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Posts Tagged ‘Red Sox’

Lackey, et. al.

john lackeyJohn Lackey and Mike Cameron to the Sox.  Sweet.  Lackey as a #3 starter?  That’s pretty freaking good.  It’s great that Theo kept these moves so quiet, too.  Just last week I wrote that I wished Lackey was more on the Sox’ radar, and it turns out he was.  I guess Theo isn’t writing off 2010 after all.  Lackey will fit in great with Beckett, Youk, Pedroia, and Victor Martinez.  I really like this plan of attack — there’s no way we’ll ever be able to outslug the yankees, but we could outpitch them.  And improving the defense is key to that.  Jason Bay never seemed like a particularly bad outfielder to me, but the defensive metrics apparently say otherwise.  And Mike Cameron is unquestionably an excellent defensive outfielder.  He can play any of the outfield positions, too, allowing Tito great flexiblity to sit Ellsbury or Drew against tough lefties.

I would also be fine with Adrian Beltre at third base.  Again, excellent defensively, but don’t expect too much with the bat.  If the offense is as bad as the Boston media says it will be, they can always try to add something during the season.  I’m afraid to mention it, but Big Papi claimed he was going to come into camp next year in the best shape of his life.  Just sayin’.

I guess an Adrian Gonzalez deal could still be in play, maybe even more so since they’ve added a quality starter without giving anything up.  It seems that would create a very left handed heavy batting order, though, without a real right handed power hitter.  Still, that would be a nice problem to have.

Ah, Randy Moss.  Sixth in the NFL in receiving.  Opponents double team him so much that it allows Wes Welker to have an absolutely crazy day.  In fact, Welker is #2 in receiving yards and Moss #6 in the league.  And Moss is #5 in the NFL in receiving touchdowns.  Not bad for a quitter.  Sure, his production Sunday definitely didn’t pass the smell test.  So he had a bad game, but the team won.  It appears the coach is behind him, the QB is behind him, and the rest of the team is behind him.  He’s still a captain.  As the Young Fresh Fellows say, everything’s gonna turn out great.

The Patriots should retire Kevin Faulk’s #33 when he retires.

The Celtics have won 11 in a row and have the best record in the NBA.  When is Big Baby coming back?  I thought it was supposed to be December.  Anyway, the only win over an elite team was opening night against Cleveland, but they’re definitely beating the teams they should beat, and looking good doing it. 

Big 10 to add a twelfth team?  I think it would be a good thing at this point.  It could even help in recruiting, and of course an elite conference shouldn’t be sitting home watching everyone else play.  But divisions will be awkward, especially for football.  Do you go east/west, or north/south?  I would think that Michigan and Ohio State have to be together, but then do you include Penn State with those two?  And who exactly is the twelfth team?  Notre Dame, Syracuse, Pittsburgh, Missouri?  Don’t even freaking joke about Rutgers.

Liverpool lost to Arsenal 2-1, this weekend, and the misery continues.  They didn’t even look passionate, which is extremely worrying.  So far this year, they’ve really risen to the occasion against the big teams, but not so in this game.  The Europa League draw is Friday.  Juventus and Marseille joined Liverpool in dropping out of the Champions League.

Sporting Views

Flight of the Conchords is over after two seasons.  Great show, but probably a good decision.  How far could these guys really go before things got tired?  It was just too creative to go on for too long.  Hopefully they’ll come up with some one-off type stuff, and maybe some HBO specials.

On another TV note, Friday Night Lights has been incredible this season.  Best show on television, bar none.

The news from Patriots camp is pretty insane, with the two losses in a row, the inability to win in someone else’s stadium, the four players being sent home, Adalius Thomas essentially blasting BB, and now Brady supposedly has a rib injury.  Things really seem to be falling apart, but BB has four games to rally them.  It’s been a confusing year.  They still have so much talent on offense, but stunningly can’t execute, especially in crunch time.  I think Bill O’Brien has to get a lot of blame for the play calling.  It seems that whenever they start running the ball effectively, they immediately go away from it.  Please come back, Charlie Weis.  The defense has probably played about as well as anyone could have expected, with the youth and all the new players.  Adalius Thomas and Derrick Burgess appear to be bums, and the lack of a pass rush is killing them.  Any secondary would look bad put in that situation.  It’s incredible that they’ve already lost as many games this year as last year, especially considering how Matt Cassel has played this year.  Four games to get their act together, get back to basics, and PLAY TO WIN THE GAME.

