Jeter Adds SI Award; Sizemore “Exposed”; and Other News…

If you get Sports Illustrated delivered to your home (as I do), this week’s cover will include the SI Sportsperson of the Year – Derek Jeter.  Jeter is near universally admired by his peers and baseball fans everywhere (except statisticians who bemoan his lack of range at shortstop), and it’s hard not to be a fan of someone who has “class” written about him in every article.  I mean, Bob Sheppard is finally retiring at 99, no longer able to make it to Yankee Stadium to work the public address mic, but Jeter insists on having a recording of Sheppard’s introduction played before every at bat.

Jeter talks about winning the award with Dan Patrick.  [DanPatrick.com/SI]

Probably Not the Photo Taken by Topps, Huh…

If you take a couple of suggestive photos for your significant other, beware who else might have access to that computer or phone where the photos are stored…  That’s the lesson Grady Sizemore seems to have learned now that a series of photos that likely won’t be sold on fathead.com have found their way onto the internet.  Sizemore, working through the legal arm of MLB, is trying to have websites that now have copies of these photos removed – but not all sites are conforming to the request.  Apparently, the leak comes from a friend/angry friend of his girlfriend.  [ESPN]

Check out the photos, if you dare, on deadspin.com…  [Deadspin]

Back to Baseball…

Sources in the Roy Halliday clan say that the pitcher wants to be dealt by spring training, else he will veto any trade after that.  Halliday wants to be able to focus on preparing for and playing in 2010.  [ESPN]

Chip Caray and TBS are no longer on the same team; both sides agreeing to go their separate ways.  [MLB]

Alex Cora, who filled in for the injured Jose Reyes until he, too, lost his season to two thumb injuries, resigned with the Mets for a one-year, $2 million deal with some incentives for playing time.  Cora remains a decent backup, but you’ll want to see how he handles the bat or throws upon his return. [MLB]

Another backup got signed – catcher Jason LaRue of the Cardinals.  LaRue’s one year deal is worth $950K.  [FoxSports]

In a grand gesture of kindness, the Angels players agreed to provide a full share of their playoff earnings to the estate of Nick Adenhart, worth about $140K.  The Yankees divided their share amongst 46 players, taking home a record $365K each.  Since the average Yankee earns something like $7.5 million, it’s tip money, but still…  Did you know that the second place clubs that DIDN’T make the playoffs also receive a share of the playoff money?  Basically, the players get a large percentage of the ticket sales first three (of a five game series) or four (of a seven game series) game series.  [MLB]

Hall of Fame Ballots for those who cannot vote…

Rob Neyer

Keith Law

Happy Birthday!

Walter Alston was born on this day in 1911 – and then managed the Dodgers forever…  At least until he got old and handed the reins to Tommy Lasorda, who may be my favorite manager of all time.

Also celebrating with cards, cake, or rememberances:  Ed Reulbach (1882) – the best fourth starter ever?, Cookie Lavagetto (1912), Marty Marion (1917), Calvin Coolidge Julius Caesar Tuskahoma McLish (1925), George Foster (1948), Dan Schatzeder (1954), Tom Filer (1956), Greg Harris (1963), Larry Walker (1966), Reggie Sanders (1967) – and probably still on the DL somewhere, Kirk Rueter (1970).

Tom Filer has the longest winning streak of all time, probably, if you go by elapsed time between losses.  After losing two decisions, Filer won his first career game on 7 – 3 – 1982 for the Cubs, went to the minors for two years before playing again in 1985 and going 7 – 0 that season for Toronto.  He wasn’t in a major league game again until 1988, where Filer won his first three decisions with the Brewers before finally losing on 6 – 19 – 1988 – two weeks shy of six years, with eleven straight winning decisions.

