet - he thinks Dukes might be injured.

Yunel Escobar grounds out to deep shortstop. Chipper up. He switches to left-handed.

0-1, 1-1, 1-2 (foul off), 2-2, swinging strikeout. Good sinker by Rivera. Teixeira up, also switching to left-handed.

On 1-0, Teix pops up tremendously to the pitcher’s mound.

Bottom of the Sixth:

Christian Guzman up. Hudson has retired 13 in a row. Hooded 7-iron to first base. Groundout.

Peter Gammons reports that Elijah Dukes had a tight hamstring, so they replaced him with Harris. I think it was because he was 0-2 on two pitches tonight.

Temperature is down to 43 degrees. Lastings Milledge up.

Comebacker to the mound, Milledge out. Zimmerman up.

Chopper to Chipper - heh. 1-2-3, 16-straight retired.

No change in standings.

Top of the Seventh:

Frenchy grounds out to shortstop. One out.

McCann line shot, running catch by Kearns. Two down.

Matt Diaz nearly identical shot as McCann’s - Three down.

Yawn.

Bottom of the Seventh:

Hudson still in. Nick Johnson up. This game is getting a bit boring. Pop fly to left center - Kotsay brings it in.

Kearns pops up to right-center. Kotsay brings that one in as well.

Long fly ball by LoDuca caught by Diaz. Another 1-2-3, 19 straight retired by Hudson - who still is in line for the loss.

Standings unchanged since last inning.

Top of the Eighth:

Lefty Ray King now on the mound. Kotsay up. Flies out to shallow left - third straight flyout for Kotsay.

Pinch hitter up. Brayan Pena hitting for Hudson. Pena walks. Man on first. Top of the order.

Kelly Johnson up - currently 1-for-3.

Gregor Blanco (Atomic Roadrunners) pinch-running for Pena! He’s not active, however.

Johnson hits a long flyout to center. Two out.

New pitcher coming in: Luis Ayala trotting in. Yunel Escobar up.

Short chopper to third, barely thrown out - but it was ruled foul. Ground out FC to shortstop. Three down.

Bottom of the Eighth:

Will Ohman (lefty) in for the Braves. Willie Harris up.

Harris bounces one right to Teixeira. One away. Ohman takes care of business and is pulled. Peter Moylan (Peter Moylan!) enters the game. Hmm, a big fella.

Ronnie Belliard hits a firm grounder up the middle - Moylan just misses it, but Yunel Escobar backs him up. Two down. Next up is Felipe Lopez, batting lefty.

Moylan out to a quick 0-2 count, with some nasty movement. Wow, backwards K, with some mean movement back into the zone.

Standings unchanged.

Top of the Ninth:

Chipper up facing Jon Rauch. Morgan babbling about how Chipper will be facing Chad Cordero right up to the point where Rauch is about to throw his first pitch. I guess as an analyst he missed Rauch warming up, and the announcement that he was now pitching.

0-1 count, Chipper nails a line-shot right into Rauch’s glove. Teixeira up. Now Jesus Colume and Mark Hanrahan are warming up in the pen, not Cordero.

Teixeira taks an 0-1 pitch to deep right center field - off the wall! Double for Teix. Six inches higher and it would have been a homer. Teixeira replaced by pinch-runner Martin Prado. Francoeur up.

(Cordero reporting of stiffness. Not specific stiffness, perhaps to the brim of his cap.)

Francoeur taps a weak grounder to second. Prado advances to third. Two down. McCann up.

Passed ball! LoDuca scrambles back to the backstop. No throw - Prado scores! Tie game!

McCann bloops a 3-0 pitch to left field. Three out.

Bottom of the Ninth:

Moylan back in for a second inning of work. Replay of the passed ball. Morgan has now said four times that the ball was in the air when it went by LoDuca. Now, watching the replay, it’s “the ball is in the air, and it just sinks past him, you see the ball hits the ground at his glove when it hits his glove.” Hmm.

Prado stays in at 1B for Teixeira. Moylan is a bit of a side-armer. 2-2 count to Christian Guzman. Another pitch with great movement for Moylan. Swinging strikeout. Lastings Milledge up.

Jon Miller foreshadowing: “Any National player whose got the idea of hitting the heroic game-ending home run, will be exploited by Moylan.”

Milledge off the fists grounds out to Chipper. Miller: “Moylan served him a jam sandwich.” Ryan Zimmerman up.

Two out, bottom of the ninth, tie game. 1-0 low.

Miller, more foreshadowing: “Last year, despite only 91 RBI for Zimmerman, 18 were game-winning.”

Pitch, down the middle, Belted deep left-center. Kid in the first row has a souvenir. Ryan Zimmerman walk-off.

Great, now I’m last in pitching.

Good game, great opening for the Nationals. That was the first baserunner for the Nationals since the first inning - 24 straight were retired.

