Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

197
Mike Flanagan's death ruled a suicide
EmailPrintComments
271
Associated Press

Mike Flanagan Found Dead In Maryland
Former Cy Young winner Flanagan found dead

BALTIMORE -- Former Cy Young Award winner Mike Flanagan died of a self-inflicted shotgun wound to the head, the Maryland medical examiner ruled Thursday.

A police investigation revealed that the 59-year-old pitcher was upset about financial issues. He left no note.

Flanagan's body was found Wednesday afternoon about 250 feet behind his home. An investigation showed he was home alone when he took his life.

Flanagan won the Cy Young Award in 1979 and helped the Baltimore Orioles win the 1983 World Series. After his retirement, he worked for the Orioles as a coach and in the front office before settling into a job as color commentator on the team's broadcast network.

Flanagan had been scheduled to work this weekend's series against the New York Yankees.

"He was looking forward to broadcasting the Yankees series coming up. He was doing something he loved," said Jim Duquette, who teamed with Flanagan from 2005 to 2007 to attempt to rebuild the Orioles.

According to police, Alex Flanagan last spoke to her husband about 1 a.m. ET Wednesday. She told police he sounded upset, and he promised he would talk to her later.

When Alex Flanagan did not hear from her husband, she called a neighbor to check on him. The neighbor went to the home and called 911 after failing to find him.

Police discovered a body on the property but could not immediately determine the identity because the wounds were so severe.

A medical examiner ruled the death of former Baltimore Orioles pitcher Mike Flanagan, left, a suicide Thursday.
There was a moment of silence at Yankee Stadium on Thursday before New York faced the Oakland Athletics. Flanagan's picture was posted on the video board.

Flanagan was a crafty left-hander who went 167-143 with a 3.90 ERA in 18 seasons with Baltimore and Toronto.

He was 141-116 with Baltimore and is a member of the team's Hall of Fame. Flanagan was also the final Oriole to pitch at Memorial Stadium, Baltimore's home from 1954 to 1991.

During that appearance out of the bullpen, Flanagan struck out Detroit's Dave Bergman and Travis Fryman, much to the delight of the 50,700 fans that filled the old ballpark one last time.

"He was a wonderful individual and a true Oriole who led by example, played the game with class and brought a lot of happiness to Orioles fans over his career. He will be missed tremendously by so many people," said Mike Gibbons, executive director of Sports Legends Museum & the Babe Ruth Birthplace.

The Flanagan family issued this statement Thursday: "We thank you for your support and kind words at this difficult time. Thank you for respecting our privacy as we grieve. A private memorial will be held at a later date."

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

198
YANKEES 22, ATHLETICS 9

Three Grand Slams Erase a Poor Start in Record Fashion

Barton Silverman/The New York Times

Robinson Cano, Russell Martin and Curtis Granderson hit grand slams in their game against the Oakland Athletics.

By DAVE CALDWELL

Published: August 25, 2011


No team in major league history had hit three grand slams in a game before Yankees center fielder Curtis Granderson strode to the plate in the bottom of the eighth inning Thursday, the crowd at Yankee Stadium having been thinned, but the bases loaded one more time.

Granderson had 35 home runs before Thursday, which made him as good a candidate as any to help the Yankees set a record. With the Yankees well on their way to a wild 22-9 victory over Oakland, Granderson really just wanted one good pitch to drive.

He got it.

Granderson smashed a 1-2 pitch from reliever Bruce Billings over the right-field fence for the Yankees’ third grand slam. The blast capped a wet and wild game that lasted 4 hours 31 minutes after the start was delayed nearly an hour and a half by rain. The Yankees scored 20 of their runs in four innings, the fifth through the eighth, and pounded Billings unmercifully. When he exited after throwing an arm-numbing 57 pitches in an inning and a third, he had given up six hits and seven runs. In all, the Yankees pounded out 21 hits against Athletics pitchers, who threw 237 pitches.

