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Here is how every team has done in the off-season in major league baseball

Blogged under Comings & Goings, Bloglockers, Baseball, Front Page, General by admin on Thursday 2 February 2012 at 11:45 pm

With Spring Training just around the corner, it makes perfect sense to check out how every team did over the winter to try to improve their teams.  Here is my opinion as to how every team has done so far this winter:

Teams Getting an A:

Tampa Bay Rays:  The Rays wanted to add to the offense and the bullpen over the winter.  They went out and have signed Carlos Pena, Luke Scott, Jeff Keppinger and Jose Molina as free agents, tightening the lineup and the defense.  The Rays also signed righty reliever Fernando Rodney to help out the back end of the pen.  The Rays added righty relievers Burke Badenhop and Josh Lueke in minor deals over the winter.  The Rays have made their team better without dealing any of their vaunted starting pitchers.

Detroit Tigers:  The Tigers didn’t have a lot of needs heading into the winter.  But, when C/DH/1B Victor Martinez went down to a torn ACL, the Tigers quickly signed 1B Prince Fielder to a 9-year, $214 million dollar deal.  Fielder will give the Tigers an awesome one-two punch in the 3 and 4 spots in the lineup as he hits behind Miguel Cabrera.  The Tigers also signed catcher Gerald Laird this winter and he will backup Alex Avila behind the plate.  The Tigers signed righty reliever Octavio Dotel and they dealt for righty reliever Colin Balester.  The Tigers have done a good job of improving their team this winter.

Los Angeles Angels:  The Angels preferred quality over quantity this winter.  First off, the Angels made a deal with the Rockies to bring in Chris Iannetta as their new starting catcher and he will definitely improve the position as it was a black hole for the Angels.  The Angels also signed righty reliever LaTroy Hawkins early on in the free agency period and he will help them out late in games.  But, it was at the winter meetings in Texas when the Angels made the biggest splash of the winter when they signed 1B Albert Pujols and lefty starting pitcher C.J. Wilson on the same day.  The Rangers better be looking in the rearview mirror, because the Angels are right on their bumper.

Philadelphia Phillies:  The Phillies suffered a lot of injuries position player wise last season, so they went out and improved the bench big time over the winter.  The Phillies traded for infielder Ty Wigginton and they have signed 1B Jim Thome and outfielders Juan Pierre and Laynce Nix to bolster the bench.  The Phillies made a huge splash when they signed closer Jonathan Papelbon early on in free agency.  I don’t think they overpaid for him as he is going to be a nice upgrade over Ryan Madson and Brad Lidge.  The Phillies have also added Joel Pineiro (free agent), Dontrelle Willis (free agent), Brian Sanches (free agent), Chad Qualls (free agent) and Jeremy Horst (trade) to bolster the pitching staff in 2012.

Florida Marlins:  The Marlins traded for manager Ozzie Guillen and then they went on a spending spree.  The Marlins signed SS Jose Reyes, lefty starter Mark Buehrle and closer Heath Bell right after free agency opened.  They also dealt for Carlos Zambrano to improve the starting rotation as long as Guillen can convince him to behave.  The Marlins added lefty starter/reliever Wade LeBlanc in a deal with the Padres early on in the winter.  They have also signed Aaron Rowand, Austin Kearns and Chad Gaudin to minor league deals.

Cincinnati Reds:  The Reds threw caution to the wind this winter to bolster the pitching staff.  They dealt a boatload of prospects to the Padres for righty starting pitcher Mat Latos.  Latos is a horse, and he will slot near the top of the Reds’ rotation in 2012 and beyond.  The Reds then dealt for lefty reliever Sean Marshall from the Cubs and he will serve as a set-up man this season.  That is because the Reds also signed Ryan Madson to be the closer in 2012.  The Reds also brought in veteran lefty Jeff Francis on a minor league deal to compete for a spot in the rotation.  The Reds signed outfielder Ryan Ludwick, catcher Dioner Navarro and IF/OF Willis Harris to compete for jobs this spring.  Ludwick will compete with Chris Heisey for the starting job in LF.  The Reds also acquired infielder Wilson Valdez in a deal with the Phillies.

Arizona Diamondbacks:  The D-Backs wanted a starting pitcher, a LF with power and relief help this winter….and they got all of it.  The D-Backs made a huge splash when they acquired righty starting pitcher Trevor Cahill and lefty reliever Craig Breslow from the A’s for a few prospects.  The Diamondbacks also signed veteran righty reliever Takashi Saito and lefty swinging outfielder Jason Kubel to start in LF!  Missions accomplished!

