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<description><![CDATA[...posting erratically since 2004]]></description>
<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/</link>













<title><![CDATA[Coztanza's Commentary]]></title>

<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2008 21:59:58 GMT
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<description>*Norv Turner made an unbelievably bizarre decision in sticking with Phillip Rivers throughout in the AFC Championship Game. The reason it was so strange is that he had no reservations in pulling LaDainian Tomlinson when it was evident that he was too hurt to make a positive contribution. Turner recognized his team's great depth at running back with Michael Turner and Darren Sproles. He also had a quarterback named Billy Volek waiting on the bench. Volek has a proven track record in the NFL beyond leading a fourth quarter comeback after coming off the bench cold. Three years ago, he started eight games for the Titans and completed 61.1% of his passes while posting an 87.1 quarterback rating. The Patriots also have significantly less film on him than they do on Rivers, who had played against New England twice in the past two years. If San Diego did not have a quality backup, it would have made sense to stick with an injured Rivers. Since they had Volek, they should have gone to him. It was obvious from Rivers' first pass that he was having trouble on his knee. He was not getting anything on his passes.&amp;nbsp; Every time New England sent a blitz, he had to hobble around and had to make a rushed throw with already sloppy mechanics. One of his interceptions came as a result of him failing to compensate for his gimpy knee and seriously underthrowing a ball. San Diego failed to come away with a touchdown in three redzone trips. The Pats rushed three and dropped everybody else back into coverage. This was because they knew that Rivers could not fit anything into a tight window with his receivers covered. Norv Turner did a lot to resurrect his reputation this season, but he failed to give his team the best chance to win the AFC Championship. Rivers should be commended for gutting out that game, but the coaching staff needed to intervene. &lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*Throughout the season, many pundits noted New England's lack of a running game as a potential weakness. It was really all part of Bill Belichick's master plan. A year ago, the Pats rode Lawrence Maroney too hard during the regular season, and he wore down. He was ineffective against the Colts and the Chargers in the Playoffs. This year Belichick knew that he had the talent to rely exclusively on the pass in the early going with good weather. He made sure to keep Maroney fresh almost to an extreme for bad New England weather in January. It sure paid dividends in the AFC Playoffs as Maroney had a pair of 100 yard games.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*In the NFC we saw bad Brett Favre rear his ugly head. Any observer could sense that something bad was about to occur. Green Bay could not run the ball, and the Giants were having great success moving it against the Packers defense. These conditions were tailor made for Favre to try and do too much. We saw this recklessness in recent years with overmatched Green Bay teams. Favre decides that he has to be the hero, and his fearless gunslinger mentality shines through. He tries to make huge plays regardless of the risk. This started in the second half, when he started throwing into double and triple teams.&amp;nbsp; It did not hurt the team then, but it ended Green Bay's season with the overtime in the interception. This was reminiscient of Jake Plummer two years ago. Plummer avoided the crippling mistakes throughout the year, only to revert to form in the Conference Championship Game.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*The bitterness of this loss transcends the game itself for the Packers. Normally when a team that young wins 13 games, it is a stepping stone year, and the window of opportunity will remain open for years to come. Green Bay is a unique situation. This might have been the first and last chance this group will have to go all the way. So much of the success was tied to Favre turning back the clock. He was an elite quarterback with terrific playmaking and decision-making abilities this season. If he retires, there is no indication that Aaron Rodgers can play at the same franchise quarterback level, Even if Favre does return, there is no proof that this was just an out of context year for a quarterback who appeared to be on the decline. The Packers may never again get a magical quarterbacking run like they got this year, and that was part of their run of success.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*If this was the end for Favre, there should be no shame in the way it ended. People remember the glory with which John Elway went out. That certainly would be storybook, but many of the best do not get to end their careers on such a high note. Steve Young, Troy Aikman, and Jim Kelly could not even leave the field for the last time under their own power. Dan Marino's last game was a humiliating 55 point loss in the Playoffs. Favre is in good company if he decides to hang it up.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*People are not giving Lawrence Tynes enough credit for the kick he made in overtime.&amp;nbsp; Tynes appeared destined to go down with Scott Norwood, Lin Elliot, and Doug Brien in Playoff kicking infamy after missing a pair of fourth quarter kicks that could have sent the Giants to the Super Bowl. Nailing any 47 yard kick is extremely difficult. Now add in bone-chilling temperatures that made the ball as hard as a rock and the pressure of an NFC Championship on the line. Tynes also had to deal with what had to be shattered confidence. People will focus on the two misses, but Tynes' successful kick was one of the greatest in NFL history. It belongs right up there with Adam Vinateri in the snow against Oakland.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;*Football fans should feel cheated by these Playoffs. During the regular season, there were four superteams. They were New England, Indianapolis, Dallas, and Green Bay. This appeared to set up an epic Championship Weekend and Super Bowl. Now none of these four will meet in the Playoffs. Yes, the Giants and Patriots played a classic in their first meeting, but there has been something missing in the postseason. It would have been much more fitting for the Patriots to try and finish their historic run by vanquishing their bitter rival in the AFC Championship Game and then either taking down the NFC's best team, Dallas, for a second time or defeating a legend in Brett Favre. That scenario would have made for a season finish for the ages. The Playoffs are at their best when great teams meet. The Chargers and Giants are nice teams, but a team going up against history should have to go through the ultimate tests to prove themselves as worthy champions.&lt;br/&gt;</description>
<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/entries/2008/01/21/championship-sunday-scattered-thoughts/1220</link>
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<title><![CDATA[Championship Sunday Scattered Thoughts]]></title>

<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2008 17:37:34 GMT
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There is no doubt that the BCS is a ridiculous system. This
year only further proves that reality. Its supporters claim that it makes the
regular season significant. The season is the playoff, which makes every game
matter they say. That must be why the two teams that will play in New Orleans on January 7
lost at home in November. It must be why a two loss LSU team will play for the
title, which undefeated Hawaii
will not. They say that games like Ohio
State against Michigan will lose meaning if both teams
have a guaranteed playoff spot. They ignore the intensity of games like North Carolina against
Duke in college basketball. Others point to the tradition of the bowl system,
which would be lost. Some argue that the bowls are good because thirty-two
teams can end the postseason with a win, while a playoff would have only one
team happy as if this was first grade tee ball and not major college football.
Others argue a playoff would make the season too long, ignoring the fact that
every other division of college football aside from 1-A has a playoff system
and that the NCAA just sanctioned an additional game for Division 1-A teams.
Still, others claim that the last team left out of a playoff would complain
just as much as the third team in the BCS does. This assumes that Clemson would
have as much of a gripe about not being able to play for the National
Championship as undefeateds Auburn, Utah, and Boise
 State did in 2004.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There really are no good arguments for the BCS. There is no
way to prove that LSU is any better than USC, Oklahoma,
or West Virginia.
I have devised a system, which addresses most of the bogus concerns of BCS
backers and allows teams to decide a National Champion on the field.





