2009 MLB Rule V Draft

jamie hoffmannThe World Champion New York Yankees got Jamie Hoffmann out of the LA Dodgers organization via the Washington Nationals, who selected him with the 1st pick in the Rule V Draft.Ā  The Rule V draft was designed to help teams at the bottom to select minor leaguers who might be log-jammed with their current.Ā  Reliever Brian Bruney was traded from the Nats to the Yanks in exchange for Hoffmann.Ā  Washington paid $50,000 for the Los Angeles outfielder.Ā  Jamie must stay in the majors this year or be offered back to his original ballclub for $25,000.Ā  The 25 year old righthanded hitting outfielder had a cup of coffee in the majors with the Dodgers this past season.

Interestingly the Pirates, with the 2nd pick, selected a guy by the name of John Raynor from the Florida Marlins, if you put a T at the beginning of his last name you get Traynor, as in Pie Traynor.Ā  Raynor is a leftfielder with very little power, who strikes out alot, not much to like.

Ben Snyder a lefthander out of Ball State was taken by the Baltimore Orioles out of the San Francisco Giants organization.Ā  The O’s dealt him, along with reliever Chris Ray, to the Texas Rangers in exchange for Kevin Millwood.Ā  I’m not suggesting that Ray + Snyder = Millwood, but this trade allowed Texas to sign Rich Harden, and have some money left over to improve their bullpen.Ā  Ben might be able to step right into the Rangers pen as a lefthanded specialist, he was 16-5 with a 2.09 ERA & 145 K’s in 151 IP in A ball in 2007, and in AA in 2009 he had a 2.88 ERA with 86 K’s in 97 IP.

Kansas City then selected Edgar Osuna out of the Atlanta Braves organization.Ā  The Royals must’ve been impressed with Osuna’s work in Mazatlan this winter.Ā  The 22 year old lefty has looked good out of the pen, crafting a 1.40 ERA in 19′ IP with 14 strikeouts.

Jorge Jimenez might shine in the Florida sunshine, drafted out of the Red Sox organization by the Astros, the thirdbaseman was dealt to the Florida Marlins.Ā  The Marlins traded reliever Matt Lindstrom (the team’s closer at the start of last season), so they must be serious about this Puerto Rican kid.Ā  The 25 year old batted .289 with decent power & a good eye at AA.

Milwaukee drafted a 23 year old lefthanded starter out of the Indians organization named Chuck Lofgren, who has struggled as a starter, perhaps they’re thinking of moving him to the bullpen, he has some pretty impressive strikeout numbers in the minors.

One of the steals of the draft might be lefthanded reliever Armando Zerpa, selected by Tampa Bay from the Red Sox.Ā  The 22 year old sparkled in AA where he posted a 1.20 ERA striking out 51 batters in 45 innings allowing only 19 hits.

Perhaps this should have been the lead story, Yankees lose Texeira to the Mariners in the Rule V.Ā  Actually it’s sinkerball righthander Kanekoa Texeira, not slugging firstbaseman Mark Teixeira.Ā  Still the Yankees might regret not protecting this kid, whom they got from the White Sox in the Nick Swisher trade.

The Baltimore Orioles lost, native son, Steven Johnson, son of former Orioles star secondbaseman & announcer Dave Johnson, to the San Francisco Giants.Ā  The 22 year old righthander recently came to the O’s in the George Sherrill trade.Ā  Steven struckout 102 batters in 96″ innings in A+ in 2009.

27 year old 6’5″ lefthander Ben Jukich was drafted by the Cardinals from the Reds, he has good control, and has posted some impressive numbers in winter ball.

This is my coverage of the major league phase of the Rule V Draft.Ā  Some recent players who were selected in this draft, who have gone on to have some pretty good success are Johan Santana, Dan Uggla, & Josh Hamilton, to name a few.

Hot Stove Starting to Heat Up

OmarVizquelThe White Sox fired up the Hot Stove signing SS Omar Vizquel & Andruw Jones.Ā  Vizquel has been the best defensive shortstop of his time and will tutor Sox shortstop Alexei Ramirez.Ā  Omar might be headed for Cooperstown when he finally hangs them up, his numbers stack up with Ozzie Smith, and nobody flashed a better glove at short.Ā  Speaking of excellent fielders, nobody did it better than Andruw Jones, but that was in his day.Ā  Andruw isn’t all that old, but he got old in a hurry, with very old knees.Ā  Jones will not embarrass himself in the outfield with the glove, although he won’t add to the team speed, but he was brought in here for his bat and to provide some outfield depth.