The Sox are reportedly close to consummating the deal trading Mike Lowell to the Rangers.  Great guy, 2007 World Series MVP, but the team just has to have better defense on third base.  Of course, they now have to replace his bat, too.  I would think they’re either going to trade for Adrian Gonzalez or sign Adrian Beltre.  If they trade for Gonzalez, Roy Halladay is obviously out.  My guess is that Jason Bay will re-sign here, but if not, I don’t think they’ll get Matt Holliday.  LF would probably end up being a platoon between Jeremy Hermida and somebody like Xavier Nady. 

Is everyone excited about Marco Scutaro?  No.  Boof Bonser?  No, but I’ve actually always liked him.  He was a first round pick in 2000, and is now coming off shoulder surgery.  Good risk, but probably not lots of upside.  After the yankees traded for Curtis Granderson, if they get Bay or Matt Holliday or, god forbid, Doc Halladay, just forget 2010 and 2011.  Although Doc is probably out for them now after trading away one of their top prospects in the Granderson deal.  They could sign John Lackey, though, which would be almost as bad.  I’ve always liked him; it’s too bad the Sox don’t seem to be looking at him any closer.  Theo did have a comment about 2010 being a “bridge” to the future, and it’s getting to the point where no one will be able to compete with yankees next year anyway, so why bother.Peter Gammons

The only good news this offseason has been the report that Peter Gammons is leaving the four letter network to join MLB Network and NESN.  Welcome home, Commish.

Badger football doesn’t get a New Year’s Day bowl game after the Outback Bowl bizarrely picked Northwestern.  Sure, they beat the Badgers, but we had a better overall record.  Anyway, I much prefer the matchup against Miami.  Better team than Auburn, and Miami is a team I truly hate.  Incidentally, ESPN’s 30 For 30 show is doing “The U” this Saturday night.  I’ve watched all the episodes so far of this thing, and it’s really good.

Badger hoops got themselves ranked after beating Duke, and then lost in OT at UW-Green Bay.  Harsh, but it looks like UWGB is actually a pretty good team, so hopefully that loss won’t look so bad later in the season.  Marquette is up this Saturday at 6:00 Eastern on ESPN2, in Madison.  Gotta win that one.

Badger hockey is on a nice roll, and they look like they could be for real this season.  They’re #11 in the country now, and they play at #3 North Dakota this weekend.  Friday night’s game will be televised on the NHL network, and I think they usually use the Badger announcers for those games.  The trend this year is for the Badgers to massively outshoot their opponents, at least with shots that reach the goalie.  Five of Wisconsin’s six defensemen have been drafted in the first two rounds of the NHL draft.

Liverpool finished up their Champions League schedule with yet another hard luck loss, this time to Fiorentina at Anfield, giving up the game winning goal basically at the death.  They play a huge game against Arsenal Sunday at Anfield.  I think it will be televised on Fox Soccer Channel.  It looks like Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard will both start for the first time since October.

Everton is supposedly in talks to get Landon Donovan on loan from the MLS.  Hopefully it happens, but I’m skeptical.  The league owns all the contracts in the MLS, and they have a history of asking for exorbitant sums for players on loan.  It would be great for Landycakes, though, and I would be really curious to see how he performs in the Premiership.

That’s all I got.

Baseball

The great Joe Posnanski wrote a great article for SI about the Yankees here.  Actually, his blog posting may be better, and that’s here.

He breaks down the numbers, and here they are:
In 2002, the Yankees spent $17 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2003, the Yankees spent $35 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2004, the Yankees spent $57 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2005, the Yankees spent $85 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2006, the Yankees spent $74 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2007, the Yankees spent $40 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2008, the Yankees spent $72 million more in payroll than any other team.
In 2009, the Yankees spent $52 million more in payroll than any other team.

And the Red Sox have twice as many championships as the Yankees this century.  Now that’s quite an accomplishment.  Now word comes that the Yankees are supposedly interested in John Lackey.  I guess they have Matsui and Damon coming off the payroll, and maybe Pettite, but WTF?

The Sox traded for Jeremy Hermida, who I have always liked.  I’ve had him on fantasy teams twice, always for that unfulfilled potential.  It’s a good risk, a risk that a team like the Red Sox, with a top 5 payroll, have to take.  Not much risk-taking in the Bronx.  Meanwhile, the Sox declined the $6 million option on Alex Gonzalez, which is not surprising, and picked up the $7.1 million option on V-Mart, also not surprising.  I guess they’re going to look into bringing Gonzalez back for less money, especially now that JJ Hardy was traded to Minnesota by Milwaukee.  My eyes say that Gonzo really shored up the infield D last season, but apparently the defensive metrics say he wasn’t that good.  I know I had a lot more confidence with him out there than anyone else last year, that’s for sure.  He also showed some rare pop with the bat.