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;Every conference will
have 12 teams spilt into 2 divisions. Every team must be part of a conference.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Part of the inequality of the BCS is that some teams have to
win a conference championship game, an extra chance for top teams to be upset,
while others do not. Notre Dame can schedule whoever it wants for the entire
season. This proposal brings more uniformity to the system. If getting Notre
Dame into a conference requires letting it keep a separate television deal with
NBC and not forcing it to split gained revenue with other conference schools,
that is fine. The goal here is to come up with a good system. Economics are
secondary. Notre Dame would enter the Big Ten, the most natural twelfth team
for that conference in terms of academics, football prestige, and built in
rivalries. Storied programs like Army and Navy would make natural fits for the
Big East. Up and coming Central Florida would give the Big East a natural rival
for South Florida and further cement the conference’s foothold in the fertile
recruiting ground of Florida. Division 1-AA power UMass would help get the
conference back into the Boston market it lost
when Boston College defected to the Big East. It
would also create a great rivalry game for the two schools. Secondary options
include Marshall as a rival for West Virginia and returning Temple to the Big East. The Pac 10 could take
a pair of solid rival Mountain West programs, BYU and Utah. Backup plans might be emerging
programs like Boise State and Hawaii.
The ACC, SEC, and Big XII could hold their status quo. Non BCS conferences
could find 1-AA powers in the same geographic regions to fill their voids. The
goal is to give all conferences twelve teams with as smallest amount of
upheaval possible.



&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;Reduce the number of
regular season games to 10.



&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This helps eliminate any concern of a playoff making the
season too long. It also clears out more room in December to conduct the
playoff.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Every team will have
5 conference games within its division and 5 nonconference games to schedule at
its own discretion. 





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This serves a number of purposes. First of all, it gives a uniform
schedule to everybody competing for a conference title. In the new
superconferences, some teams avoid powerhouses in a given year, like this
year’s Kansas team playing neither Oklahoma nor Texas,
while other Big XII North members got both. That gave the Jayhawks an unfair
edge in their fight for a conference title, which would not be a problem under
this system. It also decreases the likelihood of rematches in conference title
games, which are usually unfair to the winner of the first matchup since it is
tough to beat a good team twice in one year. Teams now will also have ample
opportunities to improve their strength of schedule through nonconference play.
When Florida beat Michigan out for a spot in the BCS
Championship Game last season, many Wolverines fans complained that their team
had been unfairly punished because it had a weaker schedule from playing in a
weaker conference. They complained that Michigan
had no control over it. Now the Michigans
of the world have ample opportunities to compensate through a vigorous nonconference
schedule. Since one loss would not be the end of the world with a playoff, more
bigtime programs would be willing to schedule series like Texas
and Ohio State did a few years ago. Finally, the
advent of big conferences has cost college football some of its best rivalries,
like Penn State-Pitt and Miami-Florida. This system would give enough
nonconference games to restore them. This might eliminate interdivisional
rivalries within conferences like Tennessee-Alabama and Auburn-Georgia, but those
teams could easily continue their rivalries by scheduling nonconference games
against each other.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;The 11 conference
championship games will be contested over Thanksgiving weekend. The winners
advance automatically to the playoff.&lt;/b&gt;





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Pro football currently dominates the Thanksgiving holiday,
but conference title games would put the college game back into consciousness
as it was when Nebraska and Oklahoma met. College football could own
Thanksgiving night by kicking off Championship Weekend with the Big Ten
Championship Game every year. The title games would continue through Friday and
Saturday with a spot in the playoff on the line. Every champion from the Sun
Belt to the SEC gets into the field. Hawaii
might never win the National Championship, but they have passed every test in
front of them this year. They at least deserve the chance to compete. Now they
get that shot to prove they can play with the big boys. &lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;A selection committee
of experts decides the ten best teams in the country that failed to win their
conference. They seed those teams 1 through 10. Those teams play the next
weekend 1 vs. 10, 2 vs. 9, 3 vs. 8, 4 vs. 7, and 5 vs. 6 at the home field of
the higher seed. Winners advance into the main playoff field.

&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This is the determination of the five at large spots for the sixteen team
playoff. It puts an emphasis on winning the conference. Otherwise, teams have
to play an extra week to make the field, while the champions get to rest. It
also eliminates any advantage for highly ranked teams that did not play in a
conference title game. For example, Kansas
did not win the Big XII North. The Jayhawks essentially would have received a
bye the week before the playoffs for not winning their division, while the Oklahoma team that won
the conference would have to immediately bounce back after a game against the
top ranked team in the country.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;A selection committee
of experts breaks the 16 remaining teams into two brackets and seeds them 1
through 8. The teams play three rounds at the home of the higher seeded team.The
third round games take place on Christmas Day.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;The reason for the selection committee both in choosing the
at large bids and in seeding the field is simple. The BCS has proven time and
again that it cannot accurately rank the teams. The media and coaches do not
have time to consider all factors. They have deadlines and other jobs to
execute. They also have biases. A committee can sequester itself over a number
of days and take the time to look at all factors when rating teams. It works in
basketball. The reason that the higher seeded team gets to play at home is simple.
It puts emphasis on the regular season. Take the Ohio State-Michigan game last
season as an example. Both teams were undefeated. The winner got a spot in the
BCS Championship Game. Some claimed that a game would lose all meaning if there
was a playoff. While the intensity of college basketball rivalries where the
same conditions apply refutes that claim, this system would ensure the game
would have mattered regardless. Neither team would have been playing for its
life, but they would have played for a spot in the Big Ten Championship Game
and the right to avoid the extra first round game for at larges. In addition,
the game would have meant the difference between playing a third round game at
home and traveling to Florida.
The National Semifinals would take place on Christmas Day, which would give
college football a new holiday.