Teams Getting a B:

San Diego Padres:  The Padres wanted to improve the offense, replace closer Heath Bell and reload in the bullpen this winter.  They have done all of that.  The Padres went the trade route to bring in RF Carlos Quentin, 1B Yonder Alonso, C Yasmani Grandal and C John Baker.  They also signed veteran 1B/OF Mark Kotsay to bolster the bench.  The Padres dealt for Huston Street and he will replace Heath Bell as the closer.  They also acquired Edison Volquez in the Mat Latos deal and he will replace him in the starting rotation this year.  The Padres also dealt for righty reliever Andrew Cashner and they signed righty reliever Micah Owings to bolster the bullpen.

New York Yankees:  The Yankees were taking their time this winter before getting into the game recently.  In one day, they dealt for righty starting pitcher Michael Pineda and they signed right starter Hiroki Kuroda.  In one fell swoop, the Yankees turned their starting rotation from a weakness to a strength.  The Yankees also signed veteran lefty Hideki Okajima to a minor league deal and he could team with Boone Logan to make the pen strong from the left side.

Toronto Blue Jays:  The Jays wanted to rebuild the bullpen and fortify the bench for 2012.  It looks like they have done exactly that.  In separate deals with the White Sox, the Jays landed righty closer Sergio Santos and righty reliever Jason Frasor.  They then went out and signed lefty Darren Oliver and righty Francisco Cordero to tighten up the bullpen in front of Santos.  The Jays dealt for catcher Jeff Mathis, infielder Luis Valbuena and outfielder Ben Francisco this winter to tighten up the bench.  The Blue Jays also have signed veteran infielder Omar Vizquel to help out in the infield in 2012.

Cleveland Indians:  The Indians are bringing in a lot of veterans to compete for jobs this spring.  The biggest moves the Indians made were dealing for righty starting pitchers Derek Lowe and Kevin Slowey.  They also signed 1B Casey Kotchman today and he should jump right into the starting lineup.  The Indians have signed Felix Pie, Jose Lopez, Andy LaRoche, Ryan Spilborghs and Fred Lewis to compete for bench spots this spring.  They also dealt for righty swinging outfielder Aaron Cunningham in a deal with the Padres early on this winter.  The Indians are also bringing in righty relievers Dan Wheeler, Jeremy Accardo, Chris Ray and Robinson Tejada on minor league deals to compete for jobs in the bullpen.

Kansas City Royals:  The Royals spent money wisely this winter and I think they have improved their team.  The Royals signed SS Yuniesky Betancourt and 3B Kevin Kouzmanoff in to battle for starting jobs this spring.  If they lose out, they will likely win bench jobs.  The Royals acquired lefty starting pitcher Jonathan Sanchez in a deal with the Giants and he will be one of their top starters in 2012, book it.  The Royals also signed righty Jonathan Broxton and lefty Jose Mijares to pitch in for the bullpen in 2012.

Texas Rangers:  The Rangers didn’t make a lot of big moves this winter.  The biggest was laying out the big bucks to sign righty starting pitcher Yu Darvish out of Japan.  The Rangers also signed closer Joe Nathan with the idea of moving Neftali Feliz into the starting rotation in 2012.  They also signed lefty swinging 1B/OF Brad Hawpe to compete for a bench job in 2012.

Washington Nationals:  The Washington Nationals had high hopes about signing Albert Pujols or Prince Fielder to bolster the offense but it didn’t work out.  The Nationals then quickly turned their attention to improving the pitching staff and they certainly have done that.  They dealt for lefty starter Gio Gonzalez in a big deal with the Nationals and they have also signed righty Edwin Jackson to a 1-year deal to bolster the starting rotation.  They have also signed Brad Lidge, Chad Durbin and they dealt for righty Ryan Perry to improve the bullpen in 2012.  The Nationals also signed outfielder Mike Cameron and infielder Mark DeRosa to improve the bench this year.

San Francisco Giants:  The Giants dealt for outfielders Angel Pagan and Melky Cabrera to try to jumpstart the offense in 2012 with their speed.  They also signed Ryan Theriot as a free agent and he will also add some speed to the lineup.  The Giants brought in righty starter/reliever Clay Hensley to add some versatility to the pitching staff in 2012.

