All the news that's relevant, with a fantasy twist. by the players, for the players

Tommy John surgery for Volquez

que up your misguided Dusty Baker jokes.

As expected, Edinson Volquez underwent season-ending Tommy John surgery Monday as doctors discovered that the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow was almost completely torn. Typical recovery from Tommy John surgery involves about 12 months on the sidelines, so even if everything goes smoothly Volquez could end up missing all of next season.

Since coming to Cincinnati in the December of 2007 swap for Josh Hamilton he's gone 21-8 with a 3.44 ERA and 253 strikeouts in 245.2 innings to emerge as one of baseball's most promising young starters. Even missing all of 2010 would give Volquez time to make a full return at age 27 and because a great changeup has led to so much of his success losing a couple miles per hour may not ruin him.

Game of the day, or what?

There are not a ton of great match-ups today, but the Cardinals face off against Johan Santana today, so we will go with that. The Metropolitan's season may be a lost cause but St. Louis is certainly in the thick of it, thanks a bunch to Joel Pineiro.

Cardinals (58-50) @ Mets (50-55), 7:10pm
  STL: Joel Pineiro (30, RHP, 9-9, 2.84)
  NYM: Johan Santana (30, LHP, 12-8, 2.96)

Peavy might be back sooner than expected

Ah nice. There in lies the difference between an annual pennant contender and an annual last place team. The Padres were saving Peavy for next season, because they could. Don't believe me? When was the last time you heard anything with regards to Chris Young? He was only supposed to miss a start or two, remember.

Peavy could face the Yankees if his timetable accelerates. The Sox visit New York on Aug. 28-30. ''That's the goal,'' manager Ozzie Guillen said. ''We look at the schedule and think that's the [series] we think he should be ready for. That's the biggest reason -- we have a tough schedule for the end of the season. Hopefully, he'll be there when we go there. I hope he'll be there before that, but that's what we're shooting for and that's what we should be doing when we go to Boston and New York.

''I've got a feeling he's going to be out on the field sooner than what we think. I don't know why, but the thing we have going on right now, I think he sees his teammates, the way we work here, how we have fun. In the meantime, when the game starts, everything is about the game. ''The good thing is it's not his arm. We have one of the best trainers [Herm Schneider] in the game. Our medical staff is very, very good, and that's one of the biggest reasons the organization took a shot at him. Hopefully, he'll be healthy as soon as possible.''

Andy Marte: Prospect or Suspect?

I snatched him up in a couple of leagues where I need 3B help. Ya never know, and the kid is still young. I for one am pulling for him.

What are we to make of Marte at this point? On the positive side, he’s hardly ancient at 25 years of age, was going postal on International League competition, and his 16.7 K% was rather low. On the other, he’s still not working the count all that well (6.8 BB%), and a .345 BABIP suggests that his batting average-driven line will come down some.

Prior to the 2009 season, CHONE was the most optimistic projection system regarding Marte’s future (.248/.316/.421). But that forecast does not take into consideration his resurgent hitting at AAA (per Minor League Splits, Marte’s Major League Equivalent line is .292/.326/.498). The truth probably lies somewhere in between those two lines. While it’s not a perfect comparison, Marte calls to mind a Joe Crede-type, with good pop and a slick glove helping to compensate for an aggressive, lower-OBP approach at the plate.

From a fantasy perspective, Marte is well worth a look in AL-only and deep mixed leagues. With Ryan Garko gone, Andy should get a decent amount of playing time at first base.

Benching Josh Hamilton

I sold off a year to early on the guy, but in some small way, I feel justified, relieved, vindicated, what ever you want to call it.

I'm sorry, but when the wait exceeds the payoff, I have to put my foot down. And speaking in terms of the six-month baseball calendar, the wait has exceeded the payoff, whether he missed part of that period with injury or not. Even if Hamilton hits eight home runs tomorrow, leading into the greatest two-month stretch of offensive firepower the world has ever seen, that's two months of goodness after four months of garbage.

In other words, for all the talent Hamilton has, for all we know he can do, he's running out of time to flip the switch and actually do it. Back in May, maybe I could afford to cross my fingers and hope he wakes up tomorrow, but not now. Now, I actually have to win. So you can keep running out Hamilton over guys like Andre Ethier, Juan L. Rivera and Ryan Ludwick if you want, but not me. I just can't take that leap of faith anymore.

Does that mean I'd cut Hamilton? Does that mean I'm calling him the worst player in Fantasy from now until the end of all eternity? No and no. I'm just saying I can't start him anymore, not until his actual performance justifies it. And if someone in my league was still willing to pay a relatively high price for him, I'd invite the discussion.