It was fitting for a game of such singularity that when Anthony Recker grounded to second for the final out, it was Jorge Posada that fielded the ball. Playing second base for the first time in his major league career, Posada bounced a throw in the dirt that was scooped up by a laughing Nick Swisher to end the game.

“That’s why it’s fun to come to the park — you never know what you’re going to see,” Alex Rodriguez said.

Many Yankees fans missed much of the fun. In addition to the rain, the crowd at Yankee Stadium started thinning once the Athletics chased starter Phil Hughes and took a 7-1 lead in the third inning.

A six-run lead does not seem so formidable, however, when a team gets 17 at-bats with the bases loaded, as the Yankees did.

“For us to come back and do what we did shows the capability of this team,” Nick Swisher said.

Robinson Cano hit a grand slam in the fifth inning off Oakland starter Rich Harden, and Russell Martin hit one in the sixth inning off Fautino De Los Santos. It was the fourth time the Yankees had two grand slams in a game, but the first since Bernie Williams and Paul O’Neill both connected at Toronto on Sept. 14, 1999. Granderson’s 36th home run of the season vaulted these Yankees into an elite category.

“It’s one of those things you’re not going to see again,” Derek Jeter said. “Can’t explain it. It’s just one of those things.”

Not that Granderson, or many of his teammates, were aware of what had been done until the achievement was displayed on a Yankee Stadium scoreboard after the game.

“You have to be pretty fortunate to be able to do that, because you have to get the bases loaded a lot,” Yankees Manager Joe Girardi said.

The Yankees started their comeback in earnest in the fifth inning. Jeter singled up the middle, and Harden walked Granderson before striking out Mark Teixeira. Rodriguez followed with a single to left field. That loaded the bases for Cano, who swung and missed at Harden’s first pitch. The second did not get by him. Cano drilled the ball into the right-field grandstands for his second grand slam this season.

Martin, who homered in the fourth inning to trim the Yankees’ deficit to 7-2, wiped out Oakland’s 7-6 lead by driving a pitch from De Los Santos into the first row in right field in the sixth.

Cano came up with the bases loaded in the seventh inning, driving in a run with a sacrifice fly to center. Martin came to the plate later that inning with the bases loaded, and hit a single to right to drive in his sixth run, a career high.

Martin hit a double off the base of the center-field wall in the eighth for his fifth hit, another career high. Brett Gardner then got a chance with the bases loaded and drove in a run with a single. Jeter struck out, but Granderson hit a pitch from Brian Fuentes for the record grand slam.

“I was surprised it hadn’t been done before,” he said.

Hughes said it would have been nice to have gotten more than eight outs in a shaky 78-pitch performance, but he was fortunate to leave the stadium with a no decision. After three sturdy starts, he gave up six runs and seven hits. Yankees fans seemed happy to see him go.

After Hughes exited, Cliff Pennington pounded Cory Wade’s first pitch into the second deck in right field for his seventh home run of the season, and a 7-1 lead for the Athletics. The crowd voiced its disapproval but the game was a long way from over.

“Makes it a little easier when you score 22 runs,” Hughes said of his no decision. He forced a smile before adding: “It was disappointing. A bump in the road.”

The sun came out in the fourth inning, cheering up the crowd of 46,439, who dropped their umbrellas and shed their ponchos. Soon enough, the Yankees would overcome the Athletics, building a fat lead and smashing records along the way.

There was only one minor detail left. Even before Granderson smacked his home run, Posada had told Girardi that he wanted to play second base for the first time in his major league career.

“It was just hard to say no,” Girardi said.

So out he went for the ninth. Recker hit a grounder to Posada, who fielded it cleanly, then paused before throwing to Swisher at first. Swisher had to twist to snag Posada’s hard throw on one bounce, but a memorable game was over, at long last.

“I threw it too hard,” Posada said. “I got super-excited.”