Los Angeles Dodgers:  The Dodgers tried to fill a lot of holes with their spending money rather than just signing one big guy.  The Dodgers moved quickly in free agency to sign righty Aaron Harang and lefty Chris Capuano to be their #4 and #5 starters in 2012.  They also inked lefty John Grabow to help out in the pen.  The big ticket in the field was 2B Mark Ellis, who will start.  The Dodgers signed catchers Josh Bard and Matt Treanor to compete for the starting job behind the plate in 2012.  They also signed Jerry Hairston, Adam Kennedy and Josh Fields to bolster the bench.

Colorado Rockies:  The Rockies have added a lot of talent this winter.  The Rockies have signed catcher Ramon Hernandez and outfielder Michael Cuddyer and they will both be in the starting lineup in 2012.  They also signed 3B Casey Blake to compete for the starting job this spring.  The Rockies traded for 2B Marco Scutaro (he is going to start), outfielder Tyler Colvin and infielder D.J. LeMahieu over the winter.  The Rockies wanted to improve in the starting rotation so they dealt for righy Tyler Chatwood, righty Guillermo Moscoso and lefty Josh Outman.  They also have signed 49-year old lefty starting pitcher Jamie Moyer and he will get a shot to compete for a starting job this spring.

Teams Getting a C:

Boston Red Sox:  I don’t really see where the Red Sox have improved this winter.  They signed catcher Kelly Shoppach, infielder Nick Punto and outfielder Cody Ross and they dealt for outfielder Ryan Sweeney.  Not a great bunch by any means.  The Red Sox dealt for closer Andrew Bailey and set-up man Mark Melancon to replace Jonathan Papelbon and Josh Bard (moving to the rotation) in the bullpen.  They also dealt for starter/reliever Clayton Mortensen and they have signed Vicente Padilla, Carlos Silva and Aaron Cook to compete for jobs in the starting rotation.  Not the typical high impact class of newcomers that the Red Sox are used to bringing in.

Minnesota Twins:  The Twins tried to improve the team on the cheap over the winter as they are going to have a lot of players in spring training on minor league deals.  The Twins signed three new starting players over the winter in outfielder Josh Willingham, C/DH Ryan Doumit and shortstop Jamey Carroll.  They also signed 3B Sean Burroughs to compete for a job on the bench in 2012.  The Twins signed righty starting pitcher Jason Marquis to help out in the middle of the rotation and he’s an innings eater when healthy.  The Twins are also taking a chance on righty reliever Joel Zumaya.  If he can stay healthy, the Twins might have something in Zumaya.

New York Mets:  The Mets didn’t have much money to work with.  They decided to improve the bullpen as they signed closer Frank Franciso, set-up man Jon Rauch and they dealt for righty Ramon Ramirez.  So at least the Mets should be able to protect leads late in games in 2012.  Andres Torres came to the Mets in the same deal as Ramon Ramirez and he will likely replace Angel Pagan as the Mets’ starting CF in 2012.  The Mets also brought in SS Ronny Cedeno to likely be the utility man on the infield in 2012.

St. Louis Cardinals:  The Cardinals acted quickly to replace Albert Pujols in the starting lineup when they signed outfielder Carlos Beltran.  They also signed catcher Koyie Hill and lefty reliever J.C. Romero.  That’s about it for the new faces on the Cardinals heading into 2012.

Pittsburgh Pirates:  The Pirates preferred quantity over quality in the free agent market this winter.  They quickly signed catcher Rod Barajas and shortstop Clint Barmes to start for them in 2012.  They also dealt for 3B/1B Casey McGehee, who could win a starting job at one of the corner infield spots this spring.  The Pirates also signed C Jose Morales, C/1B Jake Fox and outfielder Nate McLouth to compete for bench jobs this spring.  In a minor deal with the Royals, the Pirates acquired Yamaico Navarro and he will compete for a backup job on the infield.  The Pirates inked lefty Erik Bedard to a 1-year deal this winter and he will be the ace of the rotation as long as he can stay healthy.  Righty reliever Juan Cruz signed a minor league deal recently with the Bucs and he should have little problem winning a job in the pen.