Lastings Milledge Recalled

Also in the present, Huntington strongly suggested last night that recently acquired outfielder Lastings Milledge will make his Pirates debut tomorrow, coincidentally against his former Washington team.

Milledge has batted .337 in 17 games with Class AAA Indianapolis and, by all accounts, has been a model worker and citizen off the field, a main stressing point given some of Milledge's past turmoil. "We're very happy with what Lastings has done," Huntington said.

His recall is certain to mean a demotion for outfielder Jeff Salazar. That would leave Milledge, Brandon Moss and Garrett Jones rotating around center fielder Andrew McCutchen.

Ortiz and Ramirez Said to Be on 2003 Doping List

Patiently awaiting the response from this whiny little beatch. Other than the hypocrisy that will be flowing from his lips, I could care.

Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz, the sluggers who propelled the Boston Red Sox to end an 86-year World Series championship drought and to capture another title three years later, were among the roughly 100 Major League Baseball players to test positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003, according to lawyers with knowledge of the results.

Game of the day, or not!

We have a light schedule today, with most of the American League teams taking the day off. There really is not a ton of great match-ups on the docket today, even though Johan Santana takes to the mound. The best of the bunch appears to be Javy Vazquez, the most underrated pitcher in fantasy circles ever, taking the mound against the Norwegian, Rick VandenHurk.

Braves (51-50) @ Marlins (53-48), 7:10pm
  ATL: Javier Vazquez (32, RHP, 8-7, 2.98)
  FLA: Rick VandenHurk (24, RHP, 1-0, 2.45)

Injury lands Johnson on 60-day DL

Is the end of the line for the Unit?

Randy Johnson was in a chipper mood for a 45-year-old pitcher who just learned he has a slight rotator-cuff tear in his left shoulder and will not pitch until September. Johnson was placed on the 60-day disabled list Tuesday to clear a 40-man spot for Ryan Garko, which means he will not be able to return before Sept. 4.

"The first thing I thought of was I won't be able to do my instructional hitting video. That will be on the backburner for a while," Johnson said, before getting serious and adding, "I've overcome three back surgeries, there or four knee surgeries. I've been on the DL and rehabbed and know what that's all about. It's one more speed bump in the road of my career."

Cabrera is fielding tough hop to the majors

An absolutely great read on Everth Cabrera. Dare I say, a must read ..

“He reminds me so much of Omar (Vizquel),” says Padres coach Jim Lefebvre. “He has more range, more of an arm, more speed and he's more advanced physically than Omar was at his age. With that said, Omar became probably the greatest shortstop who ever played. This kid's a great find who could be around a long, long time.”

Cabrera's batting average (.259) and on-base percentage (.342) leave some room for improvement, and he's clearly a work in progress after just 42 big league games. In the opener of the Padres' current series at Cincinnati, Cabrera smoked a line drive left-handed for his first major league home run, then hit a triple right-handed with a bit of bravura on the basepaths. He added three hits Tuesday night, including a pair of doubles.

The triple was Cabrera's fourth of the season, equaling the most by any Padres hitter all last year. His speed and fearlessness made Cabrera professional baseball's stolen-base leader in 2008. He's tops on the Padres with 13 thefts in 14 tries – and that's after missing no fewer than 60 games with a fractured hamate bone in his left hand suffered April 19.

Dave Allen: 45 up, 45 down

Whats more impressive, 45 batters retired in a row, or 59 innings without run scored? It's close I think, but I'll go with the Bulldog.

Over three games Mark Buehrle was perfect through 15 innings. Starting on July 18, when Nick Markakis flied out to center in the 8th, through Thursday’s perfect game and ending in the sixth inning of last night’s game not one batter reached base. As a result Buehrle set the major league record with 45 straight batters retired. Coincidentally the previous record holder Bobby Jenks, tied with Jim Barr for 41 batters, was sitting in the bullpen watching as it happened.

Over those 45 batters Buehrle got nine strikeouts, 22 ground outs, eight fly outs, two line outs and four pop outs. A truly amazing performance. I wanted to partially analyze partially commemorate the streak by looking at the location of Buehrle’s pitches. The image is a little messy, but there are some striking trends.

MLBTR: Pirates/ Mariners trade

MLBTR rocks...

11:58am: Kovacevic says Cedeno's the only player who will report to the Pirates. Clement will head to Triple A, the others to A ball.

MLB.com's Jonathan Mayo calls it a "pretty good haul" for the Pirates and Kevin Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus says it's the best deal the Pirates have made yet.

11:45am: Kovacevic says the Mariners acquire Wilson and Ian Snell for Clement, Ronny Cedeno, Aaron Pribanic, Brett Lorin and Nathan Adcock.

 read more »

Cliff Lee to the Phillies

The trades are coming fast and furious today ...