After a career year with the Blue Jays, Marco Scutaro cashed in with Boston, where he’ll be the Red Sox everyday shortstop.Ā  Outfielder Mike Cameron’s new home will be Fenway Park, playing leftfield for the Bosox, which would mean Jason Bay will not be retained.Ā  The Redbirds made a wise investment bringing Brad Penny on board.Ā  Cardinals pitching coach Dave Duncan has to be licking his chops, adding Penny to a staff that already has Adam Wainwright & Chris Carpenter.Ā  The Atlanta Braves bolstered their bullpen by adding lefty Billy Wagner and righthander Takashi Saito.Ā  By signing with the Nationals, Ivan Rodriguez will serve as a backup catcher & mentor to Jesus Flores.

I’m sure there’s alot more to come, I’m especially looking forward to the Rule V Draft, which takes place on the 10th.

Searching for Baseball

At the end of each year, Google (as well as other search engines) does an analysis on what was searched on for that year.  Rising trends, falling trends, trends in all aspects of our society.  Google calls this trend analysis project ā€œZeitgeistā€ and they just released their results for 2009.

Looking at the fastest rising trends in the United States overall, weā€™re not going to find anything baseball related, sorry.  Actually, nothing sports related.  Twitter, Michael Jackson, and Facebook headed up the top ten of general keywords.  Among fastest FALLING was ā€œolympicsā€ but that makes sense as 2008 was naturally a big year for it and it was going to trend downward. 

What IS more relevant to our interests as baseball fans is search trends within the realm of sports.  Fortunately, Google does parse that out for us.  Here are some of the highest searched keywords within United States in sports.

Among baseball teams, there are no surprises.  Thereā€™s a reason for that East Coast bias:

  1. yankees
  2. red sox
  3. phillies
  4. cubs
  5. mets
  6. dodgers
  7. braves
  8. tigers
  9. cubs
  10. twins

Taking a look at all sports stadiums, three baseball parks make the list:

  1. yankee stadium
  2. cowboys stadium
  3. giants stadium
  4. gillette stadium
  5. lucas oil stadium
  6. reliant stadium
  7. dodger stadium
  8. raymond james stadium
  9. busch stadium
  10. shea stadium

The Yankeesā€™ ballpark gets the #1 nod for a couple reasons, Iā€™m sure.  One, their move to a new stadium.  Two, they won the World Series.  And three, well, theyā€™re the Yankees.

Interestingly, no baseball managers made the top 10 list of sports coaches.  Nor did any baseball rivalries.  Both of them were dominated by college, NBA and football.  

1.  red river rivalry (texas vs. oklahoma)

2. michigan ohio state rivalry

3. unc duke rivalry

4. colts patriots rivalry

5. vikings packers rivalry

6. bears packers rivalry

7. georgia florida rivalry

8. giants dodgers rivalry

9. lakers celtics rivalry

10. steelers browns rivalry

  1. coach k (mike krzyzewski – duke university basketball)
  2. mike tomlin (pittsburgh steelers)
  3. josh mcdaniels (denver broncos)
  4. john calipari (university of kentucky basketball)
  5. erik spoelstra (miami heat)
  6. sean miller (university of arizona basketball)
  7. bill belichick (new england patriots)
  8. roy williams (university of north carolina basketball)
  9. phil jackson (los angeles lakers)
  10. tom cable (oakland raiders)

 

Interesting that the Packers get searched on two different rivalries.

Thereā€™s more info at the Google Zeitgeist 2009 web site.

APBA’s disk is shipping!

Itā€™s cold as heck out there but itā€™s a good reason to celebrate baseball.  The APBA Game Company has begun shipping their disks for the 2009 Baseball season. 

While our APBA league (and many others) play the dice and cards version, the disk gives us an idea what the cards will look like.  Those of us in leagues all around the country have been waiting with bated breath to see how our teams will shape up for the coming year. 

Rob Moore has an article celebrating the fact over at The APBA Blog.

‘One-and-done’ Maddog

Joe Posnanski of Sports Illustrated wrote an article on those players who got between 15 and 20 votes in their first of eligibility for Hall of Fame consideration.  ā€œOne-and-doneā€ he calls them.  Good enough to get more than a few votes but not enough to remain on the ballot for subsequent year. 

