Brad Penny Signs with the St. Louis Cardinals

Brad Penny is headed to St. Louis.

According to ESPN The Magazine’s Buster Olney, Penny and the Cardinals have come agreed upon a one-year deal for the 2010 campaign.

Penny, 31, will earn a base salary of $7.5 million and can earn up to $1.5 million in performance bonuses.

The deal is currently pending a physical, which—with Penny—is no sure thing.

St. Louis, the reigning National League Central champion, is facing the loss of three starting pitchers to free agency and all three—Joel Pineiro, John Smoltz, and Todd Wellemeyer—are expected to be plying their trade elsewhere next season.

As such, adding a starter was high on general manager John Mozeliak’s to-do list at this week’s Winter Meetings in Indianapolis.

Penny is coming off a year in which he had very mixed results.

He began the year with Boston and was initially a solid, albeit mediocre back of the rotation starter.

His final five starts with the Red Sox, however, were abysmal. He went 0-4 with a 9.11 ERA and was demoted to the bullpen.

Soon after he requested and was granted a release from Boston.

Overall, he was 7-8 with a 5.61 ERA in Boston.

He signed with the San Francisco Giants at the end of August and made six starts down the stretch going 4-1 with a 2.59 ERA.

He was absolutely dominant in all but one of his starts and finished the year on a high-note, despite his pedestrian totals of 11-9 with a 4.88 ERA.

The Giants offered the two-time All-Star a one-year deal, but he rejected the offer and chose to test his value on the open-market instead.

In doing so, Penny has landed in an enviable position.

He has just joined a rotation that boasts two potential Cy Young candidates in right-handers Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright and a lineup anchored by the best hitter in the game, Albert Pujols.

Additionally, his new battery-mate, Yadier Molina is renowned for his ability to get the best out of pitchers.

Molina isn’t the only member of the Cardinals staff known for coaxing solid performances out of pitchers. Pitching coach Dave Duncan’s track record for getting career years out of journeyman pitchers is legendary.

Don’t believe me, ask Jeff Weaver, Kyle Lohse, Jeff Suppan, and, this year’s recipient of the magical Duncan dust, Joel Pineiro.

Penny does, however, have a more impressive dossier than any of Duncan’s previous reclamation projects and it’s not just because he dated Alyssa Milano.

He was a 16-game winner in 2006 and 2007 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and was an All-Star both seasons. Penny was even elected as the starter for the National League in the 2006 game in Pittsburgh.

Since then, however, injuries and reported attitude problems have hampered his performance.

Despite shaky performances in recent years, the door isn’t completely closed on Penny as middle-to-front of the rotation starter.

His mid-nineties fastball is still there and still as dominant as ever and if he can continue using the pitch-to-contact, groundball-inducing style that worked so well in San Francisco at season’s end, he could completely re-energize his otherwise flagging career.

Penny has certainly landed in the right spot to re-build his value before hitting the market again next season and—at a maximum $9 million investment—the Cardinals have shrewdly added a former ace to an already imposing staff.

All the while, the club’s modest investment still leaves room to pursue more offense for next season.

As it turns out, the Cardinals may have just found the lucky Penny they need to get over the hump and back to the World Series.

Posted in Baseball, Brad Penny, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, Injuries, MLB, NL Central, St. Louis Cardinals | Leave a comment

Sheamus: Too Much, Too Soon

Not like this.

It just can’t happen like this.

The WWE is completely botching the push of Sheamus.

I’ve made it clear in the past how I feel about the WWE’s initial build of Sheamus and I still hold the same feelings.

The company has done nothing to adequately build Sheamus as a main event talent and—aside from one cheap-shot and bodyslam—we’ve seen him show nothing in the ring against John Cena.

I’ve got absolutely no problem with the WWE pushing new talent.

I ranted and raved about the direction the company took with Kofi Kingston and I am a converted fan of the way CM Punk is being slowly built as a major heel after his initial quick turn.

Those facts notwithstanding, I still feel that the company is doing itself and Sheamus a major injustice by tossing him into the main event scene.

No one in their right mind actually expects Sheamus to win the title at the upcoming TLC pay-per-view because to the average viewer Sheamus is a nobody.

Since his debut on RAW, just six short weeks ago, we’ve seen Sheamus squash Jamie Noble, dominate a stagehand, kick Jerry Lawler in the face, beat the 600-year old Finlay, win a battle royal in which he avoided confrontation for the majority of the match, cheap-shot John Cena and put him through a table, and we saw him squash Santino last week.

Yep, that’s it.

I know all of this so well, because the WWE has been showing video montages almost non-stop to try and prove to viewers that Sheamus is a main-eventer and worth paying $40 to watch on pay-per-view.

The montages, entitled “The Celtic Warpath,” fall short, because all they show is Sheamus beating up on jobbers and non-wrestlers.

Sheamus has been incredibly overmatched on the microphone and appeared weak by not physically confronting Cena.

The build-up figures to be strong over the remainder of the week to convince viewers that Sheamus could win the match by putting Cena through a table and his brute strength might be all he needs.