Standings after Game One:

  1. Goodfellas 68.5
  2. Atomic Roadrunners 63.5
  3. Get Off Kong! 63
  4. Uncle Lester 61.5
  5. Shoeless Jews 55
  6. Cover Zero 51.5
  7. Stanimals 49
  8. Misogynistic Padres 48
  9. X-Men 46.5
  10. The Pi Train 43.5

That’s it, everyone. Thanks for coming. Good night.

Posted on March 30, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Live Blogging Opening Night

Welcome to the 2008 MLB season! I’m here live-blogging the Opening Night tilt between the Atlanta Braves and Washington Nationals, from the awesome new Nationals Ballpark in Washington, D.C.

On the mound tonight are Odalis Perez (The Pi Train) and Tim Hudson (X-Men). Let’s see if the first game lends to any trends for the long-haul of the season.

Of course, Ken Tremendous over at FireJoeMorgan.com is probably thrilled that Joe Morgan gets the call.

4:58 PM: ESPN Baseball Tonight montage of various historical Opening Day shots.

4:59 PM: And we’re interrupted by my daughter’s diaper. A bad omen for the season. Hit “Pause” - be right back.

5:01 PM: Fortunately, the game wasn’t rained-out (diaper-wise). Jon Miller has a nice voice-over with pretty D.C. pictures, and then there’s a ham-handed segment with George Will, with a tie-in to the 2008 election cycle.

5:04 PM: Looks like the Braves are wearing navy blue jerseys with grey pants. The rumor from UniWatch of powder-blue unis didn’t come to pass.

5:05 PM: Hyping my Braves - Chipper and Big Teix. Morgan says they’ll rival Big Papi and Ramirez in Boston this year. They’d better exceed those two.

5:07 PM: Nice - in the two-person standup in the booth, Miller and Morgan frame the Capitol dome in the distance. And Gammons has a good explanation of why Lastings Milledge scared all the white people in New York. Thus, he’s on the Nationals.

5:09 PM: Starting with player introductions. As mentioned earlier, I don’t have any Nationals. In the game are Braves’ 3B Chipper Jones, 1B Mark Teixeira, and relief pitcher Peter Moylan, who may or may not get into the game.

5:12 PM: Opera star Denyce Graves (a D.C. native) sings a lengthy SSB.

5:15 PM: Holy crap! Nats owner Ted Lerner looks like a young Dwight Eisenhower!

5:16 PM: The President emerges from the bullpen - looks like he’s loose. This is his 6th Opening Day assignment. Manager Manny Acta will be his battery-mate - a plum assignment. Some boos to the Pres. Don’t really agree with that - respect the office and the sanctity of Opening Day, and this glorious new ballpark. That one was high, but over the plate.

5:20 PM: Here’s the lineup for the Braves, starting with Kelly Johnson (Cover Zero). Didn’t realize Teixeira was a switch-hitter as well. At this rate the odds of Teix signing long-term before exploring free-agency are maybe four percent. Barry’s starter Odalis Perez is on the mound. That Nats’ lineup is decent, with the management decisions to bench Dmitri Young and Felipe Lopez impacting fantasy.

5:23 PM: Finally, the first pitch. Oh, good. Miller welcomes us to the “North American” Opening Day. Joe Morgan states that he only recognizes tonight’s game. Good thing the flagship network of MLB’s announcer is on board with the whole Japan Opening Series, which also appeared on this network.

Next post will be of game action . . .

Posted on March 30, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Roster Moves For Week 1

Week starting March 30th (Opening Night) and ending March 31st (Opening Day)

(Roster adjustments following WBRL Draft)

Down:

  • OF Steven Pearce (he’s in AAA)
  • P Carlos Villanueva (he’ll be activated Tuesday - he’s not pitching until Thursday)

Up:

  • P Jon Lieber (he might pitch Monday in relief)
  • OF Ryan Spilborghs (best option thus far - still looking for a better #5 OF until Pearce or Headley are promoted)

Posted on March 30, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Murton Sent Down to Iowa

From CBS Sports:

Cubs optioned OF Matt Murton to Triple-A Iowa.  This move was just a formality after the Cubs picked up Reed Johnson last week. Murton might find his way back into the majors this season at some point, but shouldn’t be drafted in any regular Fantasy formats heading into 2008. Murton remains a candidate to be traded.

Posted on March 30, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Hatteberg to Start Opening Day

From Rotoworld:

Reds manager Dusty Baker confirmed Saturday that Scott Hatteberg would be in the team’s Opening Day lineup over Joey Votto.  Versus right-hander Brandon Webb, the Reds will use a lineup of: CF Corey Patterson, SS Jeff Keppinger, RF Ken Griffey Jr., 2B Brandon Phillips, LF Adam Dunn, 3B Edwin Encarnacion, 1B Hatteberg and C Javier Valentin. Votto will still probably get a half-share of playing time at first base, though it won’t be a platoon with both him and Hatteberg batting lefty.