The Philadelphia Phillies seriously bolstered their chances of repeating as World Series champions by outbidding several teams for reigning American League Cy Young award winner Cliff Lee of the Cleveland Indians, according to baseball sources.

The Phillies also received left fielder Ben Francisco and in return, the Indians netted a strong group of prospects: Class A right-handed pitcher Jason Knapp, Class AAA right-handed pitcher Carlos Carrasco, shortstop Jason Donald and catcher Lou Marson.

 read more »

Passan: Wood an example of a faded trade chip

Jeff Passan is on his failed prospect kick this week it seems. He has two pieces up today covering the subject, and here is an excellent breakdown of one of my fav's ...

Brandon Wood is on plenty of lips again, as the Angels try to back into the Roy Halladay(notes) and Cliff Lee(notes) sweepstakes. Only it’s different this time. He isn’t the headliner. Wood is the complementary piece, the extra guy, the one who is certainly replaceable, the antithesis of what he once was: untouchable. He’s a prime example of a player a team held onto for too long because an honest evaluation of his ability was clouded by excess hype.

“Teams love their prospects,” Wood said. “But I realized very quickly that being a prospect doesn’t make you a major leaguer. A lot of prospects don’t pan out. A prospect is a label for a talented minor leaguer who hasn’t proven a thing in the big leagues.”

Wood is halfway right. Teams do love their prospects. But it’s not a normal sort of love. It is irrational. It is tainted. It is downright incestuous. Executives who pride themselves on objective analysis lose their wits because of homegrown prospects. The team drafted the player. It developed him. It watched him grow. He is the team’s kid, and he should wear their uniform, no matter what, right?

Dice-K's beatdown begins

This is one of the many reasons I cannot stand the Boston Red Sox. IMHO, it's one of the most despicable organizations in all of sports. Sorry fans of the Nation, it's not personal, I promise.

A day after Dice-K declared the Red Sox' training methods as the reason for his injuries, the team is striking back. And, as is the custom in Boston, they're doing it through the media. First, Tony Massarotti hits him, relaying that the team is "downright angry" at him, and that "the truth is that the Red Sox were tired of Matsuzaka's high-maintenance act a long time ago, but they kept their mouths shut and put up with it because Matsuzaka won games."

Then Dan Shaughnessy, who has long been a trusted messenger for the Sox, says "the Sox are steamed. Matsuzaka talked out of turn, infuriated his bosses and his teammates, and unwittingly took the focus away from Hall of Famer Jim Rice on the night the slugger's number was retired . . . It is reasonable to wonder if Matsuzaka will pitch again for the Sox this season. Or ever."

Game of the day, or what?

A couple of decent match-ups today, like say, Zach Duke versus Matt Cain, but I am going to dip back into the Dodgers at Cardinals well.

Dodgers (62-38) @ Cardinals (55-48), 8:15pm
  LAD: Clayton Kershaw (21, LHP, 8-5, 2.96)
  STL: Joel Pineiro (30, RHP, 9-9, 2.95)

Fan Graphs: Introducing Tommy Everidge

Everidge strikes out a fair amount and walks, although not at the levels you may be assuming, and his ISO is usually in the .180+ range. Truth be told, he lacks prospect status. His age, less than spectacular bat, and lack of a true position leave him in a bit of a limbo in terms of where he fits on a team; especially a team with Nomar Garciaparra, Jason Giambi, Jack Cust, and even the disabled Daric Barton floating around. Everidge is a right-handed platoon mate with defensive limitations that leave him stuck between first base and DH. T Or otherwise the player type that is about the easiest to find, right behind left-handed reliever. Everidge makes for a nice local story and probably nothing else. At least he’ll always be able to tell his kids and grandkids about his double off Papelbon though.

Astros lose pitchers Oswalt, Hawkins and Wright

You think you had a bad day?

Staff ace Roy Oswalt, along with relievers LaTroy Hawkins and Wesley Wright, all came down with ailments Tuesday, with the full extent of any yet to be announced.

Oswalt strained his lower back in the second inning of Houston's 11-6 victory against the Cubs. Hawkins was placed on the 15-day disabled list before the game because of a shingles and Wright went to a Chicago hospital after the game with a possible case of appendicitis.

Oswalt, who is flying back to Houston so team docs can check him out, said he has felt discomfort since his previous start on July 22. Now, Oswalt says, he "can walk but can't do anything strenuous." Such as pitching.

CBS: Hunter suddenly the hunted

After yielding no more than three earned runs in any of his first six starts, Hunter has become the latest must-snag pitcher and the occupant of the top spot on this week's American League Most Added player list.