They’ll undoubtedly pimp the fact that Sheamus doesn’t have pin Cena or make him submit, all he needs to do is toss him through a table, which he’s already done.

If they’re smart, they’ll have Sheamus obliterate Cena in the “Championship Showdown” at the end of RAW and put him through a table once again, thus proving that Sheamus has what it takes to win the title.

Here’s the problem, even if they build up Sheamus enough to make him seem like a viable number one contender for this Sunday, what comes next?

If Sheamus doesn’t win the WWE Championship, it proves he’s out of his league. What’s worse is that it proves he’s out of his league in a match that is painted as being in his favor.

If Sheamus loses this Sunday, he’ll probably get a one-night rematch on RAW, but any legitimate shot he has at being a main-eventer goes down the toilet with the pay-per-view loss.

John Cena was in a similar situation back in 2003 when he was pushed into a main event program with Brock Lesnar. There was minimal build and an obvious loss at Backlash.

It took Cena two years to legitimately work his way back into the main event picture.

The Miz suffered a similar fate earlier this year when he and Cena had a small feud. Miz appeared to be gaining some real steam before Cena squashed him in multiple matches and forced a dramatic re-boot of his entire persona.

Six months later, he’s the United States Champion, but is currently not on the radar for a main event push any time in the near future.

Pushing Sheamus this quickly leaves two options.

Sheamus can lose the match and, at best, attempt to carry the feud into the Royal Rumble before returning to the mid-card as an apparently failure at the upper echelon.

The alternative is to have Sheamus win the WWE Championship this Sunday.

It is feasible that the WWE could have Sheamus win the title without making Cena look too bad, thanks to the stipulations of the match, but then what?

Sheamus won’t be the WWE Champion at WrestleMania 26, that’s for sure. Any potential title reign would undoubtedly be a short one, after which he would once again return to the mid-card.

Either way you look at it, the end-game is the same. Sheamus returns to the mid-card and John Cena moves into a program that builds for WrestleMania.

I’m glad that the WWE didn’t shove another Cena vs Orton/HBK/Triple H match down our throat, but pushing Sheamus this quickly with no real resume to speak of only hurts themselves (buyrates) and Sheamus (potential) going forward.

Hopefully, the WWE will learn their lesson when, in six months, Sheamus has become another Kane. No longer an unstoppable monster, but rather just a big, bad heel who is occasionally thrown into title matches that he’ll never win.

For Sheamus it’s just too much, too soon.

Posted in Cheap Seat Chronicles, Professional Wrestling, Sheamus, WWE, WWE RAW | 1 Comment

Seattle Mariners Ready to Play with the Big Boys

The Seattle Mariners mean business.

General Manager Jack Zduriencik is entering just his second offseason at the club’s helm, but clearly has the franchise headed in the right direction.

Last offseason, he engineered a number of low-risk, high-reward deals and helped turnaround a club that had just 61 wins in 2008 to 85 victories last season.

Aside from adding a solid crop of new players, Zduriencik also took by strides by hiring manager Don Wakamatsu and bringing a more combined approach to the scouting department, by mixing both traditional scouting and modern statistical analysis.

Zduriencik is in an enviable position this offseason.

The Mariners have a very solid core in Felix Hernandez, Ichiro Suzuki, Brandon Morrow, and Franklin Gutierrez.

The club plays in a division that appears more wide-open than it has in half-a-decade and, most importantly, Seattle has some serious payroll flexibility.

The large salaries of Jarrod Washburn, Miguel Batista, Kenji Johjima, Erik Bedard, and Adrian Beltre are all officially off the books.

The total savings amounts to roughly $50 million to spend on free agents this offseason.

Additionally, Zduriencik has plenty of organizational depth to deal from and talented Major League players who could be used in trades.

As such, Zduriencik has wasted no time making improvements.

The club has already reportedly inked third baseman Chone Figgins to a lucrative four-year, $36 million contract and they don’t figure to be anywhere near done shopping.

Earlier this offseason the club signed defensive stalwart Jack Wilson to a two-year, $10 million deal to anchor the infield at shortstop.

The club also brought back future Hall of Famer—and arguably the most popular player in franchise history—Ken Griffey Jr. on a one-year, $2 million for the 2010 campaign.

The club is also in the mix to add at least one front-line starter, as the departures of Jarrod Washburn and Erik Bedard have left the depth chart a little barren beyond ace, Felix Hernandez.

Hernandez, 23, is arbitration-eligible for the first-time this offseason and—after finishing second the American League Cy Young balloting—figures to command a significant raise after earning just shy of $4 million last season.

Talks of a signing Hernandez to an extension have begun, but nothing serious has come out of the talks as both sides are said to be “far apart” in negotiations.

If an extension can’t be worked out, there is a possibility the club could move the young fireballer for a slew of prospects.

Numerous teams were rumored to have inquired about Hernandez’s availability at the trade deadline, and acquiring “King Felix” would no doubt require a king’s ransom.

In addition to bolstering the rotation, the club is also in the market to improve a lineup that ranked last in the American League in runs scored (640) in 2009, as well as tied for last in batting average (.258) and on-base percentage (.314).