Chicago Cubs:  The Cubs are in rebuilding mode now.  The Cubs quickly signed outfielder David DeJesus to start in RF in 2012.  They also dealt for 3B Ian Stewart, 1B Anthony Rizzo and outfielder Dave Sappelt in separate deals and they all have nice upsides.  The Cubs bolstered the pitching staff in dealing for lefty starter Travis Wood and righty starter Chris Volstad.  The Cubs also signed lefty starter Paul Maholm, righty starter/reliever Andy Sonnanstine and lefty reliever Trever Miller to help out the pitching staff.

Houston Astros:  The Astros are a rebuilding team, but they are starting to add some players as of late.  The Astros dealt for Jed Lowrie and he will be their starting SS in 2012.  They also signed catcher Chris Snyder and he will likely start for them too in 2012.  Outfielders Jack Cust (free agent) and Fernando Martinez (claimed on waivers from the Mets) will get shots to make the team this spring.  The Astros added righty Kyle Weiland in a deal with the Red Sox and they have signed righty starter Livin Hernandez and lefty Zach Duke to compete for spots at the back end of the starting rotation this spring.

Teams Getting a D:

Baltimore Orioles:  The Orioles thought about spending some real cash before deciding to hunt in the bargain bin for players.  The Orioles have signed outfielder Endy Chavez, IF/DH Wilson Betemit, C Ronny Paulino and they dealt for C Taylor Teagarden this winter.  They also went to the Far East looking for pitching and the result was the signing of lefties Tsuyoshi Wada and Wei-Ying Chen, who could both wind up in the Orioles’ starting rotation with good springs.  The Orioles also dealt for lefty starter Dana Eveland and they have signed righty reliever Darren O’Day, righty starter Armando Galarraga and righty reliever Pat Neshek to compete for spots on the pitching staff this spring.

Oakland Athletics:  The A’s don’t have a clue.  They pretty much had a firesale in dealing young pitchers Gio Gonzalez, Trevor Cahill and closer Andrew Bailey.  I have never seen a team acting like the A’s are this winter.  New blood in the field comes in the form of catcher Derek Norris (trade), 1B/DH Kila Ka’aihue and outfielders Collin Cowgill (trade), Josh Reddick (trade), Seth Smith (trade) and Jonny Gomes (free agent).  They will all be competing for starting jobs this spring with the exception of  Norris.  The A’s signed righty Bartolo Colon to a 1-year deal to help mentor the kiddie corps.  Righty Jarrod Parker, righty Brad Peacock and lefty Tom Milone came to the A’s in the Cahill and Gonzalez deals and they will compete for starting jobs this spring.  Righty Ryan Cook will compete for a bullpen job this spring.

Seattle Mariners:  The Mariners needed to bolster the offense this winter, but they have not done much.  DH/C Jesus Montero is the only potential big bat addition to the Mariners so far this winter.  Carlos Guillen and John Jaso have also been brought in over the winter by the Mariners.  The Mariners are throwing names at a dartboard as far as the rotation goes behind Felix Hernandez and Jason Vargas.  The Mariners have brought in Hisashi Iwakuma, Hector Noesi, Kevin Millwood and Oliver Perez to compete for starting jobs this spring.  They have also signed lefty George Sherrill and righties Aaron Heilman and Brian Sweeney to help out in the pen in 2012.

Milwaukee Brewers:  The Brewers have lost 1B Prince Fielder and N.L. MVP Ryan Braun (for 50 games due to a league suspension), so they have a lot of offense to replace.  The Brewers added 3B Aramis Ramirez and SS Alex Gonzalez to the left side of the infield, and I like both of those pickups.  They have also signed 1B Travis Ishikawa, outfielder Norichiku Aoki, Cesar Izturis, Corey Patterson and Brooks Conrad to compete for jobs this spring.  The Brewers also acquired righty reliever Jose Veras to bolster the bullpen in 2012.

Teams Getting a F:

Chicago White Sox:  The White Sox have been blowing up the roster this winter, but they aren’t exactly getting a lot of top prospects for their veterans.  Osvaldo Martinez, Dan Johnson and Delwyn Young are the top position players the White Sox have added so far this winter.  Righty reliever Jhan Marinez might get a shot to make the Pale Hose’ bullpen in 2012.  Kenny Williams needs to do better in bringing in top talent in return when he makes deals.

Atlanta Braves:  The Braves have decided to stand pat so far this winter.  They have not brought in anyone new who will likely make the team when the 2012 season begins.