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Between Christmas and
New Year’s Day, the minor bowls will take place, comprised of teams that missed
the playoffs and eliminated teams.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There is no reason for fans and players for 6-6 teams cannot
travel to exotic locations to see their teams play exhibition games. Just
because there is a playoff, the bowl system can be preserved. 





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;b&gt;On New Year’s Day,
the five BCS games take place. In lieu of the BCS Championship Game, the Cotton
Bowl would be part of the rotation. The championship game rotates every year.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;New Year’s Day used to be the holiest of days for college
football fans. Since the National Semifinals take place on Christmas, the
National Championship can be decided on the first day of the new year. There is
no way to play two BCS games at the same place on the same day so a new fifth
bowl is needed. The Cotton Bowl has more tradition than any second tier bowl.
It used to be considered a premier event. It deserves to be back in the mix
with the Rose, Sugar, Orange,
and Fiesta. The two National Semifinal winners will play inthe finale at
night. The other BCS slots can be determined among the playoff losers. The six
BCS conference champions receive automatic BCS bowl invites. So does the top
champion from a non BCS conference and the top three at large teams in the BCS
standings. The Rose Bowl would pit the Big Ten and Pac 10 champions if
possible. The Sugar Bowl would get the SEC winner. The Big XII champ would go
to the Orange Bowl if it came from the old Big 8 or the Cotton Bowl if it came
from the old SWC, the old traditional tie ins. 





&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There would be no conference tie ins in minor bowls. The
selection committee would rank all of the bowl eligible non BCS teams. All
conference champions would be guaranteed a bowl. The top two teams would play
in a bowl, as would three and four, five and six, etc. The established bowls,
Citrus, Gator, Outback, Peach, Holiday,and Sun would alternate first, second, third,
fourth, and fifth best non BCS games from year to year. The other bowls would
alternate among sixth, seventh, eighth, etc. from year to year. This provides
better matchups across the board in bowl season. It also eliminates the restriction
conference tie ins place on where teams can travel. Now every team can go to
any bowl game.&amp;nbsp;

&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This system answers all concerns of BCS apologists. It
shortens the season for most teams. It maintains the bowl system. It makes the
regular season matter as well. It also brings back numerous dormant rivalries
through more flexible scheduling and brings the Cotton Bowl back to prominence.
In the next post, I will provide the example of how this season would have
played out under such an arrangement. 



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<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/entries/2007/12/11/how-to-reform-college-football/1215</link>
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<title><![CDATA[How to Reform College Football]]></title>

<pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2007 00:05:38 GMT
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<description>When last I wrote here, I was moving on to write for &lt;a href="http://thesportsoverdose.com"&gt;h&lt;a target="_top" href="http://thesportsoverdose.com"&gt;ttp://thesportsoverdose.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/a&gt;. It is with a great deal of pleasure that I announce this blog is back. There are no juicy stories. I still get along great with the cowriters of that site. There was no falling out. It was just that nobody could commit the time necessary to build that site into what we wanted. As a result, this will once again be the home for my musings on sports.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href="http://thesportsoverdose.com"&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</description>
<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/entries/2007/12/11/back-in-business/1214</link>
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<title><![CDATA[Back in Business]]></title>

<pubDate>Tue, 11 Dec 2007 22:55:09 GMT
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<description>This blog is now on hiatus as I have joined the writing staff at &lt;a href="http://thesportsoverdose.com"&gt;thesportsoverdose.com&lt;/a&gt;. Coztanza's Commentary may return one day as either a site discussing sports or other areas of life and the world. I would like to thank everybody who took the time to read this site over the past few years and hope you will continue to read my work at The Sports Overdose.&lt;br/&gt;</description>
<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/entries/2007/09/03/end-of-an-act/1111</link>
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<title><![CDATA[End of an Act]]></title>

<pubDate>Mon, 03 Sep 2007 16:59:40 GMT
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<description>Today marks this blog's third anniversary. The third year was kind of a lowlight. I really lost my focus writing here, and ridiculously infrequent updates became the norm. I will try and get back on track this year. I would like to thank anybody who has offered support and read this thing through the rough times. Year three was the worst. I hope to make year four the best.&lt;br/&gt;</description>
<link>http://journals.aol.com/georgecoztanza/CoztanzasCommentary/entries/2007/05/05/third-anniversary/987</link>
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<title><![CDATA[Third Anniversary]]></title>