Zduriencik figures to be on the lookout for a slugging left fielder, a veteran catcher, and improvements to the right side of the infield.

Jason Bay’s name has been floated as a potential target for Zduriencik this offseason and for good reason.

Signing Bay, who lives near Seattle, makes plenty of sense for both parties.

Bay, 31, has made it clear that he would love to play close to his home and his family and friends in and around Seattle.

The Mariners would love to add his 30+ home runs and 100+ RBIs into the lineup that lacked a real home run threat for most of 2009.

Bay has already rejected a proposed four-year, $60 million deal from the Boston Red Sox and could cost more than Seattle would care to pay, but he could also give a hometown discount to gain the comfort of playing close to home.

He may not fit into Jack Zduriencik’s defensive-minded lineup, but he could split his time between left field and designated hitter to minimize his impact. Additionally, with Franklin Gutierrez covering ground in center field, Bay’s defensive ineptitude would be less of a burden.

The club has also reportedly not given up on bringing back third baseman Adrian Beltre, who has until midnight eastern Monday to accept or decline arbitration.

If the Mariners and Beltre did re-unite it would create an interesting situation with the recently signed Figgins. The club would logically want to keep Beltre’s glove at the hot corner and move Figgins to either second base or left field.

Both of those potential moves would hinge on the club’s ability and/or inability to sign Bay and/or trade incumbent second baseman Jose Lopez.

If the club did sign Bay and bring back Beltre, it wouldn’t be out of the question to move Figgins to second and slide Lopez over to first where his defensive shortcomings would be less detrimental.

If Beltre does not return, the club figures to push very hard to acquire Bay to add some power and could look toward Nick Johnson, Adam LaRoche, Lyle Overbay, or even Carlos Delgado—obviously on a short-term deal—to play first base.

The club has not yet ruled out a reunion with Russell Branyan, but the sides still seem far apart on contract negotiations after Branyan rejected a one-year deal earlier this winter.

The Mariners’ other big need, a catcher, offers fewer options this winter.

There are a number of solid, but past their prime options available such as Ivan Rodriguez, Rod Barajas, and Bengie Molina.

None of the three figures to be an impact player, but the club is more interested in having their primary backstop serve as a mentor to incumbent starter Rob Johnson and rookie Adam Moore.

As the Winter Meetings open today, it seems that the Mariners are already pushing ahead of their American League West counterparts.

The Texas Rangers are still in a state of financial flux. The club is set to be sold this winter. In fact, a deadline of December 15 has now been set, so the Rangers don’t figure to be major players in free agency until the ownership situation is resolved.

The Los Angeles Angels entered the offseason with a slew of potential free agent loses.

The club has addressed a few of the holes, having already re-upped with outfielder Bobby Abreu while seemingly deciding to let outfielder/designated hitter Vladimir Guerrero leave.

Losing Figgins to a division rival was no doubt a big blow to the Angels who had hoped to bring back their starting third baseman and leadoff hitter. Figgins will now serve as a catalyst to the arguably the Angels biggest threat for division dominance.

It is also rumored that the Mariners are interested in former Los Angeles ace, John Lackey.

If Seattle is able to sign the right-hander, it would serve as a veritable knockout blow to Los Angeles as the free agent market offers few, if any, pitchers who figure to have the same impact as Lackey.

The Mariners and Jack Zduriencik realize that they have a very limited window to win a championship during the Ichiro Era and/or the second Griffey Era and it seems as though they’re willing to go all-in to make it happen.

That fact should be enough to put the rest of the American League on notice, the Seattle Mariners mean business.

Posted in AL West, American League, Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Felix Hernandez, Free Agency, Jack Zduriencik, Jason Bay, John Lackey, Los Angeles Angels, MLB, MLB Trades, Seattle Mariners | 1 Comment

Miguel Sano Officially Signs with the Minnesota Twins

It’s official…finally.

More than two months after initially agreeing on a deal with a $3.15 million bonus, Miguel Sano is officially a member of the Minnesota Twins organization.

Sano’s application for a work visa was approved Friday by the U.S. Consulate in the Dominican Republic.

Obtaining the visa was the final hurdle that needed to be cleared to finalize the deal.

Sano’s deal included a $3.15 million bonus, which was the largest awarded to an international player this summer and the largest ever for a Latin American positional prospect.

It is also the second-largest Latin American signing bonus ever, behind fellow Dominican Michael Ynoa, who signed a $4.25 million deal with Oakland last year.

Sano, 16, was the jewel of this year’s international signing crop and for very good reason. He is a five-tool prospect with a very high ceiling.

Sano is a 6-foot-3 slugging shortstop from the Dominican Republic who has been compared to everyone from Hanley Ramirez to Alex Rodriguez.

Scouting reports say he has great raw power to all fields and only figures to get better and stronger as he fills out. Although currently a strong-armed shortstop, most scouts assume he’ll transition to third base or the outfield as he grows into his body.

Upon initially signing the deal in September, Sano seemed very confident about his ability to make an impact in the big leagues.

“I’m very thankful to get this chance to sign with the Twins,” Sano said. “I’m going to work very hard to try to get to the majors in two years.”