The blockbuster trade that never was in the NBA

Blogged under Comings & Goings, Bloglockers, Basketball, Front Page, General by admin on Sunday 11 December 2011 at 8:38 am

The NBA blocked a trade last Friday that would have sent point guard Chris Paul from the Hornets to the Lakers.  The Lakers would have sent Pau Gasol to the Rockets and Lamar Odom to the Hornets as part of this deal.  The Rockets were to send shooting guard Kevin Martin, point guard Goran Dragic, power forward Luis Scola and a first round pick in 2012 to the Hornets.  Here is a look at what this trade would have done for the teams involved:

Los Angeles Lakers - The Lakers would have gotten an elite point guard to team with Kobe Bryant.  Paul played in 80 games (all starts) for the Hornets last year and he averaged 36.0 minutes, 15.9 points, 4.1 rebounds, 9.8 assists and 2.4 steals per game.  Paul has now played in 425 games (all starts) for the Hornets in his NBA career and he is averaging 37.1 minutes, 18.7 points, 4.6 rebounds, 9.9 assists and 2.4 steals per game.  The Lakers would have had to replace Odom and Gasol, who have really been solid players for them.

Houston Rockets - The Rockets seem to have been willing to give up a lot to get 31-year old power forward Pau Gasol.  Gasol played in 82 games (all starts) for the Lakers last year and he averaged 37.0 minutes, 18.8 points, 10.2 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 1.6 blocked shots per game.  He has now played in 731 games (725 starts) in his NBA career and he is averaging 35.9 minutes, 18.8 points, 9.1 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 1.7 blocked shots per game.  Gasol would have replaced Luis Scola in the starting lineup and that would have been a nice upgrade, but, they would have also lost Kevin Martin, Goran Dragic and a first round pick in 2012.

New Orleans Hornets - The Hornets would have cleaned up in this deal, so I’m not so sure why the league didn’t allow it to go through.  Kevin Martin is a solid shooting guard.  He played in 80 games (all starts) for the Rockets last year and he averaged 32.5 minutes, 23.5 points, 3.2 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.0 steal per game.  Martin played in 435 games (347 starts) in his NBA career and he is averaging 31.2 minutes, 18.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.0 steal per game.  Martin would have filled a huge need at shooting guard for the Hornets.  Luis Scola would have replaced David West in the starting lineup.  Scola played in 74 games (all starts) for the Rockets last year and he averaged 32.6 minutes, 18.3 points, 8.2 rebounds and 2.5 assists per game.  He has now played in 320 games (277 starts) in his first four years in the NBA and he is averaging 30.0 minutes, 14.3 points, 8.0 rebounds and 1.8 assists per game.  32-year old forward Lamar Odom would have likely bumped Trevor Ariza to the bench.  Odom played in 82 games (35 starts) for the Lakers last year and he averaged 32.2 minutes, 14.4 points, 8.7 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game.  He has now played in 829 games (678 starts) so far in his NBA career and he is averaging 35.6 minutes, 14.6 points, 8.9 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1 blocked shot per game.  Goran Dragic would have likely shared the point guard slot with Jarrett Jack.  Dragic played in 70 games (5 starts) for the Suns & Rockets last year and he averaged 17.6 minutes, 7.5 points, 2.0 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game.  He has now played in 205 games (8 starts) in his NBA career and he is averaging 16.6 minutes, 6.8 points, 2.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game.  The Hornets would have also gotten a 1st round pick from the Rockets in 2012.

In summation, I think the Hornets got screwed by David Stern and his cronies vetoing this deal.  I think all three teams would have benefitted to it from some degree, but the Hornets aren’t going to get a better deal than this one.

Pedro Martinez decides to retire from Major League Baseball

Blogged under Comings & Goings, Bloglockers, Baseball, Front Page, General by admin on Sunday 4 December 2011 at 7:58 am

40-year old righty starting pitcher Pedro Martinez has officially retired from Major League Baseball.  He last pitched in 2009 with the Philadelphia Phillies.  He signed late in the season with the Phillies in 2009, working in 9 games (all starts) in which he was 5-1 with a 3.63 ERA and a 1.25 WHIP.  Martinez pitched in 476 games (409 starts) in his 18 years in the majors and he was 219-100 with 3 saves, a 2.93 ERA and a 1.05 WHIP.  Martinez only gave up 2,221 hits in his 2,827 1/3 innings pitched, while whiffing 3,154 batters and walking 760 batters….and those are very, very impressive numbers.  Martinez finished his career tied for #76 in wins with Kenny Rogers (219), #146 in ERA (2.93), #5 in WHIP (1.05 WHIP) and #13 in whiffs (3,154) in major league history.