The GM meetings are coming up soon, so maybe there will be some hot stove action.  I don’t think there usually is, though.  Action comes later.

Terrible Sports Weekend

October 13, 2009

Well, that sucked.  Badgers lose to Ohio State for their first loss of the season, Red Sox lose game 3 at Fenway to get swept by the Angels, and the Patriots blow a lead and lose at Denver in overtime.  Ouch.  That’s gonna leave a mark.

To start with Badgers, what a bizarre game.  Wisconsin basically dominated the game, outgaining OSU 368-184, owning the time of possession 42:47-17:13, and only turning the ball over one more time than the Buckeyes, 2-1.  But the team that dominated got blown out.  Killed.  Destroyed.  Annihilated.  Both Wisconsin turnovers were returned for touchdowns and the real killer was the kickoff return for touchdown in the third quarter after UW had cut the lead to 21-13.  That was all she wrote, despite the statistical imbalances.  The encouraging thing for Badger fans is that there is no doubt that UW belonged on the field with Ohio State.  Matt Millen kept repeating (and repeating and repeating) that UW was losing the battle at the line of scrimmage, and maybe they were on certain plays.  But taken as a whole, Wisconsin moved the ball extremely effectively all day, and Ohio State simply did not.  Wisconsin had 22 first downs, Ohio State, 8.  Terrelle Pryor: 5-13 for 87 yards, 1 TD and 1 interception.  Of course, the touchdown was huge, coming right before the end of the first half, and really the only time all day that Ohio State moved the ball offensively.  The bottom line is that Ohio State made big plays when they absolutely needed to, and that won them the game.  Ouch.

The Red Sox, on the other hand, simply got outplayed for three games.  The Angels were just as good as the Red Sox last year, but they essentially choked late in games (remember, they were all close).  This time, they didn’t choke, and if anything, the Red Sox did.  At least, their closer chose an awful time to not be clutch.  But really, the Angels weren’t really lacing the ball off Papelbon, they were more Texas Leaguers that showed that it just wasn’t the Sox’ year.  Now, next year is probably the last run for this group of core players.  Ortiz, Lowell, Beckett, and Victor Martinez, are all free agents after next season (although Sox have 2011 club option on Ortiz for $12.5 million).  One would have to believe that Theo and company will try to extend Martinez this winter, but it’ll be interesting to see what they do with Beckett.  Clearly, he is among the best pitchers in the game and he is 29 years old.  Do the Sox risk letting him play out his contract next year, or try to extend him this winter?  My guess is they try to extend him, but it will be costly.  He made $10.5 million in 2009 and is due for $12.1 million in 2010, relatively a bargain for a starting pitcher of his caliber.  Of course, the big question immediately is Jason Bay.  How aggressive will teams like the Giants, and, yes, the Yankees, be in going after one of the only outfielders with thump who is on the market this winter?  The top of the minor leagues is now essentially bereft of talent, so can we really expect the Sox to improve over this season?  Right now, it doesn’t seem likely to this observor.  For this reason, I believe the Sox will be aggressive this winter in trying to trade for a young, impact player, be it Adrian Gonzalez, Felix Hernandez, or Prince Fielder.  If that doesn’t happen, I think it will be a while before the Sox approach 95 wins again.

Ah, the Patriots.  It seems so bizarre to be worried about the offense when Brady and Moss are both healthy.  And this talk that the offensive struggles were due to Welker being out appear to have been overblown.  Yes, Fred Taylor is out now, too, but this is football, for crying out loud.  Somebody is always hurt.  Remember, in 2007, this offense overcame absolutely everything to win and win and win.  So what’s wrong?  I’ve got to come down on the quarterback play, although the offensive line doesn’t look the same, either.  I have every confidence that the quarterback play will improve as the season goes on, and the Patriots will be a dangerous team come playoff time.  Super Bowl?  I don’t know.  I was very confident before the season started, but now this team just doesn’t look like the old dominant Patriots.  And there are some much better teams in the AFC now, as well.  The Colts are playing as well as they ever have, the Broncos are one of those teams that plays good defense and doesn’t make mistakes, Baltimore is good, and you’ve got to believe that Pittsburgh and San Diego will be there at the end.  I guess I’d even have to put the Jests up there.  I think we’ve got parity here, folks.  Of course, it’s only week 5 and things tend change rather gradually between now and the playoffs.  Teams that look unbeatable now will look very beatable in January.  And hopefully for the Patriots, the opposite will be true as well.