While he has pitched well, a few breaks have also gone Hunter's way en route to a 3-1 record and 2.00 ERA. Hunter drew starts against two of the majors' most anemic lineups, Oakland and San Diego, in his first two games, and then he picked up another start at pitcher-friendly Safeco Field. A .256 BABIP has also helped to keep Hunter's ERA and WHIP improbably low, and he probably won't continue to strand baserunners at an 85 percent clip. Monday night's performance against Detroit was Hunter's most impressive to date, but based on his minor league track record, six strikeout games will be the exception, not the rule

Mets Fire Sale

You know what would be cool? If we had a Mets fan around here that would post stories for us, so I don't have to. Please put me out of my misery.

It was only a week ago that Omar Minaya claimed the Mets to be “buyers” rather than “sellers” but that was as much hogwash then as it is now. The Mets have 11 more losses than the NL East-leading Phillies and are 7 1/2 games out of the Wild Card with 65 games to play. Mathmetically, yes, they have a chance to reach the postseason. Realistically, though, it’s not likely. With four days before the trading deadline, it’s time to see where the Mets can cut their losses and bring in some talent for 2010. Unfortunately, the list of trade bait is pretty short.

The New York Mets are a steaming pile right now; a team in total disarray. It’s to the point where, as a Phillies fan, I no longer enjoy the schadenfreude. I now pity the New York Mets and their fan base. It is a pathetically-run organization.

Barton looks like strong DL possibility

No Brett Wallace. Oh well.

Daric Barton said his left hamstring strain feels even worse today, and manager Bob Geren said he's a definite possibility for the DL. Who gets called up if that happens? Here's a vote for Tommy Everidge, the Sonoma kid (well, he's 26) who is tearing it up at Triple-A Sacramento, hitting .377. If Sean Doolittle were healthy, he might get a look, but he's missed most of the season with injuries, most recently a knee problem.

Or the team could opt to bring Travis Buck back, though there probably won't be much playing time for him if the team decides to stick with the current outfield alignment. I asked Geren if the spot would have to go to a first baseman or could potentially go to someone at another position and he said that right now, they're discussing all options.

Brett Wallace is unlikely, though; the team has suggested that they'd like to keep him off the 40-man roster for the time being.

Rowand's MRI reveals slight forearm tear

An MRI performed Monday revealed a slight muscle tear in Aaron Rowand's right (throwing) forearm, forcing the Giants' leadoff hitter to miss his seventh straight start as his team faced the Pittsburgh Pirates at AT&T Park. Rowand said he planned to take two days of rest and continue receiving treatment. The injury doesn't affect his ability to swing the bat -- he's pinch-hit three times in the past six games -- but throwing remains an issue.

Prior to Monday's series opener against the Pirates, manager Bruce Bochy said placing his starting center fielder on the 15-day disabled list was not yet a necessity. Rowand added: "They don't want to put me out there in a game situation where, [with] the adrenaline flowing ... [I] end up hurting it longer and spending more time out."

The Freak K's 15

Barry the Motivator.

Barry Bonds stopped Tim Lincecum before the game with some orders for the pitcher: Beat my old team, or I'll beat you. "I think he was joking," Lincecum said with a grin. He made sure he didn't have to find out.

Lincecum looked like his old self, pitching a four-hitter and bouncing back from a rough outing with a career-high 15 strikeouts in the Giants' 4-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night.The reigning National Cy Young Award winner provided the Giants with a much-needed boost on the heels of a 3-7 trip that cost them the wild-card lead. He posted his fourth complete game this season and sixth of his career, finishing his 115-pitch gem in 2 hours, 6 minutes.

"It was right up there with one of his better games," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "He looked like he was excited to be home, excited to get us back on track. He was on a mission out there."

RJ White: Future Rookies, Oriole Rising

We might be getting a look at one of our prized Future Rookies very soon. Rumors abound that have Chris Tillman joining the Orioles on Wednesday and making his first start in the big leagues. Despite being lit up in his last Triple-A start, Tillman has proven why he’s one of the best pitching prospects in the minors, posting a 99/26 K/BB ratio, allowing just five HRs en route to a sub-3.00 ERA. He’s available in many fantasy leagues already, so be sure to make the preemptive pickup if you need a pitching lift.

Slowey Done for the Year

The anticipated news of season-ending surgery for Kevin Slowey has finally materialized. Dr. Thomas Graham is going to perform the surgery, where bone chips will be removed and the involved bone surfaces will be cleaned up and smoothed out. The recovery time frame being reported is two to four months, but the actuality is that the bone will be healed in 4-6 weeks, followed by a gradual decrease in generalized joint capsule soreness over the next 2-4 weeks. He would then require lengthy rehab in order to regain wrist, forearm, and shoulder strength, and then head out on a rehab assignment - all of which clearly can’t happen before season’s end.

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