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Friday, November 14, 2008
Link-O-RamaJust like riding a bike. Oliva now has 1,919 career hits. Much like NFL Network lead man Rich Eisen, Vasgersian is a perfect fit for the new venture because he's smart, funny, and very quick on his feet, along with just generally being good at his job. In addition to more or less making Vasgersian the face of the channel, MLB Network has hired Harold Reynolds and Al Leiter as studio analysts, plus Hazel Mae and Trenni Kusnierek as reporters. Ultimately their programming will determine who watches, but so far MLB Network has made some good hires. Tim Goodman of the San Francisco Chronicle agrees with me, even in the face of tough competition. Once you're done here, check out my latest "Daily Dose" column over at Rotoworld.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
AG.com Live Chat Today at NoonMy weekly live chat begins at noon today and the plan is to go for two hours or until the questions stop rolling in, whichever comes first. Be there or waste a perfectly good day doing something silly like work. Once you're done here, check out my latest "Daily Dose" column over at Rotoworld.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Twins Notes: Neshek, Blake, Punto, Lugo, and ReyesUPDATE: Neshek reportedly will undergo Tommy John surgery, knocking him out for all of 2009. Damn. Atkins is 29 years old, will make at least $15 million over the next two seasons before becoming a free agent, and will cost several valuable players to get from the Rockies, which is why there was a case against trading for him in this space yesterday. Blake is 35 years old and will likely get a multi-year deal worth at least $5 million per season as a free agent, so even though the Twins would only have to part with money to get him Blake isn't really any more appealing than Atkins. If the Twins' limited, typically unsuccessful forays into free agency have shown anything it's that paying a premium for veteran mediocrity is almost never a good idea. Blake is a valuable enough player, but he's 35 years old, will require a multi-year deal that figures to make him overpaid, and isn't significantly better than a Brian Buscher-Brendan Harris platoon that would cost around $700,000. Much like with Atkins, the Twins are probably better off devoting their limited resources elsewhere. Naturally, Christensen reports that the Twins "have had discussions with" Punto, but "have yet to make an offer." Pursuing a mediocre veteran third baseman doesn't make a ton of sense when Buscher and Harris are available to form a decent platoon for $700,000, but pursuing a mediocre veteran shortstop makes more sense when the alternative is giving Punto a multi-year deal that would almost surely be worth at least $3 million per season. Re-signing him might not be horrible, but the Twins can do better. A number of clubs have holes at shortstop--including the St. Louis Cardinals, Minnesota Twins, Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Baltimore Orioles and San Francisco Giants--but Lugo is a tough sell, coming off a season in which he didn't play after July 11 because of a severe quad strain. Beyond his value, there's the issue of his contract. The best bet would seem to be a deal in which the Sox absorb a bad contract in exchange for a team taking Lugo's remaining dollars.Michael Cuddyer is the closest thing the Twins have to a "bad contract" and he's set to make $2 million less than Lugo over the next two seasons, so that's not really a good fit. Still, if the Red Sox are willing to eat, say, two-thirds of Lugo's remaining deal he might be worth considering as a stopgap. Over the past three years Lugo has hit .258/.323/.370 with a .794 Revised Zone Rating, which at shortstop puts him about three percent below average offensively and four percent below average defensively. Reyes is a very effective left-handed specialist and bringing him back via a one-year contract is hardly a disastrous scenario, but the Twins have probably moved on and may not want to risk being forced to devote a sizable chunk of payroll to an area they have covered with Craig Breslow and Jose Mijares. Offering arbitration to Reyes would be smart, because he's unlikely to accept and the payoff outweighs the risk, but if the Twins