Martinez won 3 Cy Young Awards in this career (1997 with the Expos and 1999+2000 with the Red Sox).  In those three years, Martinez pitched in 91 games (89 starts) in which he was 58-18 with a 1.90 ERA and a 0.87 WHIP.  Martinez led the major leagues in ERA 5 times in his career.  He also won 20 games or more in a season twice and he also whiffed over 300 batters twice in his career.  Martinez made it to 8 All-Star teams, which is pretty impressive because the manager of the All-Star team picks the pitching staff.  Martinez should be a first ballot Hall of Famer five years from now as he was one of the two most dominant pitchers of his time, along with Randy Johnson.

Relief Pitchers are going to be changing teams like wild fire over the winter

Blogged under Comings & Goings, Bloglockers, Baseball, Front Page, General by chinmusic on Wednesday 19 October 2011 at 11:06 pm

This is going to fun watching how many relievers change teams over the winter. Here is where I see everyone landing when the music stops:

CLOSERS:

Jonathan Papelbon - Minnesota Twins - The Twins make a huge splash and get the best closer on the free agent market.

Heath Bell - San Diego Padres - Heath Bell likes living in San Diego and the Padres give him a nice deal to stay.

Ryan Madson - Philadelphia Phillies - The Phillies will ante up to keep Madson as he was outstanding as the full-time closer last year.

Jose Valverde - Detroit Tigers - I think the Tigers will pick up Valverde’s $9 million dollar option for 2012.

Francisco Cordero - Cincinnati Reds - The Reds would be smart to pick up Cordero’s $12 million dollar option for 2012.

Francisco Rodriguez - Toronto Blue Jays - The Blue Jays get K-Rod at a nice price and make him their closer.

Kyle Farnsworth - Tampa Bay Rays - The Rays will definitely pick up Farnsworth’s 2012 option valued at $3.3 million bucks.

Frank Francisco - New York Mets - The Mets get Francisco for a nice bargain price and make him the closer for 2012.

RIGHTIES:

Rafael Soriano - New York Yankees - Rafael Soriano will without a doubt exercise his player option for 2012 valued at $11 million bucks.

Joe Nathan - Minnesota Twins - The Twins decline Nathan’s option but bring him back to set up Papelbon.

Brad Lidge - Boston Red Sox - The Red Sox sign Lidge and let him compete with Daniel Bard for the closer’s job in spring training.

Matt Capps - Milwaukee Brewers - Matt Capps replaces K-Rod as John Axford’s set-up man.

Jon Rauch - Chicago White Sox - The White Sox like stocking up with good arms in the pen, so Rauch should fit right in.

Jonathan Broxton - Toronto Blue Jays - The Blue Jays like taking chances on guys with nice upsides, and Broxton fits the bill.

Octavio Dotel - Philadelphia Phillies - Dotel gives the Phillies a set-up man that they can trust.

Joel Peralta - Tampa Bay Rays - The Rays reward Joel Peralta with a nice raise.

Kerry Wood - Chicago Cubs - Kerry Wood signs another bargain deal to stay with the Cubs in 2012.

Jason Frasor - Tampa Bay Rays - The Rays wanted to improve the bullpen a tad for 2012 and Frasor is a nice upgrade.

LaTroy Hawkins - Baltimore Orioles - The O’s are desperate for bullpen help, so look for them to sign up Hawkins.

Chad Qualls - Philadelphia Phillies - The Phillies snare another solid veteran for the pen.

Todd Coffey - Milwaukee Brewers - The Brewers need to replace a lot of the bullpen, and Coffey would be a nice fit.

Mike MacDougal - Los Angeles Dodgers - The Dodgers re-sign MacDougal for 2012 and they give him a nice raise for a job well done in 2011.

Luis Ayala - Seattle Mariners - The Mariners need help in the bullpen and Ayala doesn’t demand big bucks.

Micah Owings - Arizona Diamondbacks - The D-Backs bring back Owings.

Takashi Saito - Detroit Tigers - The Tigers get some help for the 7th inning for 2012.

Fernando Rodney - Washington Nationals - The Nationals like hard throwers out of the pen, so Rodney should fit in.

