In other news, the sky is blue and water is wet.
Trying to get the PC up and running again. Posts to come soon.
bay area ball: giants, warriors, sharks, 49ers
Bengie Molina, C
- Yankees: With Jorge Posada out for the season and Hideki injured, the Yankees could use another catcher and added offense, just in case Richie Sexson doesn't pan out. However, the Yankees hope that Posada can retrun after the start of the 2009 season, and Bengie's contract is not fitting as an injury-replacement player.
- Marlins: Lots of murmuring that they want a backstop. Only problem is, would they take on Bengie's salary?
- Angels: Jeff Mathis has been a wreck offensively: .228/.304/.389. Bengie would be a huge upgrade.
Randy Winn, OF
- Braves: I wrote a piece discussing the Winn-to-Braves rumor floating around in June. Winn would be an upgrade over Francoeur, whose slash stats (.231/.286/.369) have dropped even lower since June. Kotsay's been hitting well, only problem, as always, has been his health. There haven't been any rumblings about a trade since then, but it's best to leave open possibilities.
- White Sox: Again, Winn would be an upgrade of Swisher, who's batting to the tune of .235/.357/.411. Swisher has more pop, but Winn is more consistent and plays a better CF.
Taschner/Walker, RP
- He wouldn't net much, if anyone, by himself, but the Giants could package him with another vet. Now that we have a cluster of minor league relief pitchers, I'm a bit hesitant about trading Walker and Taschner. They're the oldest guys in the bullpen now that Yabu is on the DL, and it would be better for the Giants to keep them both for "mentoring" purposes until they receive more value in return when T/W are packaged in a bigger deal.
When Posey was drafted by the Orioles (Ed. note: Ahem, Giants) in June, he made several statements to me alluding to the fact that he might return to school for his senior season. That, of course, was immediately after the College World Series. With much having changed since that point, Posey has gone from having an open mind about returning to school to being quoted in newspaper articles as if he's already with the Giants. Though Posey hasn't signed the dotted line, every indication has him signing with the Giants. Posey's stock will never be higher and he's already proven to be the nation's best college player. Now it's time to take that label to professional baseball.
Gillaspie had a sensational junior campaign for the Shockers, and was drafted by the Giants in the supplemental first round. As with first-round pick Buster Posey, Gillaspie has yet to sign with the Giants. Still, that might not mean much. According to a source we spoke with at Wichita State, it would come as a huge surprise if Gillaspie decides to return to school for his senior season. After an outstanding season at the plate, Gillaspie's stock is at an all-time high and probably can't improve much. As a result, I'd expect to see Gillaspie sign before the August deadline.
The Los Angeles Clippers on Thursday identified the latest target in their recovery from the free-agent loss of Elton Brand by signing restricted free agent Kelenna Azubuike of the Golden State Warriors to an offer sheet.And the game of musical chairs between the north and south continues...
NBA front-office sources told ESPN.com that the Clippers -- using their estimated $3 million in salary-cap space left over after completing a trade Tuesday with the Denver Nuggets to acquire center Marcus Camby as their primary Brand replacement -- have awarded Azubuike a three-year deal worth an estimated $9 million.
Zito is trying new stuff — fewer moving parts in his windup, a lower arm angle — with mixed but encouraging results the past month. Not easy to do mid-season, but if any athlete can re-learn his craft on the fly under this much pressure, it’s Zito. He’s healthy (we think), open-minded and hard-working.Correia is probably the most disappointing starter. After a sparkly 3-1, 2.54 ERA late season performance last year, he looked like a solid 5th starter. After an oblique injury, he wasn't the same, pitching into the 6th inning only once. It's possible that he still could be suffering from the strained oblique, so once he fully recovers--which shouldn't be too troublesome since the injury is on the opposite side of his pitching arm--he could regain his late 2007 form and string together a few victories.
Bases empty: .278/.323/.467He's been putrid at the plate with runners on, which devalues his seemingly OK slash stats (.258/.313/.413).
Men on base: .232/.301/.345
RISP: .225/.296/.348
Inning | Batter | Velocity | Result |
1 | D. Lee | 84 | Ball |
1 | D. Lee | 82 | Ball |
3 | R. Theriot | 81 | Ball |
3 | M. Fontenot | 82 | Swinging strike, K |
3 | D. Lee | 82 | Ball |
4 | J. Edmonds | 84 | Ball in dirt |
6 | D. Lee | 83 | Called strike |
7 | H. Blanco | 83 | Called strike, K |
7 | K. Fukudome | 84 | Foul |
8 | D. Lee | 83 | Swinging strike |
We felt he was one of the best international players we got a chance to look at. This player is 6-foot-5, 198 pounds. He's shown us really all the tools to play the game. He can run. He can throw. He's shown us power and the ability to take the ball the other way. He's a five-tool player. Adding to that, he has the makeup and work ethic to fulfill his abilities.- Could Omar Vizquel retire during the break? Not so, says the wiz himself.
Travis Denker, who didn’t look so hot yesterday in New York, was optioned down to Single-A San Jose. Infielder Ivan Ochoa, a Triple-A All-Star, has joined the club. (They purchased his contract and added him to the 40-man roster, which had a vacancy ever since Chulk was outrighted.)It doesn't make sense to send Denker all the way down to San Jose, but it's probably the only place where he can play everyday. Fresno will have its All-Star break next week and will be off for 4 days.
F. Lewis LFWelcome to the bigs, Ochoa, here's your spot on the bench.
R. Durham 2B
R. Winn RF
B. Molina C
A. Rowand CF
J. Bowker 1B
R. Aurilia 3B
O. Vizquel SS
In 3 games: 3 R, 9 H, 24 SO, .233 BAThe only positive about the Mets series is that all hope of being 4 GAMES BACK!!!11! during the Dodgers series is effectively stomped out. Meaning: sell, sell, sell.
First off, Maggette is injury prone. He’s been in the league nine seasons and has played 70 or more games just four times in his career. Maggette’s body says Iron Man; his stats say Tin Man.For $50 million over 5 years? Oh boy.
Maggette is a great sub, the kind of aggressive scorer you love coming off the bench. He has a shoot first mentality and is a mediocre defender at best. In other words, as a sixth man he’s great, as a starter he’s not.
Maggette has made it clear he wants to start and be a primary offensive option. But he’s the type of high-maintenance player who doesn’t make teammates better. In fact, because he doesn’t create much, there tends to be a lot of standing around when he’s got the ball on the perimeter.
Maggette has never played for a winner. His teams have missed the playoffs in eight of the nine seasons he’s been in the league. The one year a Maggette team made the playoffs was in 2006, when the Clippers made it to the postseason. That year Maggette played 32 games.
Inning | Batter | Velocity | Result |
1 | C. Beltran | 83 | Ball |
1 | D. Easley | 81 | Ball |
2 | B. Schneider | 82 | Ball |
3 | C. Beltran | 83 | Ground ball single to RF |
5 | J. Reyes | 82 | Foul |
Inning | Batter | Velocity | Result |
1 | K. Fukudome | 83 | Foul |
1 | K. Fukudome | 80 | Swinging strike, K |
1 | D. Lee | 84 | Line drive single to CF |
3 | R. Johnson | 89 | Called strike |
3 | K. Fukudome | 84 | Foul |
4 | G. Soto | 81 | Swinging strike |
4 | G. Soto | 81 | Swinging strike, K |