<pubDate>Sun, 06 May 2007 01:16:43 GMT
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&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="1" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Oakland Athletics&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Like their counterparts in the AL
Central, many prognosticators think that the A’s have taken too much of a hit
in the offseason to repeat as division champion. Oakland saw its best pitcher, Barry Zito, and
best hitter, Frank Thomas, leave via free agency. However, the team should be
able to replace the production that both offered and stay in the postseason
mix.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Thomas posted MVP stats, but Oakland went a long way
towards replacing him by signing Mike Piazza. Piazza proved last season in San Diego that he can
still rake. He is still a middle of the order threat. His stats were skewed by
the extreme pitchers’ park he called home. Serving as DH will only make him
more productive as it will save him from the wear and tear of catching. He should
come from off the radar like Thomas did last season to become Oakland’s best hitter. This is going to be
his best season since 2002. While he will be extremely productive, asking Mike
to do what Thomas did in 2006 would be a lot. However, Oakland is going to pick up production in
other spots.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Eric Chavez had a horrid 2006 at
the plate as he was hampered by nagging injuries. Given an offseason to heal,
Chavez should be closer to the run producer he was in seasons past than to the
offensive liability he was last year. Mark Ellis finished 2006 strongly,
indicating his horrid start a season ago was a fluke. Nick Swisher, coming off
a breakthrough 2006, has the tools to take his game to the next level this year
and become an elite power threat. Bobby Crosby’s last two seasons have been
plagued by injuries, but the ailments he has suffered are mostly freak things,
not perennial. He should finally put together a healthy season and be something
close to the player he was in 2004. Milton Bradley’s antics have hidden the
offensive force he is, and Jason Kendall has a good eye at the plate at the top
of the order. Losing Mark Kotsay will hurt the team defensively, but he has not
been much of a hitter recently. Shannon Stewart will not be either, but
Kotsay’s absence in the outfield will be lessened by Milton Bradley’s quality
defense in center. Stewart’s presence means that the A’s will only suffer a
major defensive downgrade at a corner spot.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Zito will be missed in the
rotation, but Rich Harden should finally be healthy enough to pitch for an
entire season. Harden has a bad past in terms of health, but like Crosby he has not suffered anything chronic. There is not
Kerry Wood damage. Harden has just had some bad luck aside from an elbow
ailment that came from bad mechanics he has since rectified. Rich Harden has
the stuff to be better than Zito. With his talent, Harden could enter the air
of Santana and Halladay in the American League. Behind him is Dan Haren, whose
ceiling is not as high as Harden’s. He still has the stuff to become ace
material. After a pair of runs through the American League, he should be primed
for a breakout season. Joe Blanton is not as good as his 3.49 ERA in 2005 would
indicate, but he also is not as bad as his 4.82 ERA in 2006. He should settle
somewhere in between and act as an above average middle of the rotation guy.
Esteban Loaiza is a solid backend starter. That leaves the fifth spot to Joe
Kennedy. Kennedy has had an inconsistent career but always had the stuff to be
a quality pitcher in the bigs. He appears primed to become Oakland’s latest unheralded scrap heap
pickup. After a very effective season as a reliever, he should offer stability
at the back of the rotation. Jason Windsor is a quality youngster who will be ready to step in and pitch well. He provides the A's with rotation depth. A bullpen anchored by Huston Street, Justin
Duchschrer, Alan Embree, and Kiki Calero should help Oakland pull out a number
of close games.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Billy Beane has again done a great
job constructing the roster. His one problem is that his ego is often too big
for his own good. Beane wants a manager that he can control. This prevents him
from attaining baseball’s best. In game strategy is not the most important part
of managing. Most decisions are defensible. A manager’s job is to run the
clubhouse. He needs to find ways to motivate his team to play the best. He
needs to make sure that things never get too high or low. He needs to make sure
that his entire team is focused on the goal. He needs to have the respect of
his players so that they will believe in themselves and their teammates. He
needs to create the right atmosphere. When Oakland went to replace Ken Macha, they had
that guy on their staff, longtime coach, Ron Washington. Beane went for Bob
Geren instead and let Washington, a future star manager, go to a division
rival. Beane wants to run the on field aspects of the team from the front
office. He hired Geren to be a puppet. Beane was simply too worried about in
game strategy. His teams have always struggled in critical spots. This is due
at least in part to his inability to give his team a strong manager to rally
the troops and keep them on task through the difficult times. The A’s are
always going to have regular season success, but their general manager needs to
get over his own ego trip and give his team a strong leader who might disagree
with him on certain tactics, even if it means taking a backseat and letting the
guy he hired to run the team do his job.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The A’s have consistently seen
household names defect from their roster since the end of the 2001 season.
Pundits always count them out the next year, but the team always responds. This
year should be no different. A lot of guys underperformed for this team in
2006. Most should bounce back, more than making up for lost production. Oakland might not have
great depth right now, but it is the most complete club in the AL West. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="2" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;This team needed to find an impact
bat in the offseason to give Vladimir Guerrero some help. Names like Alex
Rodriguez, Aramis Ramirez, Manny Ramirez, Alfonso Soriano, and Miguel Tejada
surfaced. Things became more desperate when the team’s second best hitter, Juan
Rivera, broke his leg in winter ball, which will cost him most of the season
and could force him to sit out all of 2007. The team’s response was
uninspiring. Bill Stoneman brought in Shea Hillenbrand, a decent power threat
but hardly an elite middle of the order threat. He also dished out $50 million
to Gary Matthews Jr. That is $50 million to a guy who posted by far his best
year at age 32 in a contract year. That is $50 to a guy who had much better
splits in a home park that is one of baseball’s top havens for hitters. That is
$50 million to a guy whose 17 homers and 77 RBI’s were not even that impressive
in the first place. If it was not for Gil Meche, this would be the worst
contract of the offseason by far. This was before steroid speculation came out.
Matthews is not going to do much of anything to help this offense. He will help
defensively, but even centerfield defense is not worth that kind of money.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Offense is going to be what holds Los Angeles back again.
Vladimir Guerrero is one of the five best players in the game, but one player
can only do so much. Losing Rivera will hurt production a lot. The Angels will
at least be better than they were last season. Howie Kendrick, Mike Napoli, and
Casey Kotchman all will become above average hitters. The problem is that none
of the three is ready to become an elite run producer. Kendrick and Kotchman
especially should become very productive, while Napoli
will turn into a solid hitter for a catcher. Kendrick is a natural hitter but
not a big time power threat/run producer. People are simply putting unrealistic
expectations on him this year to carry the club. He needs another year under
his belt. Kotchman is a guy on whom too many have given up. The Angels asked
too much from him in years past before he was ready. Last season’s disaster was
due primarily to a bad case of mono. He still has the sweet stroke that allowed
him to progress through the minors at a rapid pace. He has developed enough to
finally deliver on his potential. The problem is that the Angels need him to
immediately put up numbers he will reach in his prime. Los Angeles needs its role players to hit
like superstars, which is not a great bet to make. They also have too many
marginal hitters like Chone Figgins and Orlando Cabrera. Both guys bring unique
skills to the table, but that is not what the team needs. Garrett Anderson is
nowhere near the impact hitter he once was either. This team is not going to