opt against doing so their reasoning will be easy to figure out. Clubs know that. That hasn't necessarily discouraged clubs from inquiring or making suggestions of offers. But we don't see anything out there that gives us a net gain by losing him. We have a list of very definitive untouchables for various reasons. After that, if someone wants to get creative and we could find a way to do something, even if it takes more than one prospect, we're willing to do it.Sabean remains likely to value Young higher than most general managers, but if the Twins are looking to get MLB-ready talent in return the Giants are lacking. Once you're done here, check out my latest "Daily Dose" column over at Rotoworld.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Potential Trade Target: Garrett AtkinsAmong the many potential trade targets being linked to the Twins this offseason, Garrett Atkins' name seemingly pops up most often. Not only have the local scribes reported on the Twins' interest in Atkins, Rockies beat writer Troy Renck of the Denver Post seems convinced that he has a legitimate chance of ending up in Minnesota. For instance, last month Renck penned the following note about the Twins' interest in Atkins: Moving Atkins for pitching--the Angels, Twins and Red Sox are all potential fits--makes the most sense for the Rockies' roster with Ian Stewart at third base and Todd Helton expected to return as the everyday first baseman.Then last Monday he wrote: The American League Central should be the epicenter for interest in Atkins, with the Twins and Indians trying to fill needs at third base and each possessing a bushel of young pitchers. It's not too hard to see conversations starting around the Twins' Kevin Slowey and Nick Blackburn or Cleveland's Aaron Laffey and Jeremy Sowers.Renck then more or less revised that same note for the next day: The Indians and Twins have inquired about infielder Garrett Atkins. Both have needs at third base. Atkins would fit nicely in Minnesota between left-handed hitters Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau.Most recently, Renck wrote the following over the weekend: It has been a rapid transformation from slugger to walking trade rumor. Garrett Atkins chewed on that idea over dinner Wednesday, aware he has become an appetizer for teams looking for a corner infielder. The Rockies are ... listening to calls from the Twins and Indians about Atkins.Clearly there's some fire behind all that smoke and on the surface at least Atkins looks like a perfect fit for the Twins. He's a right-handed, power-hitting third baseman and has batted .305/.369/.498 with an average of 25 homers and 110 RBIs over the past three seasons. At first glance he'd be a big upgrade at third base over a Brian Buscher-Brendan Harris platoon and would be a great fit in the lineup either between Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau or in the No. 5 spot behind Morneau. However, dig a little deeper and Atkins looks much less appealing. His overall production has declined significantly since his career-best 2006 season. He hit .329/.409/.556 with 29 homers, 48 doubles, 79 walks, 117 runs, and 120 RBIs that year, but since then his OPS has dropped from .965 to .853 to .780. Even a .780 OPS is slightly above average for a third baseman, but focusing on Atkins' raw numbers is misleading because he's played half his games in the best ballpark for hitting in all of baseball. For his career Atkins has hit .337/.394/.527 at Coors Field and .260/.328/.424 everywhere else, which makes him 20 percent less effective on the road and includes a measly .233/.278/.383 mark away from home this year. Take him away from Coors Field and Atkins has been a below-average third baseman offensively, which is a problem given that his fielding is also sub par. During the past three seasons Atkins has posted a Revised Zone Rating of .665, which rates five percent below average at third base.Beyond that, when Todd Helton went down with a midseason injury the Rockies decided to play Atkins at first base while 23-year-old rookie Ian Stewart manned third base despite not being considered a great defender himself. And finally, via arbitration Atkins figures to make at least $6 million in 2009 and $10 million in 2010, at which point he'll be eligible to leave as a free