A two-year romp to the big leagues isn’t entirely unheard of for an elite prospect such as Sano, but it is probably a lofty goal for a player who will be just 17 next season.

It is believed that Sano will begin his professional career next season playing for the Twins’ affiliate in the Gulf Coast League.

Posted in AL Central, American League, Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, International Signing, Miguel Sano, Minnesota Twins, MLB | Leave a comment

2010 All-Free Agent Team – National League

This year 171 players filed for free agency.

Of the 171 total free agents, 99 are from the National League and 72 are from the American League.

Unlike last year’s class of free agents, only a select few in this crop figure to land blockbuster deals.

In fact, an increasing number of teams are choosing to improve via trade or by promoting young talent from within the farm system.

As such, many of these veterans can expect to sign short-term and/or incentive-laden deals for 2010 and potentially beyond.

I’ve taken a look at all of the free agents left on the market and split them up into two 25-man rosters, one for the National League and one for the American League.

League affiliation was determined by whichever team a player finished out the 2009 season.

In an effort to keep things as realistic as possible, I’ve ensured that each team has a backup catcher, infielder, and outfielder. Additionally, both the NL and AL rosters have been given a 12-man pitching rotation.

These teams certainly don’t reflect an All-Star mentality, but rather they give a good indication of how weak this year’s free agent class can be considered.

It should be noted that some deserving players were left off of the roster due to position-eligibility concerns. As such, you’ll note some sketchy inclusions and unfortunate exclusions.

Without any further ado, let’s take a look at the NL All-Free Agent Team.

Check out the National League’s 25-man roster at BleacherReport.com. 

Posted in All-Free Agent Team, Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, MLB, National League, NL Central, NL East, NL West | Leave a comment

Marco Scutaro Signs with the Boston Red Sox

Talk about anticlimactic.

Smart, but anticlimactic.

In a move that was pretty much set in stone a week ago, the Boston Red Sox have reportedly agreed to a two-year deal with Marco Scutaro.

According to ESPN’s Buster Olney, the deal pays Scutaro $5 million in both 2010 and 2011 with a $1 million signing bonus.

The third-year option for 2012 is a mutual option.

The club option is worth $6 million and the player option is worth $3 million with a $1.5 million buy-out.

Essentially that makes it, at minimum, a two-year, $12.5 million deal.

Finalization of the contract is pending a physical.

The Red Sox had shown interest in Scutaro earlier this offseason, but when Toronto signed Alex Gonzalez—presumably Boston’s Plan-B—last Thursday, the endgame became pretty apparent.

As a result, Toronto—after shrewdly offering Scutaro arbitration—will receive Boston’s first-round draft pick in 2010 and a supplemental pick, assuming Boston doesn’t sign a higher-ranked Type A free agent.

Scutaro, 34, was easily the most-desirable option at shortstop in this year’s very weak class of free agents.

The Sox were also rumored to have kicked the tires on veterans Miguel Tejada, Orlando Cabrera, and Adam Everett.

All three, however, came with plenty of drawbacks which eventually led to the Sox going with Scutaro to take over what has been a veritable black hole in Boston’s lineup for nearly half a decade.

Scutaro is coming off a career year in which he set career-highs in nearly every statistical corner.

In 574 at-bats, Scutaro put up an impressive .282/.379/.409 line with twelve home runs, 60 RBI, 35 doubles, 100 runs scored, and fourteen stolen bases. He also drew an impressive 90 walks on the season against 75 strikeouts.

Those numbers were good enough to rank him in the top ten among all shortstops in numerous categories including: doubles (6th), home runs (9th), runs batted in (4th), walks (1st), stolen bases (T9th), on-base percentage (4th), and on-base plus slugging percentage (8th).

His numbers in 2009, however, were well-above his career batting line of .265/.337/.384. He’s usually good for modest pop, but nothing like the numbers he put up in 2009.

Many expect him to regress, but the Red Sox are clearly willing to the take the risk that he’s simply a late-bloomer who can hold down the shortstop position for the foreseeable future.

It is also possible that the club has plans to use Scutaro elsewhere if his numbers do return to earth in 2010 and beyond.

Scutaro has played everywhere on the diamond except catcher and pitcher.

According to most defensive metrics, he’s roughly a league-average defender no matter where he’s penciled into the lineup.

Earlier this week the Sox made mention that they were considering using former Most Valuable Player and current second baseman, Dustin Pedroia, at shortstop next season.

This now appears to have been a negotiation tactic to get Scutaro to let up on what had reportedly been a desire for a long-term deal of three-years or more.

With the shortstop situation now cleared up, the Red Sox can return to their pursuit of a big bat for left field and/or first base and a potential blockbuster trade for Toronto ace, Roy Halladay.

Posted in AL East, Baseball, Boston Red Sox, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, Marco Scutaro, MLB | 1 Comment

Atlanta Braves on a Warpath: Club Bolsters Bullpen, Turns Attention to Big Bats

Atlanta is at it again.

Just a day after acquiring Billy Wagner to serve as the club’s new closer, the Braves have reportedly signed free agent reliever Takashi Saito to a one-year deal.