J.D. Drew Is Worth Every Cent

It’s been bothering me for quite a while how J.D. Drew seems to get far more than his share of criticism from the Boston media and even some of the fans.  I remember sitting in the first base side grandstand in early 2007 for Drew’s first homestand with the Red Sox and after an opposition single to right field, the rather large and certainly loud woman sitting in front of me stood up and yelled, “Nixon woulda had it!”  This attitude does not seem to have diminished despite a World Series championship and stellar individual postseason play.  Personally, I love the way Drew plays the game.  I love the smooth swing and the gap power.  I feel confident with him in right field at Fenway, the most difficult in the game.  I consider him a good baserunner and a heady player.  But it seems I’m always defending him.  So let’s look at the numbers.  How does J.D. Drew compare to other American League right fielders?  With Sunday’s close of the regular season, Drew’s third season in Boston, we can take a look at relevant offensive stats and salaries for American League right fielders.

  2009 American League Right Fielders                      
                             
Team Player Games BA R H 2B 3B HR RBI OBP SLG OPS OPS+ Salary(millions)
BOS Drew 137 (8) 0.279 (7) 84 (6) 126 (8) 30 (7) 4 (T3) 24 (5) 68 (8) 0.392 (2) 0.522 (2) 0.914 (1) 131(1) 14 (3)
CLE Choo 156 0.300 87 175 38 6 20 86 0.394 0.489 0.883 128 0.420
NYY Swisher 150 0.249 84 124 35 1 29 82 0.371 0.498 0.869 126 5.400
MIN Cuddyer 152 0.276 92 161 34 6 32 94 0.342 0.520 0.862 130 7.667
TEX Cruz, Nelson 128 0.260 75 120 21 1 33 76 0.332 0.524 0.856 121 0.408
SEA Ichiro 146 0.352 88 225 31 4 11 46 0.386 0.465 0.851 127 18.000
LAA Abreu 152 0.293 96 165 29 3 15 103 0.390 0.435 0.825 115 5.000
BAL Markakis 161 0.293 94 188 45 2 18 101 0.347 0.453 0.800 106 3.350
DET Ordonez 130 0.309 52 142 24 2 8 48 0.376 0.422 0.798 108 18.972
CWS Dye 141 0.250 78 126 19 1 27 81 0.340 0.453 0.793 103 11.500
OAK Sweeney, Ryan 134 0.293 68 142 31 3 6 53 0.348 0.407 0.755 104 0.410
TOR Rios 108 0.264 52 115 25 2 14 62 0.317 0.427 0.744 95 6.400
KC Gullen, Jose 81 0.242 30 68 8 0 9 40 0.314 0.367 0.681 81 12.000
TBR Gross, Gabe 115 0.227 31 64 16 1 6 36 0.326 0.355 0.681 77 1.255
                             
                             
                             
BOS Drew career averages 121 0.283 77 113 22 4 19 63 0.392 0.504 0.896 129  

The incessant drone from the local blabberers of the airwaves about “Nancy” Drew and the supposedly overpaid Red Sox right fielder simply is not borne out by his production on the field.  In fact, Drew played very close to his career averages in 2009, at the age of 33.  He missed just 25 games (less than Kevin Youkilis) and ranked fifth on the team in games played, behind just Pedroia, Ellsbury, Bay, and Ortiz.  Ichiro had nearly 100 more hits than Drew, yet Drew still led him in OBP by .006 and outslugged him by the relatively wide margin of .057.  And Ichiro only had four more runs scored than Drew, while being paid $4 million a year more.

Michael Cuddyer certainly had an excellent season for the Twins, yet despite the eight more home runs, their slugging percentages were essentially equal and Drew reached base at rate of .050 more.

Shin-Soo Choo appears to be a player on the rise.  At age 26, the Indians outfielder completed his first full season in the majors.  20 home runs and 21 stolen bases in 156 games are very impressive numbers.

Nick Swisher has the reputation of an on base machine, but he actually had a career high slugging percentage this year, at age 28.  Neither his OBP nor his slugging compare to Drew’s.  In fact, Swisher has never reached Drew’s 2009 OBP in any season of his career.

If the local blabberers want to focus on overpaid AL right fielders, check out Magglio Ordonez, Jermaine Dye, and Jose Guillen.  In fact, Guillen is signed through 2010 by the Royals for $12 million.  Also, Nick Markakis signed a contract extension before the 2009 season for 6 years and $66 million.  The 25 year old may have brighter days ahead, but 2009 was fairly typical of his previous three seasons of full time big league play.

It appears that Drew is penalized for not kissing the butts of the knights of the airwaves, and they will have two more seasons to continue deriding him.  But with his production in a Boston uniform so far, Theo and the rest of Red Sox Nation should be quite pleased with the results.