Posted on March 29, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

I Have No Nationals

Every season there’s usually one or more teams from which that I fail to acquire a representative player.  This isn’t necessarily a bad thing - though I’d never recommend against not owning a player from a team just because the team collectively stinks.  Such odoriferous rosters usually yield several values with lovely bouquet.  The Nats this year looked like a source of plenty of bargains with sweet-smelling upside.

In addition to several starting players that reliably produce (Austin Kearns, Chad Cordero, the new catching duo of Paul LoDuca and Johnny Estrada), the Nationals were jam-packed with hidden value.  Here were my top "sleepers" for the Nationals this season:

Nick Johnson, 1B - I am expecting a .280 season, 25 HR, with possibly 75 RBI, bouncing back to where he was the first 22 weeks of 2006.  Tom Ross of Get Off Kong! managed to secure him for only $6.  SIX!  I wanted to bid higher, but at that point, I didn’t have much cash available, and it would have been my DH.  But this was a crime.  A crime!  Figure that he and Adam LaRoche produce equally - and he went for $16 ($25 last year).

Jason Bergmann, SP - He was high on my watchlist, but was snapped up in the 4th round of the minor league draft - 4 spots before I would have selected him.  I instead went with Jon Lieber, who doesn’t have the upside.

Wily Mo Pena, OF - Star cross’d career? Check. Injury in Spring Training to open the season on DL? Check.  Been a "failed prospect" several times over?  Check.  Still only 26 with tremendous bat speed and huge power? Check.  Moving into a smaller ballpark?  Check.  A perfect late-round sleeper, especially in our keeper league.  I actually nominated him with a chance of getting him, but the one other team that could bid on a hitter outbid me. He went for $8.

Matt Chico, SP - Penciled in as the No. 4 starter yet again this season, the former Diamondback prospect was much better in Spring Training this season, with different footwork and fewer walks allowed.  He’ll be better this season (though that may not be very helpful in Rotiss).  He was selected with the final pick of the 4th round of the minor league draft.

Ross Detwiler, John Lannan, and Collin Balester, SPs - The Nationals pitching ranks are looking up.  I was targeting Detwiler, specifically, to help out once Patterson broke down again in May.  Jim Bowden solved that issue by releasing him and bringing Odalis Perez on board.  Detwiler and Lannan each went to Stanimals for $1, and Balester went with the seventh-overall minor league pick.

On the Scout Team:

Garrett Guzman, OF - Rule 5 pick that was able to be sent down to AAA, he may not be more than a No. 4 OF, but I’ll keep an eye on him.

Justin Maxwell, OF - Could also end up contributing, especially if further injuries strike or a trade is made.

Tyler Clippard, SP - Sent down to AAA when it was expected he would be the No. 5 starter, he could come back and contribute.

Joel Hanrahan, RP - Lights-out in Spring Training, with 14 shutout innings and stellar K/BB ratio.  While technically a long reliever, he may get a shot in a bullpen with a starting closer that is maxing-out at 87 mph (Cordero), and the top-two most heavily used relievers in MLB last season (Jon Rauch and Saul Rivera).

And then of course:

Felipe Lopez, MI - The anti-sleeper.  At one point this offseason, some blogger joked that Manny Acta must have caught Lopez sleeping with Acta’s wife, as Lopez is in the doghouse’s basement, locked in a box like the Gimp from Pulp Fiction.  With no hope of an opening (or a trade, in all likelihood), of course he gets selected for $7, which isn’t so bad I guess.

Posted on March 29, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Prince Under the Weather

From Rotoworld:

Prince Fielder was scratched from Saturday’s lineup with flu-like symptoms. We’d recommend chicken noodle soup, but that’s no longer an option. [Now that he's a vegetarian]. Fielder is expected to be ready to go on Monday.

Posted on March 29, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Prince Fielder Offered Big Cash, Lotsa Prizes

From Rotoworld:

Brewers owner Mark Attanasio said offers have been made to Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun that would take them through their first year of free agency.  The team had made it clear it was going to happen. Fielder’s deal would be five years and an option for 2013, while Braun’s was six years with an option for 2014. One would think it’d take over $50 million to lock up Fielder for that long. He’ll want something similar to the $10 million Ryan Howard is getting this year in his first year of arbitration in 2009. Figure something like $36 million for the three years of arbitration and then $16 million-$20 million for the season of free agency.

Posted on March 29, 2008 by Andrew Flynn

Valentin Ready to be Inconspicuous

From CBS Sports:

Reds C Javier Valentin hit a three-run homer Saturday against the Rays — his second of the spring. He batted .294 for the exhibition season. Valentin will split at-bats with David Ross this season. He has some decent power, but he’s not worth drafting as more than a No. 2 catcher in NL-only leagues because of his backup status.

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