According to Ken Rosenthal of FoxSports, Saito’s base salary will be $3.2 million, according to a major-league source. He can earn $2.3 million in appearance-based incentives.

The move further re-enforces the backend of a bullpen that could have been destroyed by the free agent exodus of Rafael Soriano and Mike Gonzalez who have shared the bulk of the closing and setup duties in recent years.

Soriano and Gonzalez were both offered arbitration, and sources said the Braves would have qualms with one or both accepting the offer and returning next season.

It is believed, however, that both are looking for multi-year deals and the opportunity to close, thus likely closing the door on their respective tenures with Atlanta.

Saito, 39, will serve both as a setup man and an insurance policy in case Wagner’s surgically-repaired elbow becomes an issue.

Throughout his four years in the Major Leagues, Saito has served both roles and proven he can excel in any capacity.

Saito spent 2006-2008 in Los Angeles serving as the Dodgers’ primary closer. In that time he went 12-7, racked up 81 saves, posted an impressive 1.96 ERA, and an equally imposing 0.91 WHIP.

A sprained elbow forced Saito to the disabled list in 2008 and when he returned he’d lost the closer’s role to Jonathon Broxton.

As such, the Dodgers non-tendered him that winter and he signed a one-year, $1.5 million deal with the Boston Red Sox for the 2009 campaign.

Saito spent the year serving as a setup man to Jonathon Papelbon and went 3-3 with a 2.43 ERA, a 1.35 WHIP, and 52 strikeouts in 55.2 innings of work.

He was very solid in his role and reportedly had a number of teams looking to acquire his services.

The move should solidify the Atlanta bullpen for 2009 with incumbents Peter Moylan, Eric O’Flaherty, and Manny Acosta all expected to resume their late-inning roles.

As the bullpen now appears settled, the Braves can turn their attention to the next goal, acquiring a power bat to reinforce a lineup that was desperately in need of a spark for most of last season.

The Braves have already been linked to free agents Jermaine Dye, Xavier Nady, Mike Cameron, and Marlon Byrd, among many others.

There is also the possibility that the club will avoid dipping into the free agency pool for a hitter and go the trade route, instead.

It is widely-anticipated that last offseason’s key additions, Derek Lowe and Javier Vazquez, will be shopped this winter with the intent of bringing the aforementioned big-time bat in return.

The Braves may struggle to find a taker for Lowe and the three years and $45 million that remain on his contract.

Vazquez is only under contract through 2010, but was easily the club’s most reliable starter in 2009 and the Braves would no doubt be hesitant to lose his presence at the front of the rotation.

Neither pitcher figures to have much value until after John Lackey is signed to a new deal. After Lackey the free agent pool of starters is very shallow and many teams could find Lowe and Vazquez to be more attractive alternatives.

Whatever the rest of the offseason holds for the Atlanta, one this is certain, the bullpen is all taken care of for 2010.

Posted in Atlanta Braves, Baseball, Billy Wagner, Boston Red Sox, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, Los Angeles Dodgers, MLB, NL East, Takashi Saito | 1 Comment

Placido Polanco Signs with the Philadelphia Phillies

Placido Polanco is coming back to Philly.

After spending four and a half years in Detroit, the Phillies have reportedly signed the 34-year-old to take over as the club’s everyday third baseman.

The contract is believed to be a three-year, $18 million deal with a fourth-year mutual option for 2013.

As is customary with all deals, finalization of the contract is pending a physical.

Polanco spent parts of four seasons in Philadelphia and posted a very solid .297/.352/.439 line during that time while posting of the best power numbers of his career.

The Phillies will be moving Polanco from second base, where he has two Gold Gloves, to third base to replace the departed Pedro Feliz.

Polanco isn’t a stranger to the hot corner, having originally started his career as a third baseman before shifting to second base full-time during his last stint in Philadelphia.

He posted above average numbers at the hot corner, but has only played nine games at third since the end of 2004.

The addition of Polanco gives the Phillies more flexibility in the lineup as well as in the field.

Polanco, a career .303/.348/.414 hitter can hit anywhere in the lineup.

He is renowned for his plate discipline. He struck out once every 14.7 plate appearances last season, good enough for the second-best mark in all of baseball.

Over the past five seasons, he’s averaged just one strikeout per every 17.5 plate appearances, which is also good for second-best in the Majors.

He has hit primarily out of the two-hole in recent years. His penchant for clutch hits and moving runners makes him an ideal candidate to continue that role in Philadelphia.

Another option would be to hit him lower in the order, to allow more turn-over at the bottom of the lineup. Shane Victorino has handled the two-hole in recent years and has thrived in the role.

No matter where manager Charlie Manuel decides to hit him in the lineup, Polanco figures to be an exciting addition to one of the most potent lineups in all of baseball.

The Phillies were rumored to be interested in Mark DeRosa and Adrian Beltre as alternatives at third base, but the Phillies pursued Polanco very aggressively after it was learned that Detroit would not offer him arbitration.

As a Type A free agent, the Tigers could have gained a first-round draft pick and as supplemental pick for Polanco had they offered him arbitration.