score enough.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The shame of the situation is that
the Angels have arguably the deepest pitching staff in baseball. John Lackey
has emerged as a frontline starter. Ervin Santana is a quality starter and will
get better with another season under his belt. The same is true of Jered
Weaver. Kelvim Escobar is a steady veteran presence, and Joe Saunders has
progressed through the minors and should be an adequate starter. He is only
holding the fort until Bartolo Colon returns at midseason from rotator cuff
surgery. The Angels are in great shape because their pitching is good enough to
survive without the 2005 AL Cy Young winner, but he is capable of greatly
improving the staff if he can recover from his ailment. A deep bullpen has only
gotten better with the addition of Justin Speier. If the Angels have a lead
through six innings, Speier, Scot Shields, and Francisco Rodriguez virtually
guarantee a win. Hector Carrasco is a solid backend bullpen pitcher and Darrin
Oliver reemerged in 2006 as possibly baseball’s best long reliever. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Angels are going to be in the
mix through the entire season, carried by pitching. They have been too gun shy
in the past about making blockbuster trades. The farm system is stocked with
young chips. Unless Bill Stoneman brings in an impact bat at the deadline, the
offense will not be good enough once again. Vladimir Guerrero can only do so
much. Los Angeles should finish behind Oakland once again.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="3" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Texas Rangers&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Since the late 1990’s, people have
known the Rangers as a team that can hit with anybody but cannot consistently
get hitters out. The same will likely hold true in 2007 but not to the degree
it once did. Texas’
starting rotation is not going to remind anybody of the 1990’s Braves (aside
from the presence of&lt;span style=""&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/span&gt;Kevin Millwood),
but it should at least be adequate, although the fifth spot is full of abysmal
options like Kameron Loe and Jamey Wright. Kevin Millwood and Vincente Padilla
are solid middle of the rotation starters. Both men have had big years in the
past and pitched like frontline guys. Brandon McCarthy and Robinson Tejada have
top of the rotation potential but are not likely ready to deliver on it. This
rotation is essentially a crapshoot. If two or more pitchers maximize their
talent this season, the rotation will be well above average, and Texas will contend for
the postseason. If the top four pitch only adequately, the Rangers will have a
solid rotation but not one ready to compete with Harden-Haren-Blanton or
Lackey-Weaver-Santana in the division. The latter probably will be the case.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Rangers’ bullpen should be a
strength. Akinori Otsuka and Wes Littlejohn form a more than adequate one-two
punch. Scott Feldman, C.J. Wilson, Ron Mahay, and Joaquim Benoit are all decent
relievers to round out the ‘pen. Eric Gagne is a major wild card. If he can
maintain relative health through much of the year, this bullpen will become
elite. Gagne-Otsuka-Littlejohn would be a daunting trio for any offense to face
in late inning situations. The problem is that Gagne has thrown fifteen innings
in the past two years. There is no reason to expect that he will stay healthy.
Signing him was worth the risk due to his high ceiling, but the chances of him
delivering seem slim.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Offensively the Rangers will be
very good. Mark Teixeira is one of the top all-around hitters in baseball. Ian
Kinsler and Michael Young will be more productive than any duo of middle
infielders not named Jeter and Cano. Hank Blalock is geared to bounce back from
a rough season. A regime change always benefits a few players. Blalock will be
one of those guys. Buck Showalter lost faith in Blalock once he struggled.
Showalter is a good manager, but he gives up on players too quickly. The
recovery of Francisco Cordero after a trade to Milwaukee would attest to that. Blalock
seemed to take Buck’s lack of faith to heart. He has discussed openly how much
more comfortable he is with Ron Washington in charge. He also has the game’s
best hitting coach, Rudy Jaramillo, to help rework his swing. Blalock is poised
to have a big year. Frank Catalonotto and Kenny Lofton will help Texas to have a solid
offense in supporting roles. There are some weak points in the lineup. Anybody
who thinks that Sammy Sosa is going to be an impact hitter is welcome to buy
the Brooklyn Bridge from me. A hot Spring Training
against rusty pitchers and minor leaguers does not mean a whole lot. Sammy will
hit his 600th career homer this year, but a year away from the game
typically does not help guys with deteriorated skills. Brad Wilkerson and
Gerald Laird are not going to be very productive. The fact that Jon Daniels does
not get more ridiculed for dealing a forty-forty guy in Alfonso Soriano for
Wilkerson is one of life’s great mysteries. That was one of the worst trades of
all-time. Anybody who knew anything about baseball could see that at the time.
This is not a statement in hindsight. At any rate, Texas will lose a lot of production from the
departed Rod Barajas, Carlos Lee, and Gary Matthews Jr. not that any of those
guys was worth bringing back relative to price. However, that only means that
the Rangers will have a less effective offense. It will still be pretty good.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Rangers made a great hire when
they named Ron Washington manager. Washington
is a rising star of the profession. He will do a great getting through to his
players and running the clubhouse. He will get everything he can from this team
because the players will buy into his message. His problem is that the Rangers probably
do not have the horses to compete with the top teams in his division. The
pitching staff is pedestrian. Even with their offense, it would be a surprise
to see the Rangers in October. They at least now have some young pitchers with
potential. Making the postseason should be less of a pipedream in a few years.
However, it is doubtful that Texas
will win the World Series the year after firing Buck Showalter like the Yankees
and the Diamondbacks did.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="4" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Seattle Mariners&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;It is going to be another long
summer in the Pacific Northwest. The Mariners
did little to improve upon a team that has finished in the cellar for three
straight seasons. Their rotation is not going to be very good. Felix Hernandez
should be one of the few bright spots. He is ready to have a breakout season
with a solid defense backing the groundball pitcher. He should finish in the
top ten of Cy Young voting. The problem is that there is no depth behind him.
Miguel Batista and Jarrod Washburn would be backend starters on most teams.
Jeff Weaver and Horacio Ramirez might not even be that in the American League.
Weaver’s strong October led to him being drastically overpaid. The fact is that
he was miserable last year, especially during the half season he spent with the
Angels. Now he is back in the same division. After Hernandez, this rotation
will be a major weakness.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The bullpen will be even worse.
J.J. Putz is a terrific closer. However, the trade of Rafael Soriano cost the
bullpen its only other reliable option. Chris Reitsma, Julio Mateo, and George
Sherill make up a bullpen every bit as bad as the relief corps for the 1990’s
Mariners teams that contended.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The lineup is even more pitiful.
Raul Ibanez and Richie Sexson both provide power in the middle of the order,
but there is nothing behind them. Both hitters also are aging and susceptible
to decline. Giving up anything of value for Jose Vidro made no sense. Vidro is
no longer productive as a hitter. Adrian Beltre continues to give the M’s as
little bang for his massive contract as almost any player in baseball. Kenji
Jojima is a good hitting catcher buthardly an impact bat. Jose Lopez and
Jeremy Reed are both youngsters trying to develop into adequate offensive
players. Jose Guillen is hardly an impact bat at this point. Yuniesky Betencourt is a very good defender but carries a weak bat.
Ichiro might be the modern day Ty Cobb swinging the bat, but he can only do so
much with such a weak supporting cast.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Mariners are strong
defensively. Betencourt and Beltre make up an excellent left side, and Seattle finally is making
the most of Ichiro’s range by putting him in centerfield. However, it takes
more than an ace, a closer, and good defense to make a good team. Seattle is below average
on both offense and defense. This team needs a lot to go right to get into
third place.&lt;/p&gt;

