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Rays nab Pat Burrell

Now on deck for the Rays: Pat Burrell - flickr (Scott Ableman)

*hat tip MLB Trade Rumors, from Ken Rosenthal*


"According to Ken Rosenthal, the Rays are close to signing Pat Burrell to a two-year, $16MM deal. It'd be a solid move, as the Rays can increase his value by not using him in the field. The '08 Rays struggled against lefties (.726 OPS) and Burrell crushes them (.952 OPS in '08)."

This is a strong move for the Rays for whom Burrell and his 2.8 win value in 2008 will replace the sub 1.0 Cliff Floyd as the Rays primary DH. As MLB Trade Rumors notes, Burrell's fielding woes will be mitigated and he'll help the Rays woeful performance against left handed pitching. Very underrated, but very strong move by the Rays.

The A.L. East keeps getting tougher.

Read more  |  9 Comments  |  Tags: Boston Red Sox, MLB, Pat Burrell, Tampa Bay Rays

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Five things necessary for a successful 2009

Happy 2009? Will need the return of "Big Papi" - flickr (BostonWolverine)

Now that we've officially put 2008 to rest, I thought it might be fun to roll the calendar forward 365 days to January 1st, 2010 and take a "look back" at 2009 and specifically five things that would need to have happened for the Red Sox to achieve it's goals of another championship.

It's important to note that these aren't the only five things, nor are they necessarily the most important. But it is fair to say that if these things don't happen, 2009 won't meet the organization's lofty goals.

Read more  |  10 Comments  |  Tags: Boston Red Sox, David Ortiz, Dustin Pedroia, Jason Bay, Josh Beckett, Kevin Youkilis, Manny Ramirez, MLB, New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays

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MLB Top 10: Baseball's Best Stories in 2008

Evan Longoria - Keith Allison/Flickr.com

We're just a few days away from ringing in 2009, so it's time to look back on the year that was 2008.  Major League Baseball provides us with tons of memories every season, but only so many can make it into a Top 10 list -- here are the Top 10 moments from this past year in Major League Baseball.  Feel free to share your own in the comments section.10. This is the game that never ends...The final All-Star Game played at Yankee Stadium lasted nearly 5 hours (4 hours, 50 minutes), and would have lasted longer if Justin Morneau wasn't able to beat Corey Hart's throw home on a sac fly by Michael Young.  The game tied the record for innings played in the Midsummer Classic, matching the 15 innings played in the 1967 affair.  With so many innings being played, a number of records fell -- the 2008...

Read more  |  Discuss  |  Tags: Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, Milwaukee Brewers, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies, Tampa Bay Rays, Texas Rangers

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The Season of Hope

That phrase is used often to refer to Christmas, but among baseball fans it's probably just as often a reference to Spring. Yes I know that Winter is not even a week old, so the meteorologist tells us. But for a baseball fan, Winter is deep into the second month and Spring only some seven weeks away.For Jays fans, and those who comment on the team professionally, hope seems to be in short supply. Buster Olney and Kieth Law at ESPN have already offered up the predictable refrain (already familiar in the Toronto media) that the Jays face a virtually unclimbable mountain and might as well rebuild. Law doesn't disrespect the team which exists, but nevertheless finds the competition too intimidating. Once you get outside the professional writers and read blog comments and BBS posts, it seems like 98% of Jays fans with internet access are out on the ledge...

Read more  |  5 Comments  |  Tags: Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, Toronto Blue Jays

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Joe Maddon on Teixeira

Joe Maddon said today he is not worried about the Yankees signing Teix because, he says, pitching wins games and he's got great pitching. Listen to him Theo!!! Our battered 2008 lineup hit better than our equally battered rotation and Pen managed to pitch. Listen to him Theo? Act soon before the window is closed. Sign the best available ACE-caliber starting pitcher. That would be Ben Sheets. Sign the best available relief pitcher. That would be Brian Fuentes. The Sox used 23 pitchers in 2008: Keep Buchholz and Bowden in AAA until they are fully ready. And Keep Masterson in the Pen, with Fuentes, RRammo and the old crew, to make it lights out. And while you are at it, to make up for losing Teix's output, might as well rebuild the Bench for power, and get catchers with Big Bats, like Shoppach and Kottaras....