Angels, Dodgers Clinch Playoff Spots; Braves Keep Winning

Congratulations to the Los Angeles Angels, who pounded the floundering Texas Rangers, 11 – 0, to win the AL West Division.  After the game, the team poured champaign over the jersey of Nick Adenhart, who had died in a hit and run accident this April.  The team also ran back onto the field where, in addition to celebrating with fans, they posed for a team photo in front of the Adenhart sign in the outfield.  [ESPN]

I forgot to congratulate the Los Angeles Dodgers, who have clinched at least a playoff spot, but haven’t yet clinched the division.  Meanwhile, sore hamstrings are keeping Manny Ramirez and Casey Blake from playing.  Blake’s hamstring is sore enough to require a trip back to see team doctors for treatment.  [ESPN]

The Red Sox are limping toward the playoffs, having been swept by New York, and then losing last night to Toronto.  Perhaps more importantly, Josh Beckett was scratched from his start with back pain.  Both Francona and Beckett said, since the pain was in his upper left side, he could have pitched if the situation required it.  However, with Jon Lester wounded by a line drive on Friday, having two wounded aces would be a bad omen for the playoffs.  [ESPN]

The Atlanta Braves have won 15 of 17 to not only make a run at the Colorado Rockies (they trail by two games in the wild card chase), but they moved to within four games of the slumping Philadelphia Phillies.  The Marlins couldn’t reach Jair Jurrjens last night, while Houston pummelled the Phillies, 8 – 2.

The Twins and Tigers were postponed by rain, so today Detroit hosts a day-night doubleheader (I’ll be watching at least one game today!!!).

Welcome Back! J.C. Romero returns from the DL to the Phillies.

Afterthoughts – and prayers… This story will melt your heart, and hopefully four-year-old Luke Holko will make a full recovery after being struck in the head by a line drive foul ball a few weeks ago.  Check it out.

299 and Counting; Zambrano Erupts? No Way!

Randy Johnson stopped Atlanta for his 299th win last night, next up Washington next Wednesday, then (likely) Florida. If that happens, you know where I’ll be.

Moving to the Marlins (sort of), Philadelphia’s Brett Myers left last night’s game with pain in his right hip. MRI and possibly a cortizone shot in his near future. He’ll miss a start.

Carlos Zambrano will likely miss a start after erupting over a close play that went against him in last night’s game against Pittsburgh. He was mad when contact between he and the umpire sealed Zambrano’s fate. Having watched it, though, it looks like the umpire bumped Zambrano and not the other way around. So, Zambrano beat up a gatorade machine.

How about that Daisuke Matsuzaka start? Four wild pitches yesterday, and then two more by relievers, tying an AL record for most wild pitches in the game. Catcher George Kottaras got a little extra exercise last night…

A couple was arrested in Tampa last night, and on the way to jail claimed that they were the steroids suppliers to the Washington Nationals (and Washington Capitals of the NHL). If anyone has seen the Nationals play, you know that they aren’t using steroids – or don’t know what to do with the stuff. Richard Thomas, who was caught with $200,000 worth of steroids, says “the truth will come out…” Isn’t Richard Thomas the guy who played John Boy Walton on TV 30 years ago?

Jake Peavy is pitching through an ankle injury – which is just the type of thing that ruins a shoulder or ankle. If I owned him, I’d be nervous. If I were trading for him (Cubs, Phillies), I’d be more nervous.

Houston’s Brandon Backe returns from the DL – and the Astros can use him out of the bullpen. Wesley Wright returns to AAA Round Rock.

On the Mend? Jorge Posada might be back with the Yankees for the weekend. Cincy’s Edinson Volquez says he can throw without back pain. And, Minnesota’s Joe Crede might be back today.

Melky Cabrera made a fine running catch and crashed into a wall – and now is headed back for treatment on his non-throwing shoulder. He’s day-to-day.

Definitely out? Cubs Aaron Miles (shoulder), A’s Nomar Garciaparra (calf), and Oriole Koji Uehara (hamstring). The last one is especially sad as he’s been doing a good job for Baltimore.

My favorite failed prospect, Daniel Cabrera, was designated for assignment by Washington. Talk about someone who needs a new pitching coach!!! His velocity is down a touch, and (like Matt Lindstrom) he throws a very flat fastball.

A few other transactions hit the wire, but nobody of interest is on the list. Sorry to see the Cubs sent Bobby Scales back to AAA Iowa…

St. Louis’s hot streak has them in first place in the NL Central. Toronto’s loss last night is the ninth straight and moves them off people’s playoff radar…

Buster Olney’s blog on ESPN.com has a bunch of odd stats, of which just a couple are really important. The Indians pitchers are walking a lot of batters, which was contributed to the disappointing start, and the rest are mostly trivial unless they hold up for the rest of the season. However, he has a couple of interesting trade rumors, including Brad Penny to Philadelphia… Hmmm…. Penny has pitched well for Boston and just would like to stay healthy to get a contract for next year.