INSIDE PITCH

The Yankees had never hit two grand slams at home before. ... Alex Rodriguez had two hits after missing the previous two games with a sprained thumb.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

199
Boy hit by foul ball at Citi Field

By Aaron Taube / MLB.com | 08/29/11 11:40 PM ET

NEW YORK --

A young boy's trip to a baseball game took a turn for the worse Monday at Citi Field when he was struck in the face with a foul line drive in the ninth inning of the Mets' win over Florida. The play happened along the first-base line during the first leg of a doubleheader.

The impact of the blow caused the boy to bleed heavily, and he was escorted to an ambulance in a wheelchair, accompanied by his mother. The Mets could not provide personal information about the boy due to medical privacy laws.

"I saw it hit him, he didn't even move," Mets second baseman Justin Turner said. "I heard his mom screaming, and I look back over and blood was squirting out of his forehead onto his mom. It was pretty disturbing.

"It hit him right between the eyes. It was probably one of the worst things I've ever seen on a baseball field."

Florida's Greg Dobbs, who hit the ball, said after the second game that Mets vice president of security Robert Kasdon told him that the boy's nose was not broken, that his orbital bones are fine, and that the boy's sight has not been damaged. In addition, Turner said he saw the boy talking while he was being wheeled through the bottom of the stadium.

After the accident, Turner came over and gave his jersey to the boy's mother, and Dobbs gave the mother his bat.

"You don't want anybody getting hurt on something that you've done," Dobbs said. "It's not like I did it on purpose, but especially a kid. They're defenseless. I've got two kids of my own and I'd never want that to happen to either of my children. It's a tough thing. As a parent, I can imagine what was going through the mom's mind. I got her number so I'm going to call her tonight and see how her son's doing, and take it from there. Make sure he's OK, first and foremost. "

Turner felt especially bad that such an accident occurred during what should have been a fun day at the ballpark for the boy and his mother, and added that he hopes the incident doesn't spoil the boy's fledgling baseball fandom.

"I felt sick to my stomach," Turner said. "Hopefully he's all right and it's nothing too serious and we can get him out there and give him a glove for next time."
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

200
Strasburg slated for season debut Tuesday

The Nationals have already decided how their rotation will look in the next week, and barring any setbacks, it will include right-hander Stephen Strasburg, who is scheduled to start Tuesday against the Dodgers at Nationals Park.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

201
"Frank McCourt has been offered $1.2 billion to sell the Dodgers, The Times has learned. The bid is headed by Los Angeles Marathon founder Bill Burke and funded in part by Chinese investors, according to a letter sent to McCourt on Tuesday. The letter was disclosed to The Times by two people familiar with its content but not authorized to discuss it publicly. The proposed sale price would set a record for a Major League Baseball team. In a brief telephone interview, Burke declined to discuss the bid. "I have no comment at this time," Burke said."
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

202
Tigers rally past White Sox with 2 HRs in 9th
Scoring Summary
CHW DET
1st A Pierzynski hit sacrifice fly to left, A Ramirez scored. 1 0
1st M Cabrera doubled to deep right center, D Young scored. 1 1
4th G Beckham singled to right, D Viciedo scored, A Rios to third, B Morel to second. 2 1
4th J Pierre grounded into fielder's choice to first, A Rios out at home, B Morel to third, G Beckham to second, B Morel scored, G Beckham to third on throwing error by catcher A Avila. 3 1
4th A Ramirez homered to left (400 feet), G Beckham and J Pierre scored. 6 1
5th A De Aza homered to right (370 feet). 7 1
5th B Morel homered to left (390 feet). 8 1
5th A Jackson tripled to deep center, C Guillen scored. 8 2
5th D Young homered to left (393 feet), A Jackson scored. 8 4
7th W Betemit homered to left (420 feet). 8 5
8th J Peralta singled to left, V Martinez scored. 8 6
9th R Raburn homered to left (411 feet), A Jackson scored. 8 8
9th M Cabrera homered to left (412 feet). 8 9
View complete Play-By-Play
Game Information
Stadium Comerica Park, Detroit, MI
Attendance 40,635 (98.5% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time 3:10
Weather 95 degrees, sunny
Wind 10 mph
Umpires Home Plate - Jeff Kellogg, First Base - Eric Cooper, Second Base - Mark Carlson, Third Base - Tim Timmons
Research Notes
The Tigers comeback win could be the 'turning point' that we look back on come October. The Tigers surge over these last few games has been possible in part because of Austin Jackson's tremendous play. Austin Jackson Last 4 Games BA .684 OPS 2.105 XBH 7 RBI 5 SB 2 >>Tigers 3-1 over these 4 games