agent. Given all of that, should the Twins really be heavily pursuing Atkins? Take him away from Planet Coors and Atkins is a career .260/.328/.424 hitter and poor defender who's declined significantly over the past two seasons. Not only will he cost at least $15 million over the next two seasons, the price to acquire him from the Rockies figures to be plenty steep as well. Meanwhile, for the combined cost of around $700,000 the Twins could save their trade bait and money to improve other areas by simply letting Buscher and Harris split the position. Buscher and Harris will never approach the huge numbers Atkins posted in Colorado a few years ago, but neither will Atkins at this point. Buscher batted .315/.391/.517 at Triple-A over the past two seasons and has begun his MLB career by hitting .297/.354/.411 in 279 plate appearances against right-handed pitching. Harris is a career .269/.330/.408 hitter in 1,186 plate appearances as a big leaguer, including .295/.360/.440 against left-handed pitching. Platooned properly, Buscher and Harris are perfectly capable of covering third base while combining to hit at least .280/.340/.430 and would be a good bet to beat Atkins' road mark of .260/.328/.424. Even if you're willing to give Atkins the benefit of the doubt by assuming that he'll reverse his multi-year decline and improve his non-Coors Field numbers once out of Colorado, the odds are against his topping the Coors Field-boosted .286/.328/.452 mark he had in 2008. Plus, there's an awful lot of doubt: YEAR SO% BB% K/BB IsoPAtkins has seen his strikeout rate, walk rate, strikeout-to-walk ratio, and Isolated Power all get worse in both of the seasons since his career-year. He's striking out 39 percent more often, walking 43 percent less often, and hitting for 27 percent less power. Twins fans seem to like the notion of trading for a "big bat" like Atkins almost as much as they seem to dislike the notion of turning third base over to the old Buscher-Harris platoon that finished 2008. However, once you wipe away perceptions, reputations, and name recognition there simply isn't that much difference in performance between Atkins and Buscher-Harris. Over the next two years Atkins will cost about $15 million more than Buscher and Harris combined, and acquiring him would also involve sending major value to the Rockies. Let the Indians have him, unless of course the Rockies are willing to swap Atkins for the Twins' own declining, overpaid right-handed hitter. In which case ... maybe. Once you're done here, check out my latest "Daily Dose" column over at Rotoworld.
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E-Mail: aarongleeman@gmail.com Twitter: twitter.com/aarongleeman Read Me Elsewhere Rotoworld NBC Sports MinnPost Minnesota Twins Stuff Minneapolis Star Tribune St. Paul Pioneer Press MinnesotaTwins.com LaVelle E. Neal III Joe Christensen Kelsie Smith Kelly Thesier Seth Stohs Stick and Ball Guy Nick Nelson Parker Hageman Phil Mackey John Bonnes Edward Thoma Josh Johnson Howard Sinker Twinkie Town Pat Neshek Sports Stuff Circling the Bases Rotoworld Fan Graphs Baseball-Reference.com The Hardball Times Baseball America Baseball Think Factory Bill Simmons Rob Neyer Joe Posnanski Big League Stew The Big Lead Deadspin Fanhouse Baseball Prospectus U.S.S. Mariner Al's Ramblings Sports By Brooks Baseball Musings MLB Trade Rumors Non-Sports Stuff MinnPost Alan Sepinwall David Brauer Adam Carolla Poker Road Gorilla Mask Wicked Chops Poker WWTDD? Popoholic The Superficial Steve Silver Tao of Poker ![]() Official Fantasy Girl of AG.com OFGoAG.com Timeline: Heidi Klum (8/2002 - 12/2003) Jessica Alba (12/2003 - 10/2004) Elisha Cuthbert (10/2004 - 11/2006) Vacant (11/2006 - 6/2008) Keeley Hazell (6/2008 - Present) OFGoAG.com Candidates: Marisa Miller Jenna Fischer Kate Beckinsale Mila Kunis Elisha Cuthbert Top 40 Twins Prospects of 2010: 21. Alex Burnett, RP 22. Robert Delaney, RP 23. Luke Hughes, 3B 24. Ben Tootle, RP 25. Deolis Guerra, SP 26. Shooter Hunt, SP 27. Trevor Plouffe, SS 28. Michael McCardell, SP 29. Reggie Williams, 2B 30. Estarlin De Los Santos, SS 31. Derek McCallum, 2B 32. Jose Morales, C 33. Chris Herrmann, LF 34. Bobby Lanigan, SP 35. Danny Rams, C 36. Josmil Pinto, C 37. Steven Tolleson, 2B 38. Anderson Hidalgo, 3B 39. Loek Van Mil, RP 40. Joe Testa, RP |