Andrew Gallo was officially indicted in the death of Nick Adenhart and two others stemming from an alcohol related accident in southern California last April.

Adenhart Dies in Accident; Macias Replaces Injured Floyd

Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart was one of three people killed in a hit and run accident in the early hours of Thursday morning in Fullerton (CA). The car in which Adenhart was a passenger was hit by an allegedly drunk driver whose minivan ran a red light and smashed into the smaller Mitsubishi. After impact, the Mitsubishi smashed into a tree, while the driver of the minivan ran away from the scene on foot.

Adenhart was just 22, and had pitched six innings of shutout ball that evening. Last year, getting a quick callup in May, Adenhart was the youngest pitcher in the AL, and was named the top Angel prospect by Baseball America.

Drew Macias was the first player activated by Yahoo Sports after opening day… The San Diego Padres added Macias when Cliff Floyd was moved to the disabled list with a strained right shoulder (big surprise, huh?). The 26-year-old Macias is a pretty quick outfielder, but not necessarily a good base stealer. Since being drafted by San Diego in the 35th round out of Chaffey College, Macias has moved up through the minors one step at a time, getting a September cup of coffee each of the last two seasons. His primary skill appears to be his batting eye – he has hit about .280 most seasons in the minors with a good number of walks, but with little power. With three (reasonably) established players in the outfield (and a fourth outfielder in Scott Hairston), don’t expect Macias to see much playing time except as an occasional pinch hitter or pinch runner.

2009 Season Forecast: Los Angeles Angels

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
100 – 62 (1st Place – AL West)
Runs Scored: 765
Runs Allowed: 697

2008 Season Summary:

Pretty simple, actually.  The Angels got off to a solid April, going 18 – 10, kept a winning record through May and June, then ran away with the division with a 19 – 6 July.  With a weak division, strong pitching, a closer having a record season, and just enough hitting, the Angels never had a losing month.

You know what’s really odd about the season?  They weren’t that good – rather, they weren’t as good as their record.  Based on the ratio of runs scored to runs allowed, you would expect them to win 90 games – still good, but not 100 wins good.

Four teams allowed fewer runs – one of them was Oakland – and nine teams scored more.  So, they weren’t blowing teams away.  When they got a lead, though, nobody could get past that bullpen – featuring the 62 saves of Francisco Rodriguez.  Heck, in close games Jose Arredondo won 10 and lost 2.  Five starters won 10 or more – that doesn’t happen very often at all.

What they were was a broadly talented team with few superstars having a bit more pitching than everyone else, and the ability to shut down games after the sixth inning.

How About That Offense:

The outfielders weren’t half bad.  Vlad Guerrero missed a little time, but still delivered punch, with 27 homers and a .303 average.  Torii Hunter, added from Minnesota, was just ordinary good – above average power and speed.  Garrett Anderson remains slightly above average offensively even as he ages.  The power numbers are down, but his batting average remains decent.  As always, he just doesn’t do anything else to get on base.  Backups Juan Rivera and Gary Matthews were okay, but actually below average offensive performers.

The infield was also a hair above ordinary.  Chone Figgins and Erick Aybar were a notch below average while Howie Kendrick and Casey Kotchman were a hair above average.  Until Mark Teixeira arrived, there were no bangers in the infield.  For all the talk about the two months that Manny Ramirez gave Los Angeles, was it that much better than what Tex did?  Teixeira batted .358, slugged .632, and drove in 43 runs in just 54 games.  Backups Robb Quinlan, Brandon Wood, and Macier Izturis were tolerable backups.

The combined performance of the catching was impressive – 29 homers, 91 RBI.  Of course, only Mike Napoli was really good.  Jeff Mathis hit .194, but with 42 RBI, so the few hits he had were important.

Tell Me About the Defense:

Defensively, the catching was tolerable – Mathis being the better of the two against the run (Napoli only caught 11 of 52 runners), far more mobile, though slightly more mistake prone.

The infield defense was above average – anchored by two good glovemen at first (Kotchman and Teixeira).  Howie Kendrick is slightly above average (1 play per 800 balls in play) and doesn’t hurt you on the double play or in making errors.  Erick Aybar is a gold glove candidate, while Chone Figgins is the best option at third (though Wood has more range).  Figgins was – 5 in terms of range, but doesn’t make mistakes, and so he doesn’t hurt you too much.