ESPN Stats & Information

Associated Press

DETROIT -- By the time Miguel Cabrera came to the plate in the ninth inning, the Detroit Tigers had already erased a seven-run deficit.

Cabrera needed only one swing to cap one of baseball's best comebacks of the season.


The big first baseman hit a game-ending solo homer Saturday, lifting the Tigers to a 9-8 win over the Chicago White Sox.

Detroit trailed 8-1 in the fifth inning and 8-6 in the ninth, but Ryan Raburn tied it with a two-run shot off Sergio Santos, and Cabrera won it one out later with his 25th homer of the year.
Detroit extended its lead to 7½ games over third-place Chicago in the AL Central. Second-place Cleveland trails by 6½.

"That was an unbelievable inning," Detroit manager Jim Leyland said. "I'm not sure I've ever been part of a game exactly like that one, with a two-run homer to tie it, and then boom, another one to win it."
It was only the fifth time this season a team rallied from a deficit of at least seven runs to win, according to STATS, LLC.

"I think every loss hurts when you play this game or when you compete," Chicago manager Ozzie Guillen said. "But this one is very painful. This game was huge for us. It was a very important game."
Santos (3-4) hadn't allowed a run in his previous 30 road appearances, dating to last season.

Luis Marte (1-0) earned his first big league win with a perfect top of the ninth.
The game was delayed 36 minutes in the eighth by rain.

Alexei Ramirez's three-run homer highlighted a five-run fourth for the White Sox, and Alejandro De Aza and Brent Morel added back-to-back solo homers in the fifth off Brad Penny.

The Tigers began their comeback with three runs in the fifth on an RBI triple by Austin Jackson and a two-run homer by Delmon Young. Wilson Betemit's solo shot in the seventh made it 8-5.

By the eighth, the weather looked increasingly threatening, with wind blowing debris around and lightning visible in the distance. The teams played through that, thunder and eventually some hard rain before finally leaving the field with one out in the bottom of the inning, moments after fans had been told to retreat to the concourse.

Jhonny Peralta hit an RBI single soon after the game resumed, but Chicago still carried a two-run lead into the ninth.

With one out, Jackson came up with another triple for his fourth hit of the game. Raburn followed with a 424-foot homer down the left-field line.

"He left a slider up, and I was just trying to make sure I got the run in from third," Raburn said. "I hit it good, but hitting one like that was the last thing on my mind, especially against that guy."
After Young struck out, Cabrera ended it with his 420-foot shot to left.

"I was just looking for a good pitch to hit, and I got the bat on his slider," Cabrera said. "The White Sox are one of the teams behind us, so this is big, but it is one game."

Penny allowed eight runs -- four earned -- and 10 hits in five innings.

Chicago's Gavin Floyd allowed four runs and eight hits in five innings. He struck out four.
Chicago's big inning was aided by a couple defensive mishaps by Detroit. Second baseman Carlos Guillen made an error on a grounder, enabling the White Sox to load the bases with one out. Gordon Beckham followed with a tiebreaking RBI single to make it 2-1. Juan Pierre then hit a grounder to first, and Cabrera threw home for the force. Catcher Alex Avila threw back to first, trying for an inning-ending double play, but the ball appeared to hit Pierre and bounced away, allowing another run to score.