Read more  |  7 Comments  |  Tags: Fuentes, Rays, Red Sox, Salty, Sheets, Shoppach, Teixeira, Yankees

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Roar of the Tigers reacts in a most inevitable fashion to the Matt Joyce trade

I really had more or less talked myself into being OK with the Matt Joyce/Edwin Jackson trade. I wasn't overjoyed with it or anything, but I could see the rationale and I was, I think, fairly level-headed about it when I wrote the post about it. After I had that up, though, I went to look at what everyone else thought about the move, and realized WOE! SADNESS! ANGUISH! DISTRESS! TEARS BOTH SUPPRESSED AND RELEASED!! And I think we all know how we deal with stuff like that around here. illustration by Samara Pearlstein Click for slightly bigger, as per usual. SIGH. Have fun playing in a giant beret, Mr. Joyce. Detroit, and perhaps more importantly its kittens, will miss you....

Read more  |  7 Comments  |  Tags: Detroit Tigers, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays

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The Trades That We Could Have Done Without

The 2008 MLB Winter Meetings have wrapped up and while there was some action, many of the headlines were either predictable or were not the ones everyone was looking for. This entry will review three trades that went down in a little over 24 hours in Las Vegas-three moves which were largely unheard of prior to being finalized.The first move occurred late Tuesday evening, as the Cincinnati Reds shipped Ryan Freel and two prospects to the Baltimore Orioles for Ramon Hernandez. This isn't a move that I particularly agree with for the Reds and one I feel as though they sold themselves short on. While the return is fine, it is the direction of the return that I question.First, Ramon Hernandez has had some success as a Major League catcher, he is only two years removes from posting a park adjusted .367 weighted on base average(wOBA*). In fact, 2006 marked...

Read more  |  2 Comments  |  Tags: Baltimore Orioles, Cincinnati Reds, Detroit Tigers, Edwin Jackson, Jason Jaramillo, Matt Joyce, MLB, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, Ramon Hernandez, Ronny Paulino, Ryan Freel, Tampa Bay Rays, The Hot Stove League, The OLIB, Trade Reflection

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Wooden Indian

Kerry Wood spent Wednesday in Cleveland for a physical to finalise a likely two-year, $20 million deal to become the Indians' new closer, according to Sports Illustrated. The injury-plagued Wood just so happens to live in Arizona, home of the...

Read more  |  Discuss  |  Tags: Andy Pettitte, Boston Red Sox, Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Edwin Jackson, Jason Varitek, Kerry Wood, Matt Joyce, New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays

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MLB Top 10: Baseball's Best Stories in 2008

Evan Longoria - Keith Allison/Flickr.com

We're just a few days away from ringing in 2009, so it's time to look back on the year that was 2008.  Major League Baseball provides us with tons of memories every season, but only so many can make it into a Top 10 list -- here are the Top 10 moments from this past year in Major League Baseball.  Feel free to share your own in the comments section.10. This is the game that never ends...The final All-Star Game played at Yankee Stadium lasted nearly 5 hours (4 hours, 50 minutes), and would have lasted longer if Justin Morneau wasn't able to beat Corey Hart's throw home on a sac fly by Michael Young.  The game tied the record for innings played in the Midsummer Classic, matching the 15 innings played in the 1967 affair.  With so many innings being played, a number of records fell -- the 2008...Read more

Read more  |  Discuss  |  Tags: Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, Milwaukee Brewers, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies, Tampa Bay Rays, Texas Rangers

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Being the GM: 2009 Tampa Bay Rays

Andre Ethier - Malingering's mother

The Tampa Bay Rays are coming off their most successful season in their short history of the game. They won the American League East and the American League, period. They've got a young, vibrant team ready to do some serious damage over the next five-plus years. What do they have in store for us this off-season?Read more

Read more  |  24 Comments  |  Tags: MLB, Tampa Bay Rays

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Friday's Hot Stove Dishes - November 7, 2008

Check MVN Outsider ever Friday for the ten hottest rumors during the Hot Stove League and a recap of all of the latest moves in Major League Baseball: Peavy's days numbered in San Diego.  Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves highlight possible destinations. As San Diego Padres GM has stated, the Jake Peavy "train has kind of left the station."  Since the Peavy rumors started, he has informed the Padres that he will lift his no-trade clause for seven teams -- the Atlanta Braves, Chicago Cubs, Houston Astros, Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees.  Of that group, the Braves and Cubs have emerged as the front-runners.  The Braves seem to be dangling Yunel Escobar and young pitching but not prospect Tommy Hanson who the Padres have been rumored to be interested in.  Also, the talk of Escobar being part of the deal has Peavy concerned about Atlanta's...Read more

Read more  |  Discuss  |  Tags: Andy Sonnanstine, Atlanta Braves, Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, Coco Crisp, Colorado Rockies, Edwin Jackson, Hot Stove, Jake Peavy, Jason Varitek, Junichi Tazawa, Matt Holliday, MLB, New York Mets, Tampa Bay Rays, Texas Rangers