</description>
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<title><![CDATA[AL West Preview]]></title>

<pubDate>Fri, 06 Apr 2007 04:25:12 GMT
</pubDate>





</item>
<item>
<description>

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="1" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Minnesota Twins&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Conventional wisdom states that
the Twins are in big trouble this season. They enter 2007 without Francisco
Liriano, perhaps the second best pitcher in baseball, due to Tommy John surgery
and Brad Radke, who pitched through a torn labrum at the end of last season,
due to retirement. Many observers feel that Minnesota simply does not have the pitching
to win a fifth Central title in six years. This is not the case. Johan Santana
is the most dominating force in the American League. Putting him on the mound
virtually guarantees the Twins a win every fifth day. All that they need to do
in order to finish above .500 is win two of four games he does not pitch. Minnesota has the arms
to do just that. Boof Bonser &lt;span style=""&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;pitched
very well after being called up last season to replace Liriano. He should be
able to build on that with his good control and ability to get a strikeout when
he needs one. After a disastrous 2006, Carlos Silva worked all offseason to
regain control of his sinker. His pitches were flat last season because he was
not able to get under them. After a winter of recovery, Silva should be closer
to the pitcher he was in 2004 and 2005 for the Twins.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The key to the Twins’ season comes
at the back of the rotation. It is not a question of whether guys will perform.
It is instead how quickly will Terry Ryan pull the plug on a pair of ill-fated
veterans and go with young talent. Sidney Ponson and Ramon Ortiz will be
terrible for the Twins. Ponson is a guy will all the natural ability in the
world, but his terrible attitude and conditioning will assure he never comes
close to reaching his potential. Ortiz posted an ERA in excess of 5.00 last
season pitching in R.F.K. Stadium, an extreme pitchers’ park. Minnesota has quality young pitching waiting
in the wings. Matt Garza struggled during a cup of coffee last season, but that
was due to fatigue late in the season. He is ready to become a highly effective
pitcher in the Majors. Scott Baker is another Twins minor leaguer who should
make an impact before 2007 is over as are Kevin Slowley and J.D. Durbin. Minnesota cannot wait
too long to pull the plug on what will be disastrous Ortiz and Ponson
experiments. One can only guess that Terry Ryan will have learned from last
season when he kicked mistake signings Tony Bautista and Juan Castro to the
curb, and the team responded with younger players. &lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Twins do not need their young
pitchers to dominate. All that they need are to produce quality starts and to
keep games close because Minnesota
has one of the deepest bullpens in baseball. Joe Nathan, an elite closer,
anchors the unit. Jesse Crain,&lt;span style=""&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/span&gt;and Juan
Rincon provide the Twins with terrific short relief. Matt Guillier has found a
niche in long relief. Anthony Reyes is one of the top lefty specialists in baseball,
and Pat Neschek pitched terrifically in his rookie campaign last season. This
unit will not give away games.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Entering last season, offense was Minnesota’s primary
concern. After breakout years from Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau, that does not
seem to be much of a concern. Both guys are probably going to regress this
season. .347 batting averages come for catchers once in a blue moon. However,
both will be able to carry a productive offense as the killer M’s rank among
the top offensive players from their respective positions. Morneau’s numbers
probably will not drop drastically. He will just spread his production out
through an entire season rather than condensing a monster year into a few
months as he did in 2006. The potential was always there with these guys. Now
that they have broken through, they are on their ways to long and productive
careers. It often takes young players one season to gain the confidence
necessary to do so. Both players now know they belong in the Majors as stars.
That is half the battle. Mauer and Morneau are surrounded in the lineup by
productive hitters in Torii Hunter, Luis Castillo, Michael Cuddyer, and Rondell
White, who recovered from an awful start to finish with a flourish in 2006.
Jeff Cirillo will serve as a lefty masher in a part time role. Jason Kubel
should also pick up some of the offensive slack as the knee he wrecked back in
2004 has had another year to heal.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Twins are run as well as any
organization in baseball. Ron Gardenhire has the respect of his players and
always seems to get the most from them as a result. Minnesota needs things to break right in
terms of getting young pitchers into the rotation, getting those young pitchers
to perform, and keeping Mauer and Morneau healthy since their lineup is full of
supporting players and lacking big hitters. However, all of these are
realistic. Santana gives Minnesota
an advantage no other team can claim to have. I like the Twins to take the
Central again.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;2. Cleveland Indians&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Two factors kept the Indians from
having a big season in 2006. The first was infield defense. The Tribe addressed
that by upgrading the infield. Andy Marte takes over at third base for Aaron
Boone, who never seemed to recover from the ACL he tore that cost him the 2004
season. Cleveland
also picked up Josh Barfield to take Ronnie Belliard’s spot at second base.
Jhonny Peralta should be much better at shortstop as well after addressing
vision problems that plagued him last season, albeit he will still not become
Gold Glove caliber. This new defensive look will aid a strong starting rotation
that features C.C. Sabathia, Cliff Lee, Jake Westbrook, and Jeremy Sowers. All
four young guns give the Tribe a chance to win every game that they pitch. The
rotation is rounded out by wily veteran, Paul Byrd, a man who will bounce back
nicely from a rough 2005.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Cleveland has a very deep lineup. Grady
Sizemore is a terrific catalyst at the top of the lineup with a great eye,
terrific speed, and good pop for a leadoff man. The anchor, Travis Hafner, needs
no introduction. Hafner is a hitter who finally has enough name recognition to
go with his gaudy stats that he could make a serious MVP push this season.
Victor Martinez is below only Joe Mauer and Brian McCann in terms of production
from the catching position. His problem is his abysmal rate of throwing out
potential base stealers. When a catcher only nails 16 of 116, it cannot only be
the pitchers. That is a major problem regardless of how good of a game he
calls. Martinez
ideally would move to either first base or DH, but both of those positions are
filled. The Tribe still has no problem with his bat. Casey Blake is a nice
middle of the order bat. The additions of Dave Dellucci and Trot Nixon to serve
as lefty platoons opposite Jason Michaels and Ryan Garko were among the most
underrated of the winter. Cleveland
is going to have a pair of extremely productive platoons. Josh Barfield holds