Itā€™s a list littered with players who were more than fair, in my opinion.  Players like Lou Whitaker, Joe Carter, Ted Simmons (youā€™ll get a lot of arguments from Cardinals fans on this, I know), Rusty Staub, and Al Oliver. 

bill-madlock-77 One player on the list who I saw a lot growing up was thirdbaseman Bill Madlock.  ā€˜Maddogā€™ has some interesting stats in way.  Posnanski makes the point that eleven players have won four or more batting titles.  Of those, ten are in the Hall of Fame.  Bill Madlock is not.  That said, I get the sense Posnanski wasnā€™t necessarily bemoaning Madlockā€™s omission from the Hall.

Madlock had a career .305 batting average to go along with his four batting titles.  While he had that going for him, his stats look good-but-not-great otherwise.  Bill Madlock usually hit the double digits in homeruns but never passed the 20 mark for a season.  His highest was 19 in 1982 for the Pirates.  Not much of a doubles hitter either from the looks of it.  He passed 30 only twice. 

He had decent speed also sometimes hitting double digits in stolen bases.  Only once though did he pass 20 when he stole 32 this time in a split season in 1979 between the Pirates and Giants. 

In essence, Maddog earned his paycheck by winning batting crowns. 

Pay Attention! Stimulant exemptions up in MLB

Thereā€™s an interesting piece over at The Biz of Baseball on a report put out by the MLBPA and MLB.  The report contains among other things, the number of players who were granted Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs) from baseballā€™s drug policy due to their particular conditions.  All told, 115 players were exempted in one way or another from MLBā€™s drug policy.  Of those 115, an overwhelming 108 were being treated for Attention Deficit Disorder. 

Hereā€™s the breakdown:

  • Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD): 108
  • Hypertension: 2
  • Hypogonadism: 2
  • Narcolepsy: 1
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): 1
  • Post-Concussion Disorder: 1

During their mandatory testing in 2009, MLB found 11 instances of Adderall, a stimulant, which is an approved substance used in the treatment of ADD.

MLB players being treated for ADD is nothing new.  A few years back, relief pitcher Scott Eyre was very open about his ADD and treatment for it.  Apparently, he was bouncing all over the place before getting help.  Once treated, he could focus and started to pitch better.  Rumor has it, his bench-mates could tolerate him better, too.

Two things Iā€™m taking away from thisā€¦ One, I never knew the extent of those baseball players who have ADD (or, letā€™s face it, claim to have ADD).  Out of the relatively small number of players that play in the majors, 108 is a pretty high number. 

Two, it seems Adderall is the drug of choice to treat ADD among players.  I know for a fact there is a variety of drugs out there that treat ADD and they donā€™t all work the same.  It just seems odd that among the 3000+ drug tests that the MLB administered that another drug wasnā€™t found.

Finally, in case you are wondering (I was):

Hypogonadism is when the sex glands produce little or no hormones. In men, these glands (gonads) are the testes; in women, they are the ovaries.

I knowā€¦ too much information..

TBS fires Chip Caray

With three years left on his contract, Chip Caray just got canned by TBS.

David Levy, president of Turner Sports, wrote in a memo to Turner employees: ā€œSince the end of this yearā€™s MLB playoffs, weā€™ve had several discussions with Chip Caray regarding 2010 and beyond. Both sides have agreed that now is the right time for Turner Sports and Chip to move ahead on different paths.ā€

  Thatā€™s putting it nicely.

 

Place your bets on who his replacement will be.

Topps, Minor Leagues reach exclusive deal

Three months ago, MLB signed Topps Company to a major contract to produce and market baseball cards with the MLB teamsā€™ logo.  This was an exclusive contract to the detriment to other card making companies such as Upper Deck. 

Now, Topps has scored another coup.  They have reached agreement with Major League Baseball Properties in a multi-year licensing deal to produce certain nationally distributed Minor League cards

The agreement makes Topps the only trading card manufacturer licensed by MLBP to produce nationally-distributed trading cards of top draft picks and prospects within Minor League Baseball, and will give Topps the rights to names and logos of the 160 affiliated Minor League clubs and current Minor League players in uniform on baseball cards and stickers beginning on January 1, 2010. In addition, Topps will now have the exclusive use of the Pro Debut logo. Its first product will be its 2010 Topps Pro Debut Series 1 to be unveiled in early March 2010.

As it was three months ago, this deal is exclusive.