Without the offer, Polanco instantly became more attractive as a free agent option.

Posted in Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, MLB, National League, Philadelphia Phillies, Placido Polanco | 1 Comment

2010 All-Free Agent Team – American League

This year 171 players filed for free agency.

Of the 171 total free agents, 72 are from the American League and 99 are from the National League.

Unlike last year’s class of free agents, only a select few in this crop figure to land blockbuster deals.

In fact, an increasing number of teams are choosing to improve via trade or by promoting young talent from within the farm system.

As such, many of these veterans can expect to sign short-term and/or incentive-laden deals for 2010 and potentially beyond.

I’ve taken a look at all of the free agents left on the market and split them up into two 25-man rosters, one for the American League and one for the National League.

League affiliation was determined by whichever team a player finished out the 2009 season.

In an effort to keep things as realistic as possible, I’ve ensured that each team has a backup catcher, infielder, and outfielder. Additionally, both the AL and NL rosters have been given a 12-man pitching rotation.

These teams certainly don’t reflect an All-Star mentality, but rather they give a good indication of how weak this year’s free agent class can be considered.

It should be noted that some deserving players were left off of the roster due to position-eligibility concerns. As such, you’ll note some sketchy inclusions and unfortunate exclusions.

Without any further ado, let’s take a look at the AL All-Free Agent Team.

Check out the American League’s 25-man roster at BleacherReport.com.

Posted in All-Free Agent Team, American League, Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, MLB | Leave a comment

MLB Arbitration Rundown: Who’s Staying, Who’s Going?!

This year 23 free agents were offered arbitration.

Of those 23, ten are Type A free agents and thirteen are Type B.

Teams that sign a Type A free agent will lose their first-round pick—if that club finished in the top fifteen in the league—as well as a sandwich pick between rounds one and two of the draft.

Teams that sign a Type B free agent do not lose a draft pick, but the team that offered arbitration does receive an additional supplemental round pick.

The following players were offered arbitration on Tuesday, and now have until December 7th to decide whether to accept:

Check out the slideshow featuring all 23 free agents at BleacherReport.com.

Posted in Adrian Beltre, Baseball, Billy Wagner, Brandon Lyon, Brian Shouse, Carl Pavano, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Chone Figgins, Fernando Rodney, Free Agency, Gregg Zaun, Ivan Rodriguez, Jason Bay, Jason Marquis, Joel Pineiro, John Lackey, Jose Valverde, Justin Duchscherer, Marco Scutaro, Mark DeRosa, Marlon Byrd, Matt Holliday, Mike Gonzalez, MLB, Rafael Betancourt, Rafael Soriano, Rod Barajas | Leave a comment

Billy Wagner Signs with the Atlanta Braves

That didn’t take long.

Just hours after the deadline for teams to offer arbitration, the Atlanta Braves have reportedly signed free agent closer Billy Wagner to a one-year deal.

The deal is reportedly worth $7 million and has a $6.5 million vesting option for 2011.

The option reportedly becomes guaranteed if Wagner finishes 50 games next season.

As with all pending deals, it won’t become final until Wagner, 38, passes a physical, which he is expected to take Wednesday in Atlanta.

Wagner is a Type-A free agent, who was offered arbitration by the Red Sox on Tuesday.

As such, Boston will receive Atlanta’s first-round draft pick in 2010 (the 20th overall pick) as well as a supplemental pick between the first and second rounds.

Wagner spent most of last season rehabbing from Tommy John surgery.

He made two strong relief appearances for the New York Mets before he was traded to the Boston Red Sox where he served in a setup role to Jonathon Papelbon.

In all, Wagner made a total of 15 appearances for 13.2 innings pitched. He struck out 22 and walked just seven, while giving up three earned runs.

His overall record was 1-1 with a 1.98 ERA and six holds.

Wagner wasn’t shy about his desire to close and made that clear when he agreed to waive his no-trade clause last summer only if Boston agreed not to pick up his $8 million option for 2010.

Wagner is currently ranked sixth all-time in total saves with 385. He is third on the active list behind only Trevor Hoffman and Mariano Rivera.

His return to the ninth inning role also gives him an opportunity to garner out the 40 saves he needs to pass John Franco for the all-time record among left-handed pitchers.

Additionally, the Braves give Wagner a chance to win.

He stated that a big reason why he accepted the trade to Boston last year was an “overwhelming desire to pitch in a pennant race.”

The Braves proved last year that they were only a few pieces away from the Wild-Card.

As such, Wagner just might get another chance at a pennant race.

Posted in Atlanta Braves, Baseball, Billy Wagner, Boston Red Sox, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, MLB | 2 Comments

Minnesota’s Free Agent Targets Become Clearer Following Arbitration Deadline

Twins general manager Bill Smith had better have the Pohlad’s checkbook ready.

As Tuesday night’s 11 p.m. deadline for teams to offer arbitration came and went, it officially sounded the real opening bell on free agency.

Don’t get me wrong, I know that free agents, all 171 of them, have been able to sign with teams since November 20th, however, teams rarely sign any Type-A or Type-B free agents prior to the arbitration deadline.