his own for a second baseman. There is some excellent depth as well with
Shin-Soo Choo waiting in the minors, Kelly Shoppach as backup catcher, and half
of the platoon on the bench. The only real weak link is Andy Marte, who still
needs time to adjust to Major League hitting. He is not yet ready to become a
productive hitter, but he will get on the job training. Cleveland only needs him to provide solid
defense given how productive the rest of the lineup is.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The reason that Cleveland will not win the division is the
second issue the team had last season, its bullpen. Keith Foulke’s retirement
did not really hurt the Indians. There was no sign he would ever be healthy
again or productive even if healthy. The Indians added Aaron Fultz, Roberto
Hernandez, and Joe Borowski over the offseason. All three are serviceable
relievers. None of the three qualifies as elite. The fact that all three are
considered upgrades says more about how awful this bullpen was a season ago (24
saves in 47 chances) than anything positive about the trio. Borowski will rack
up saves and not blow giant leads, but he is very hittable. The same goes for
the other two. Cleveland’s
bullpen has gone from an F to a C-. That means that the Tribe will not give
away as many games in late innings as a season ago. It also means that the team
will lose enough of them to not win its division. By the end of the year, some
combination of youngsters Tom Matsny Tony Sipp, Juan Lara, and Rafael Perez could
be up as reinforcements, but the damage will have been done. Jason Davis and
Fernando Cabrera really need to step up, but neither seems ready to put it all
together. This bullpen probably will cost Cleveland
a spot in the postseason and Eric Wedge his job.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;3. Detroit Tigers&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Tigers shocked the baseball
world last summer by jumping out to an early commanding lead in the American
League Central that they held for most of the year. Then they suffered a tail
spin at the end of the season and were relegated to the Wild Card on the
season’s last day. Everybody left them for dead in the postseason, but Detroit recovered to
upset the Yankees in the ALDS and sweep the A’s in the ALCS. Most
prognosticators then chose them over the Cardinals in the World Series, where
they were dismantled in five games. No team has been more befuddling to me.
Every time I thought they would fall apart, they got hot. Every time I believed
in them, they came apart at the seams.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The primary reason for Detroit’s success in 2006
was its starting pitching. The Tigers’ staff should still be good this season,
but asking the pitchers to replicate what they did last season would seem to be
a bit much. American League Rookie of the Year Justin Verlander was nothing
short of dominant during his first Major League campaign. However, he fatigued
down the stretch. Verlander increased his workload by over seventy innings in
2006. That takes a toll on a young arm not conditioned to take that kind of
beating. The Tigers are probably going to pay the piper this season with
Verlander as the White Sox did last year for all of the extra innings that
their starters threw in 2005. Justin Verlander probably will not be as effective.
Neither will Nate Robertson, who should make a solid backend starter but
pitched over his head in 2006, posting a sub 4.00 ERA. Kenny Rogers is another Detroit starter set for a
decline. He will be under careful watch this season, meaning that he will not
be able to place items onto his hand which could help him become more
deceptive. Posting numbers under his career averages for a third straight year
will be a tall order for Kenny. All three of these guys posted close to career
years last season. It is not likely to happen again. Jeremy Bonderman, however,
should get even better after a breakout 2006. His power arm will likely make
him this year’s ace. Mike Maroth should serve as a dependable starter to round
out the rotation as he comes off an injury-plagued 2006.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Detroit’s lineup might not be in the same
class as the Yankees, but there is still some punch. The addition of Gary
Sheffield adds a disciplined slugger to a lineup in need of one. Sheffield is happy in his new environment with a contract
extension for the time being. It will be at least a year before his selfish
antics start to poison clubhouse morale. He joins Magglio Ordonez as the big
hitters in the middle of the order. Placido Polanco should rebound from a
relatively disappointing 2006 at the plate to become a productive table setter,
while Carlos Guillen is the most underrated shortstop in the game in terms of
offensive production. Sean Casey is meanwhile a quality role player. Detroit’s lineup is far
from bulletproof, though. Craig Monroe and Brandon Inge will add some power,
but they will probably decline fromcareer years in 2006. Pudge Rodriguez is in
steep decline and probably getting no better with the bat for all the
leadership and defensive prowess he brings to the table. Curtis Granderson is
not a good leadoff hitter at all. He has no discipline and does not properly
utilize his speed to cause trouble on the basepaths. &lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Tigers have an above average
but not elite bullpen. The setup corps of Fernando Rodney and Joel Zumaya is
terrific. A big problem will be replacing Jamie Walker. The Central has some
big-time lefty hitters in Morneau, Hafner, and Thome. The Tigers need to hope
that converted starter, Wilfredo Ledezma is up to the task or else they could
find themselves on the wrong end of late game heroics. Todd Jones is an
adequate closer, but he is eminently hittable in the Borowski mold. He gets the
job done more than he does not, but nobody would ever feel safe betting their
life on him getting through the ninth unscathed. Jose Mesa is a wild card for
this bullpen. He can add some depth, but age and returns to American League and
pennant races make that seem unlikely.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Tigers are an above average
team. It would be surprising if they were not in contention. However, they have
a lot working against them. They are going to need to have guys repeat monster
years that seem out of context. They have something else working against them.
This year they will be the hunted because they are the American League
Champions. Last season the Tigers played well early. Then they struggled down
the stretch once people believed in them as a contender. When most counted them
out during the American League postseason, they thrived only to fail again in
the World Series when they were favored. The point is that this team has not
handled success or the pressure of being the favorite well. Will they be able
to have the same kind of success when everybody will be up to play them? It
will take a much greater level of focus and intensity to match last season’s
output. The second year is always tougher to navigate, especially with an
inexperienced team. They tend to forget all the work that went into making them
successful the year before and assume that they will win by showing up. The
Tigers could easily fall into this trap because there is still a lot of
inexperience on the roster. Pudge Rodriguez and Sean Casey can only do so much
in terms of leadership. Asking for things to fall so perfectly for a second
straight year seems like too much.&lt;/p&gt;