Avila was charged with an error, and Leyland came out to argue, apparently contending that Pierre was out of the baseline. The play stood, and Ramirez followed with his 14th homer of the year to make it 6-1.
A.J. Pierzynski opened the scoring with a sacrifice fly in the top of the first, and Cabrera tied it with an RBI double in the bottom half. Cabrera's hit was reviewed by the umpires, but it appeared to have hit the top of the wall in right-center field.

There was no doubt about Cabrera's shot in the ninth.

"We have to come back and try to win another one tomorrow -- but this is a hell of a win," Leyland said.

"That's exciting. I just wish more of our fans could have stayed to see the whole thing."

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

204
Franklin Gutierrez (severe oblique strain) is likely done for year, according to Shannon Drayer of 710 ESPN.
Adam Kennedy pinch-hit for Gutierrez -- finished his at-bat, actually -- in the eighth inning of Sunday's game after Gutierrez hurt himself swinging. If he's done, Gutierrez will finish the year with a terrible .224/.261/.273 slash line and one homer in 318 at-bats. Trayvon Robinson seems most likely to take his centerfield at-bats.

Related: Trayvon Robinson

Source: Shannon Drayer on Twitter Sep 4 - 8:05 PM

Joins Brian Barton and Kevin Kouzmanoff as big to dos about nothing.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

206
Fielder doubts he'll return

September 15 / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

"In an interview with Turner Broadcasting System scheduled to be aired Sunday, first baseman Prince Fielder admitted he doesn't expect to be back with the Brewers in 2012.

SI.com, which along with TBS is owned by Time Warner, reported that Fielder made those comments to Brewers television play-by-play man Brian Anderson, who also does games for TBS. The segment is set to air on the network's "MLB on Deck" at noon Sunday.

Fielder, 27, is a free agent after the season and it has been considered unlikely for some time that the Brewers would be able to keep him. Fielder, who is making a club-record $15.5 million salary this season, turned down the club's preliminary extension offer of about $100 million for five years in the spring of 2010.

Last winter, the Brewers and Fielder decided to play out this season and shoot for the playoffs, then worry about free agency later. But Fielder expressed little hope of returning to Milwaukee.

"I'm signed for this year, but being real about it, it is probably the last year," Fielder told Anderson.

Referring to the slugging tandem he has formed with leftfielder Ryan Braun, Fielder said, "It's been great. Unfortunately, this is probably the last year of the one-two punch. .?.?. Hopefully, we can go out with a blast.""
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

209
If you missed it, the movie is about Billy Beane, the general manager for the Oakland A’s since 1998, and the radical way of choosing players he has to use because the team has no money to spend on payroll.

The reason this is a weird concept for a movie is because his system sucks. He’s never won the American League, the A’s haven’t had a winning record in 5 years, and the goofy old scouts this movie makes fun of choose the AL Rookie of the Year in 1986, 87, and 88, the only time one team has ever won the award three times in a row. It’s also weird because Oakland is far from the lowest payroll in baseball. Out of 30 teams, they’re number 21. Number 29, second to last, is Tampa Bay, who is actually awesome.

So I guess the hook here is that it’s an inspiring story about following your dreams, especially if your dream is to be rich and famous despite not be very good at anything.