If a team signs a player prior to the deadline, the other team will undoubtedly offer arbitration to recoup their losses in the form of draft picks.

Tuesday’s deadline, however, was the last opportunity for teams to offer arbitration to free agents.

Any players who were offered arbitration now have one week to determine whether or not they’ll accept.

Any players who were not offered arbitration just became a whole lot more attractive on the free agent market.

The opportunity to sign high-profile players without surrendering draft picks makes them all the more appealing.

As such, I’ve taken a look at some of the popular targets for the Minnesota Twins this offseason who were NOT offered arbitration by Tuesday night’s deadline.

All of these players who—reportedly and/or hopefully—are on the Twins’ offseason radar are now available, without the added cost of a draft pick.

Let the games begin…

Check out the slideshow at BleacherReport.com.

Posted in AL Central, American League, Baseball, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Erik Bedard, Felipe Lopez, Free Agency, Miguel Tejada, Minnesota Twins, MLB, Orlando Hudson, Rich Harden | Leave a comment

Carl Pavano Receives Arbitration Offer from Minnesota

The Twins have reportedly offered Carl Pavano arbitration.

Minnesota had until Tuesday’s 11 p.m. deadline to offer the right hander arbitration for next season, but chose to do so early.

The decision makes sense as Pavano qualifies as a Type B free agent and that guarantees the Twins a draft pick if he signs elsewhere.

Additionally, if he chooses to accept the offer, the Twins have shown no hesitation to the prospect of Pavano making an encore performance in Minnesota next season.

Pavano was highly-regarded for his gritty, veteran presence on the young pitching staff late last season. He also produced by going 5-4 with a 4.64 ERA in twelve starts for the club down the stretch, seven of which qualified as quality starts.

The Twins have already had discussions with Pavano about a potential second tour of duty, so it is more likely that if he were to accept the arbitration offer, the club would strike a multi-year deal.

Pavano, 34, has a lengthy injury history that includes an infamous injury-laden, four-year stint with the New York Yankees.

He bucked the trend in 2010 by staying healthy for a full season for the first time since his 2004 campaign with the Florida Marlins.

He pitched 199.1 innings over 33 starts and posted a cumulative 14-12 record with a 5.10 ERA. Those numbers are skewed by an abysmal April. After his shaky start to the season, Pavano went 14-9 with a 4.67 ERA in 181.1 innings.

Despite his injury history and middle-of-the-pack overall numbers, Pavano has garnered interest from a number of teams.

Cleveland has shown interest in bringing him back and it is rumored that a number of National League teams are interested in the right hander as well.

At his best, Pavano is probably no better than a middle of the rotation starter at this point in his career, but he did finish in the American League’s top five in starts, walk rate, and strikeout-to-walk ratio, so he still brings something to the table.

I look at this situation as a win-win for Minnesota.

If Pavano accepts, we get a reliable innings-eater for the middle of the rotation.

If we sign a multi-year deal—at the right price—it gets even better.

If it comes down to an arbitrator on a one-year deal, Pavano’s overall numbers merit a raise, but not a substantial one.

Pavano’s base salary last year was $1.5 million and he made roughly $4.35 million when performance bonuses were factored in. At worst, he would probably cost the Twins somewhere in the $6-7 million range via arbitration.

Then there is the alternative.

Pavano could decline arbitration and guarantee the Twins a draft pick when he signs elsewhere.

The Twins could then use the money they were going to use to sign Pavano to acquire a different starter or to bolster the infield.

Barring the sudden, unexpected return of the “American Idle” version of Pavano from his tenure with New York, the Twins can’t lose in this situation.

Posted in AL Central, American League, Baseball, Carl Pavano, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Free Agency, Injuries, Minnesota Twins, MLB | 1 Comment

Dustin Pedroia May Play Shortstop for Red Sox

 

The Red Sox may no longer need a shortstop.

 

Just one day after I went on a lengthy diatribe regarding Boston’s inability to find a suitable shortstop, the club has reportedly found a solution.

 

The solution is none other than current second baseman Dustin Pedroia.

 

“They’ve asked me if I think I could play shortstop,” Pedroia said. “They’ve put it out there and I’ve told them I’m all for it.”

 

The Red Sox aren’t exactly throwing Pedroia to the wolves by making the transition, as he has plenty of experience at the position.

 

Pedroia was an All-American shortstop at Arizona State and was drafted and signed as a shortstop in 2004. He played 42 games without committing in error that year but was shifted to second base to make room for then-Red Sox prospect Hanley Ramirez.

 

He played shortstop infrequently in 2005 and 2006, but in 184 games at the position he committed just seven errors.

 

As I mentioned in yesterday’s article, the Red Sox’s options at shortstop are very limited and uninspiring. The club’s only real options are Marco Scutaro, Miguel Tejada, and Orlando Cabrera, all of whom come with plenty of warning signs and high price tags.

 

In moving Pedroia to short, the Sox can turn their attention to one of the many second basemen currently on the market via trade or free agency.

 

Players like Felipe Lopez, Orlando Hudson, Placido Polanco, and Brandon Phillips would all give the Red Sox a more well-rounded and competitive club.