The outfield was average all the way around.  The best fielder is Gary Matthews, but he’s just everyone’s backup.  It’s time to admit that Torii Hunter is no longer the centerfielder he was five years ago – he just looks smooth.  Per 800 balls in play, Hunter is just one play better than average.  Matthews, by the way, was +10 – much better than Hunter, though in just 221 innings.  Garrett Anderson and Vladimir Guerrero were better than expected at this point by being league average.

Now Pitching:

The most complete rotation in the majors.  Ervin Santana was 24 runs better than the average pitcher and gave the Angels 219 innings.  Joe Saunders surprised everyone with 198 innings, won 17 games, and was 20 runs better than average.  John Lackey missed ten starts and still was 13 runs better than average.  Jered Weaver hasn’t blossomed into an ace, but he’s still slightly above average, too.  Only Jon Garland, who still went 14 – 8, was below the bar – 15 runs below average, but over 196.2 innings.  Dustin Mosely and Nick Adenhart picked up the missing 13 starts and weren’t ready yet but showed promise.

The bullpen was amazing, led by Rodriguez and the 14 runs he saved the team.  However, Arredondo was 17 runs to the good (42 hits in 61 innings), Scot Shields remained dependable, and Darren Oliver kicked in 72 solid innings.  Only the mop up guy, Justin Speier, was below average in any way.  Only Philadelphia had more bullpen weapons.

Looking Ahead to 2009:

The front four members of the rotation stay, and the lone weak spot (Garland) was allowed to leave.  Nick Adenhart or Dustin Moseley can be as good as Garland – at least not worse.

The bullpen lost Rodriguez and signed Brian Fuentes from Colorado – who, I am sure, is happy to be here.  I don’t buy that Arredondo can repeat his performance, and Joe Saunders might take a step back.  Darren Oliver won’t be 15 runs better than league average again.  I think it’s probably going to cost the Angels about 25 runs.

Defensively, Matthews is going to be a step up (it would be even better if he played center and moved Hunter to left or right).  Getting Vlad to the DH position and letting Juan Rivera play right isn’t going to be an improvement – so the net change will be balanced out.  And, the infield lost Teixeira to the Yankees – so the infield defense may lose 10 to 15 runs – maybe more – by playing Kendry Morales.

So – instead of allowing 697 runs, it might be more like 735.

Offensively, Matthews isn’t as good as Anderson, who is in Atlanta.  Hunter and Vlad may step a bit back.  The infield loses the big bat of Tex, but Morales will be better than Kotchman.  Still, the net loss will be another 30 runs.  So, the net runs scored will be around 735.

That puts Los Angeles at .500 – 81 and 81, and might not win the division.  My take on it is a disappointing second place.

Down on the Farm:

For the last three seasons, Baseball America has been calling Nick Adenhart one of the top two prospects in the chain.  Adenhart has been okay in AA and AAA, finishing 2008 with a 9 – 13 record in 26 starts, with less than promising command.  In fact, it’s gotten worse with each season in the minors.  I know people hit a ton in the PCL, but 75 walks in 145.1 innings should be a concern.  In his favor is his age – he’s just 22.  In fact, it’s hard to see who the prospect is at Salt Lake City.  Dustin Moseley got starts with the Angels but had a 6.94 ERA there.  Shane Loux was 12 – 6, doesn’t strike a ton of guys out, and is 28.  If Adenhart is a prospect, so is Nick Green, who had comparable numbers, is 23, and went 8 – 8.

Brandon Wood gets shots with the parent club and has real power, but the best hitter will be new first baseman Kendry Morales, who hit .341 at SLC with some power, makes great contact – but could be a little more selective at the plate.  Sean Rodriguez, a second baseman with power and discipline hit .306 with a .645 slugging percentage and a .397 OBP.  He won’t do that in the majors, but he can play.

No hitters at AA impressed me, but 23 year old Kevin Jepsen had a 1.42 ERA for Arkansas – a power pitcher who could work on his control a bit.  Steve Marek fanned 57 in just 46.2 innings and may be a reliever of the future.

Rancho Cucamonga (A+) featured several young arms, of which Sean O’Sullivan and Amalio Diaz stood out.  20 year old Alexander Torres will also get a long look in a couple of years.  He had nice strikeout numbers in ten starts.  Catcher HanK Conger is 20, hit .303 for the Quakes, and might be a long term Angel in 2012.