Juan Cruz - Chicago Cubs - The Cubs continue to rebuild the bullpen.

LEFTIES:

Darren Oliver - Texas Rangers - The Rangers will bring back Oliver for 2012.

Mike Gonzalez - New York Yankees - The Yankees need a situational lefty and Gonzalez fits the bill.

Jeremy Affeldt - Milwaukee Brewers - The Brewers have not had a good lefty out of the pen in the long time, that ends in 2012.

George Sherrill - Philadelphia Phillies - The Phillies get a second lefty in the pen to team with Antonio Bastardo.

Javier Lopez - Arizona Diamondbacks - The D-Backs need a solid left in the pen, so they steal Lopez from the rival Giants.

Arthur Rhodes - St. Louis Cardinals - I see the Cardinals declining Rhodes option for 2012 and bringing him back for less.

John Grabow - Kansas City Royals - The Royals need a second lefty for the pen, and Grabow comes at the right price.

The free agent market has a lot of options for teams as far as starters go

Blogged under Comings & Goings, Bloglockers, Baseball, Front Page, General by chinmusic on Wednesday 19 October 2011 at 10:27 pm

The free agent market has a lot of starting pitching available. Here is where I see them landing this winter:

RIGHTIES:

Hiroki Kuroda - Los Angeles Dodgers - Hiroki Kuroda has stated that it’s L.A. or Japan. I think the Dodgers are going to bring him back for 2012.

Roy Oswalt - Texas Rangers - I see the Phillies turning down Oswalt’s option for 2012 and Oswalt is the perfect replacement for C.J. Wilson.

Javier Vazquez - Florida Marlins - Ozzie Guillen will talk Vazquez into pitching at least one more year for the Marlins.

Edwin Jackson - Kansas City Royals - The Royals are going to ante up for Edwin Jackson as starting pitching is the only weakness on the team right now.

Ryan Dempster -Chicago Cubs - The Cubs hope that Dempster rebounds in 2012, because they are going to be paying him $14 million bucks when he exercises his player option.

Aaron Harang - San Diego Padres - The San Diego Padres are going to pick up Harang’s option for 2012 valued at $5 million bucks.

Jason Marquis - Colorado Rockies - The Rockies need help in the rotation so they bring back an old friend in Jason Marquis.

Freddy Garcia - Los Angeles Dodgers - The Dodgers ink a solid veteran for the #5 spot in the starting rotation.

Brad Penny - Baltimore Orioles - The Orioles need another veteran for the rotation to team with Jeremy Guthrie and Penny fits the bill.

Joel Pineiro - Cleveland Indians - The Indians need a veteran for the #5 spot, so why not give Pineiro a chance to get his career back on the right track?

Livan Hernandez - New York Mets - Livan Hernandez would benefit from pitching in CitiField half of the time. Plus, he’s an innings eater.

Jon Garland - New York Mets - This Mets get a nice deal on Garland with him coming off of shoulder surgery.

Chien-Ming Wang - Washington Nationals - The Nationals invested a lot of time and money on Wang’s rehab. Now he starts rewarding them.

Bartolo Colon - Chicago Cubs - The Cubs sign up Colon for the back end of the rotation with his new bionic arm.

Rich Harden - New York Mets - The Mets take another low risk/high reward chance on Rich Harden.

LEFTIES:

C.C. Sabathia - New York Yankees - Even if Sabathia opts out, no team is going to offer him more money than the Yankees will.

C.J. Wilson - New York Yankees - The Yankees ink C.J. Wilson, who will thrive pitching half of his games in Yankees’ Stadium.

Mark Buehrle - Florida Marlins - Mark Buehrle follows Ozzie Guillen to Miami to pitch near the top of the rotation.

Erik Bedard - Seattle Mariners - Erik Bedard goes back to Seattle to reward them for sticking by him when he was injured.

Bruce Chen - Kansas City Royals - The Royals will bring back Chen, who has been their most effective starter the last two years.

Chris Capuano - Boston Red Sox - The Red Sox tried desperately to get their hands on Capuano near the end of the season. They will finally get him.

Paul Maholm - Kansas City Royals - The Royals nab Maholm as they continue to rebuild their starting rotation.

Jeff Francis - Boston Red Sox - The Red Sox take a flier on Francis.

Zach Duke - Toronto Blue Jays - The Blue Jays take a chance on Duke at a nice bargain price.

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