 

Additionally, the return on investment would be much higher than the Sox could expect to receive by overpaying for Scutaro, Tejada, or Cabrera.

 

Whether or not Pedroia can make the shift defensively to a full-time shortstop is sure to come under fire, especially by those who feel that this announcement may be more of a smokescreen to drive down the asking price of the aforementioned shortstop options.

 

For his part, Pedroia feels very confident he can make the move and has been working hard to prepare for the transition.

 

“I’ve really worked hard on speed, agility and flexibility as well as all the strength, conditioning and endurance programs,” Pedroia said. “It’s really helping me. I have much more quickness and speed than I ever had. Maybe there is some question about my arm strength, but I’m working on that. I can do it. I hope it happens.”

 

If the Red Sox do go through with the transition, one could assume that it won’t be a permanent move. The Sox currently have 19-year-old defensive wunderkind Jose Iglesias in the farm system, and he figures to be the shortstop of the future.

 

Whether it’s a short-term move, a long-term move, or just speculation, it doesn’t change the fact that Pedroia is completely confident that he can handle the transition if and/or when the opportunity arises.

 

“When the idea of moving back to shortstop was floated to me, I welcomed it,” Pedroia said. “I believe I can play shortstop and help get the Red Sox back where they belong.”

 

It will be interesting to see if Pedroia can handle the reins at shortstop or if the team is actually using this as a negotiation tactic with the current crop of free agent shortstops.

 

Either way, expect Boston to remain busy this offseason, but for now it appears as though the Red Sox finally have their shortstop.

Posted in AL Central, American League, Baseball, Boston Red Sox, Cheap Seat Chronicles, Dustin Pedroia | Leave a comment

CM Punk’s Cult-like Crusade

 

CM Punk is NOT wasting away.

 

Despite what many fans and critics have said lately—myself included—the WWE appears to know exactly what they’re doing with CM Punk.

 

In my Survivor Series recap I stated that I felt his talent was being wasted in subpar midcard feuds with the likes of R-Truth and referees.

 

I’ve since been involved in many conversations regarding Punk’s future direction and I’ve found myself repeating the same dream scenario for Punk.

 

I want Punk to become a cult leader.

 

His recent ranting and raving on Smackdown has him coming off as preacher of sorts and logically the next step should be to acquire followers.

 

The WWE took the first step in the right direction on last week’s Smackdown by having Luke Gallows, formerly Festus, accompany Punk down to the ring.

 

Punk then proclaimed that he had “saved” Gallows from a life of drugs and neglect.

 

Festus—who was last seen as a balding, overweight mental patient—was “born again” as Luke Gallows, a menacing giant with new-found loyalties to his personal savior, CM Punk.

 

Gallows aided Punk in his match with Matt Hardy and eventually laid Hardy out with a sloppy, yet effective new finishing maneuver.

 

When it was all said and done, fans saw a brilliant pose as Gallows sat overtop of a fallen, beaten Hardy and Punk stood over Gallows as though he were his personal hound who had done his master’s dirty work.

 

Punk figures to continue his “crusade” to convert those in need to a straightedge lifestyle.

 

My hope is that they’ll use this as a chance to build Punk an army of his own, a church of followers much like Raven’s Flock from ECW/WCW.

 

This would serve multiple purposes.

 

First and foremost it would allow Punk the chance to shine as the leader of his cult.

 

He has become a more impressive heel with each passing week and having an army of ruthless—and eternally loyal—minions would only paint him as a more despicable heel as he works his way back into the World Heavyweight Title picture.

 

Imagine a Royal Rumble that consists of Punk and half a dozen of his reborn, straightedge slaves. The thought is very intriguing.

 

The second major purpose of a CM Punk Church of Followers would be to put over some lower midcard talent.

 

Rebranding Festus as Luke Gallows is the first of what could be many superstars shedding dead in the water gimmicks to be “reborn” as Punk’s disciples.

 

The list of superstars currently going nowhere in WWE is a lengthy one and if WWE pushes through with a CM Punk faction, superstars like Carlito, Primo, Chris Masters, Evan Bourne, and dozens of others could be brought in to revive their faltering careers.

 

Thirdly, this faction would provide opportunities for other midcarders who are currently searching for a storyline. John Morrison is currently without any real direction. The same could be said for Matt Hardy and, for the most part, Christian in ECW.

 

Any of these midcard faces could use a feud with a diabolic heel stable to push them to new heights in the WWE.

 

In the end, the WWE may decide that Gallows is all Punk needs for a sidekick and that’ll be the end of the story.

 

If the WWE decides to press on with this storyline and give Punk the reins of his own heel stable, it could finally be the move that puts Punk on top for good and helps rebuild an otherwise floundering midcard in the process.

 

Either way, I’m very impressed with what I saw out of CM Punk last Thursday and I now know for sure, that Punk is not wasting away on Smackdown.

 

Rather, he’s still evolving and we’re all going to be the benefactors of his evolution.

Posted in Cheap Seat Chronicles, CM Punk, Professional Wrestling, WWE, WWE Smackdown | Leave a comment