Re: Just Baseball: Major League teams OTHER THAN the Tribe

210
Jon Heyman>DAILY SCOOP


More ColumnsEmail Jon Heyman


The current favorites for Fielder


Brewers star first baseman Prince Fielder is generally considered one of the three mega free agents of the 2011-12 offseason, along with Albert Pujols and Jose Reyes. But so far Fielder's impending free agency hasn't garnered quite the publicity as the other two. That's probably because Reyes is in New York (at the moment, anyway), and Pujols is, well, Pujols.
But Fielder's market should still attract a great deal of attention considering he is having an MVP-caliber season (he and Brewers teammate Ryan Braun are probably the co-favorites, though Matt Kemp has his supporters) and is only 27. A year or so ago the Brewers offered Fielder a $20-million-a-year deal, believed to be for six years with at least one opt out that didn't even make Fielder flinch, and he recently said in an interview with TBS that this was "probably'' his last year in Milwaukee. His departure has long been suspected, though aggressive Brewers owner Mark Attanasio should never be counted out and is expected to make one final run at Fielder.
Fielder is currently second in the National League with 34 home runs, third with 112 RBIs (one behind Ryan Howard and Kemp), second in on-base percentage at .410 and fourth in OPS at .960. The one knock on the 275-pound Fielder is that he's heavy. Yet, he is the only player in the majors to play in all his team's games (153 so far), he's played in all but one game over the last three seasons (flu, September 2010), all but eight the last five and all but 13 over six seasons. Spies tell us he isn't real a vegetarian. But whatever he's doing is keeping him on the field and consistently productive.
He looks too rich for Milwaukee, though no one should suspect that Attanasio has given up, or that the Brewers' chances are exactly zero. Here are our current favorites to sign Fielder.
1. Orioles. They've used power-hitting but strikeout-prone Mark Reynolds and Chris Davis at first base since trading Derrek Lee, but it isn't certain how sold they are on either one. They tried for Baltimore native Mark Teixeira three winters ago, and there are whispers Orioles owner Peter Angelos may open his checkbook.
2. Cubs. It's hard to say what they might try considering they don't have a GM yet (and aren't likely to hire one this month). But with Carlos Peña a free agent, they would appear to have an opening. They could also take a poke at the NL Central-rival Brewers by stealing their biggest star and set themselves up for three-fourths of a superb under-30 infield, with also 21-year-old shortstop Starlin Castro and 25-year-old second baseman Darwin Barney.
3. Rangers. They already have one of the best three or four lineups in baseball but could really complete it with the addition of Fielder, who'd have to love the Rangers' ballpark. They are not afraid of free agency, as they showed last year by signing Adrian Beltre.
4. Nationals. They are also obviously unafraid of free agency (see Jayson Werth) and have worked extensively with agent Scott Boras in the past (Stephen Strasburg, Bryce Harper, Anthony Rendon, Danny Espinosa, Alex Cora, Rick Ankiel and Werth). The Lerners, who are thought to be baseball's richest single owners, are acting like they are going to make a push in one of baseball's tougher divisions. Mike Morse can play the outfield, though there remains the question of where Rendon, their top draft pick last June, will play (it would seem that Rendon and Ryan Zimmerman would man first and third base, eventually, though Rendon might be able to play second).
5. Dodgers. It's hard to say whether their bankruptcy will kill their winter. But if Frank McCourt sells some of his many mansions or MLB is fortunate enough to be rid of him, Fielder would be a perfect fit. Actually, the Dodgers might have been competitive this year with just one more big offensive force.
6. Brewers. Some have written them off, but say this for Attanasio: He certainly tries hard. It is believed his first offer, awhile back, was something like $120 million over six years, with the opt out. Fielder is seen as the clear leader on a beloved Brewers team. Attanasio has done a magnificent job maximizing revenues, but of course it would probably still take a stretch to keep Fielder, as he himself suggested.
7. Mariners. They definitely need the offense, and GM Jack Zduriencik and scouting director Tom McNamara absolutely love Fielder after they picked him for the Brewers back when Zduriencik was their scouting director and McNamara the scout. They also have the revenue.