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MVN Awards: Best Relievers - Joey Devine, Carlos Marmol

Outside the handful of high-profile closers in the league, being a reliever is often a less-than-glamorous job. Set-up men rank somewhere near the bottom of the league on pay scale -- and name recognition. When was the last time you saw a fan wearing the jersey of a middle reliever? All too often, non-closing relievers are only remembered for making a single key mistake.It's time to change that, and recognize the most outstanding relievers in the game who weren't restricted to the ninth inning.- -- --- -- ---In the National League, the Cubs were all over the newspapers, magazines, TV... basically any and all media was fixated on the North Side crew and their 100-year championship drought.A key member of that club was a wild-armed Dominican who nearly pitched himself out of a job in his rookie season of 2006, only to have a breakout year in 2007. This season,...Read more

Read more  |  Discuss  |  Tags: Carlos Marmol, Chicago Cubs, Grant Balfour, Joey Devine, MLB, Oakland Athletics, Tampa Bay Rays

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MVN Awards: AL Manager of the Year - Joe Maddon

var iamInit = function() {try{initIamServingHandler(320,469,239216,"http://cdn.pis.picapp.com/IamProd/Resources/Css/css2.css")}catch(ex){}}() Before he landed in Tampa Bay in 2006, Joe Maddon tried in vain to become a manager of a Major League team.  He was passed over by the Angels in 1996 and 1999.  The Red Sox nearly hired Maddon in 2003 but went with Terry Francona instead.  The Diamondbacks and Mariners decided against hiring him in 2004 after he interviewed with them.  Heck, even the Rays almost passed on the man behind one of the best worst-to-first stories in baseball history.  Tampa Bay interviewed nine other candidates before settling on Maddon.  Just think, if the Angels were knocked out a round earlier, the Rays may have went with Joe Girardi.  Girardi impressed in his interview with Tampa Bay but joined the Florida Marlins while the Rays waited for the Angels to be eliminated so they could interview Maddon for their open managerial spot. It took...Read more

Read more  |  2 Comments  |  Tags: Joe Maddon, Manager, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays

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Gillick deservedly goes out a winner

Joe Blanton (phillymads63/Flickr.com)

It was 1963 when Pat Gillick began what would blossom into an illustrious and lengthy front office career, leaving his pitching days behind for a job as a farm director for the Houston Astros.  Through a decade and a half of hard work, split between the Astros, Yankees, and Blue Jays organizations, Gillick ventured up the executive ranks, landing his first general managerial gig in Toronto in 1978.  And after three decades of wearing that prestigious hat for several different teams, Gillick is deservedly going out a winner.  Gillick's tenure as the general manager of the Blue Jays spanned 17 years.  He took the reins of a team that finished an abhorrent 54-107 the previous year and, eight years later, brought an AL East division title to Toronto.  From 1985 through the end of his stay in 1994, Gillick built five division winners, and two World Championship teams -- the...Read more

Read more  |  2 Comments  |  Tags: Brad Lidge, Joe Blanton, MLB, Pat Gillick, Philadelphia Phillies, Tampa Bay Rays, World Series

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Tonight's finish of game 5 a chess match

wallyg/flickr.comGame 5 of the 2008 World Series already isn't your typical baseball game. And its finish is going to be unlike anything we've ever seen.Will be interesting to watch? Yes. Is it just going to feel weird? Yes -- in a good way, and bad.Granted, it was tough to watch the World Series being played in mud on Monday. That should have just never happened. It will be even tougher to see a game decided in basically three innings. I know it's a continuation of the game, but with the score tied, it will just seem like they are starting over and only playing a 21-out game.It'll be hard to adjust -- at first. But in the end, I think I'm going to like tonight's matchup.The two managers are going to find themselves in a position where each has to manage instantly. First, do you use a starter or a...Read more

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Game 5 a must-win for both sides

After steamrolling past the Red Sox on the bat of B.J. Upton and the arm of Matt Garza, the Rays seemed poised to complete their remarkable run from worst to first.  But the Phillies, viewed by most -- yours truly, included -- as the underdog in the 2008 World Series, have proven much more formidable than expected.  Entering Monday night's Game 5 at Citizens Bank Park, it's the Phillies who own a 3-1 series lead over the Rays.  The 2-3-4 tandem of B.J. Upton, Carlos Pena, and Evan Longoria that pummeled everything thrown its way during the ALCS has been thoroughly contained by the Phillies' pitching staff, managing a paltry four hits -- all of them by Upton and all of them singles -- in 45 at-bats while whiffing a whopping 19 times.  Meanwhile, Philadelphia's big boppers, Chase Utley and Ryan Howard, have led their team's charge with five combined...Read more

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