8. Cardinals. Their real effort, of course, is directed at trying to keep their own icon Pujols. They are seen as the favorite to do so, though nothing's certain. If they don't get Pujols, well, they have the spot and the money set aside.
9. Marlins. They're talking about spending big, and Fielder is a Florida product (Melbourne, four hours up the east coast from Miami), so we'll include them here. But they have Gaby Sanchez at first base and other, bigger needs. They aren't exactly used to opening their wallets, either. We'll believe they'll spend when we actually see it.
Around the Majors
• Word is, the Cubs will not hire a new GM this month, leading to speculation within baseball that they are targeting an established name GM first. Those most speculated about include the Rays' Andrew Friedman, the Athletics' Billy Beane, the Yankees' Brian Cashman, the Dodgers' Ned Colletti and the Red Sox' Theo Epstein. Two other possible names of interest could be the Reds' Walt Jocketty and Indians president Mark Shapiro. Ultimately though, the Cubs may have to settle for one of a number of strong up-and-comers as many of the GM stars have contracts for next year, an ownership stake in their current teams or some other sound reason for staying. Friedman is the name most speculated, and while he operates without a contract, most baseball insiders don't see him leaving Rays owner Stu Sternberg, with whom he has a very close relationship.
• The Phillies very much want to bring star shortstop Jimmy Rollins back. Word is, they are likely willing to do a three-year deal, although Rollins, who's a key in the clubhouse, is expected to seek a four- or five-year deal. The Phillies have shown a willingness to overpay a tad for the players they love, and it's worked out for them. So the annual salary for Rollins might be a bit higher than one might expect.
• The Red Sox are thought to have interest in Phillies reliever Ryan Madson.
• Baseball insiders suggest White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf may "dig in his heels'' and force Ozzie Guillen to stay after Guillen's continuing public blathering about how it might be best for him to be fired and other such musings. But really, it might be best for all concerned to simply trade Guillen to the Marlins, as was briefly discussed a year ago. Those talks ended when the White Sox requested Logan Morrison. But as fortune would have it, Morrison is not exactly beloved these days by the Marlins. Morrison, who was already seen by Marlins management as a bit too opinionated, now has filed a grievance against the team for demoting him at a time he says he didn't deserve it based on his play.
• The Marlins are a tough organization in general. They bumped upstairs two highly successful longtime scouts, Stan Meek and Jim Fleming, after their tough season.
• Insiders insist Attanasio will stay with the Brewers and won't become a candidate to buy the Dodgers once McCourt finally clears out.
• The Royals will try to acquire two viable starting pitchers in the offseason. They are ultra-talented in terms of positional prospects. Not so much from a pitching standpoint.
• The Red Sox' Adrian Gonzalez won't say how hurt his right shoulder is, which only puts him in line with the organizational policy.
• The Twins will try to keep free agent Michael Cuddyer.
• Ryan Dempster told MLB.com he hasn't thought much about his $14 million player option. Of course not. What's to think about? Of course, he has to pick that up. The only chance he doesn't would be if the Cubs work out a two-year arrangement for less per year, a la Chris Carpenter's $21 million, two-year deal with the Cardinals.
• Carlos Beltran opined that the Giants could use Jose Reyes, which is funny because there's certainly no probability Beltran himself will be back. Meanwhile, outgoing Giants CEO Bill Neukom suggested Beltran will be seeking five or six years in free agency. That seems highly doubtful, even as a request. Three to four seems much more like it. Neukom, who had a lot to say on his way out, also said they didn't sign CC Sabathia because they were worried Sabathia might not be worth the money in the last years of a long deal. That's as opposed to Barry Zito and Aaron Rowand, who weren't worth the money from the very beginning. Neukom technically was not in charge for those signings. But Sabathia didn't deserve that opinion being said aloud by Neukom, either.
• Buck Showalter is said to have tremendous pull with Peter Angelos now. John Hart would seem to be a candidate for the hardest job in baseball, that of GM on Angelos' Orioles.
• From here, Justin Verlander has just about locked up the AL MVP award.
• Mariano Rivera is the greatest closer ever, no matter how many saves he has.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/w ... z1YVtawd70