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<title><![CDATA[AL Central Preview]]></title>

<pubDate>Thu, 29 Mar 2007 04:39:10 GMT
</pubDate>





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<description>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 4. Chicago White Sox



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;In both of the past two seasons,
the team I have picked to finish fourth in the Central has won the American
League pennant. This year that team is the Chicago White Sox. Chicago won the World Series in 2005 behind a
dominant starting rotation. Last season the Pale Hose experienced many of the
problems that I expect the Tigers to go through this season. Their pitchers
were fatigued by pitching too many innings and an extra month of baseball and
found themselves unable to duplicate career years. Chicago still has a solid top three in Mark
Buherle, Jose Contreras, and Jon Garland. All three pitched over their
respective heads in 2005. All came crashing back to Earth and had a disastrous
first (Garland)
or second (Contreras and Buherle) half in 2006. None was truly as good as their
heights would suggest nor as bad as their lows would indicate. In 2007, all
three should pitch like dependable starters but not like aces. The problem is
that the Sox traded away their starting pitching depth in the offseason,
sending Freddy Garcia to Philadelphia and
Brandon McCarthy to Texas.
With both pitchers, the White Sox have a terrific rotation from front to back.
Without them, the last two spots are a major weakness. Javier Vazquez is a
National League pitcher. He is the guy that Ken Williams should have traded
because he has more value than what he is worth on the mound to the White Sox.
He is going to have another rough season being hit around the American League.
The fifth spot in the rotation is in even greater flux. Gavin Floyd has a lot
of talent, but he is a long term project. He has major confidence and control
issues due to the way the Phillies tried to rush him through their system
before he was ready. John Danks, acquired for McCarthy has a lot of talent but
is not ready to make an impact on the Major League level. Like the Twins, the
back of this rotation is going to be a mess to start the season, but there are
not a plethora of in house solutions to fix matters.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The 2006 version of the White Sox
was driven by offense. Chicago
is going to hit a lot of homers once again with Paul Konerko, Joe Crede, Jim
Thome, and Jermaine Dye comprising the middle of the order. The offense will
not be as productive, though as Dye figures to regress after a career year. Jim
Thome figures to do the same as the wear and tear that comes with age will take
a toll. Thome does not have the same motivation that he did last season when he
was coming off a disastrous 2005. Nobody doubts that he will be productive. He
just will not be as productive as he has been in the past. Juan Uribe cannot
help but improve on his terrible 2006. Darrin Erstad will do the same on Brian
Anderson’s putrid stats. A.J. Pierzynski and Tad Iguchi are above average
hitters for their position. Chicago is going to have a problem at the top of
its order also as Ozzie Guillen seems set to have Darrin Erstad and Scott
Podsednik bat 1-2. Both are good players. They bring something unique to a
team. They both cause trouble on the bases and play with a reckless abandon
that cannot help but rub off and have a positive effect on a team. The problem
is that neither guy gets on base enough. One of these guys at the top of the
lineup with a low on base percentage is one thing because the way these guys
create havoc once they are on helps to make up for it. With both guys hitting
in the first two slots, there is going to be nobody for the big hitters to
drive in. The Sox would be well advised to give top prospect Josh Fields a long
look to take one of the two outfield spots and use Erstad or Podsednik as a
speedy defensive replacement and pinch runner.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Bobby Jenks is a good closer, a
prototypical power pitcher who gets the job done despite a high ERA.&lt;span style=""&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/span&gt;Matt Thornton and Mike MacDougal constitute a
solid set up corps. Andy Sisco is an interesting project who should pitch well
in a short role, and David Aardsma was a nice pickup in a trade with the Cubs.
Aside from MacDougal, all of these pitchers throw hard and should constitute a
solid bullpen. The White Sox utilized their deep bullpen in 2005 to their
advantage in close games. This unit is not as deep, but it has potential to be
very good.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The White Sox are solid all
around. However, they were not good enough to get to the postseason last year.
Their offense will not be as good, and their rotation has major holes. The
bullpen can only do so much. Ozzie Guillen also could become a factor in this
team’s demise. He has done a terrific job with the Pale Hose, but a team can
only endure so much of his volatility before it starts tuning him out. This
team might be ready for a new voice if things start to go badly. The White Sox
should be good enough to stay in the race for a while, but it is tough to see
them getting back to the postseason.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;5. Kansas City Royals&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;This franchise is an embarrassment.
There is no other way to put it. In what will undoubtedly go down among the
worst contracts in the history of professional sports, the Royals gave Gil
Meche $55 million this offseason. That money goes to a guy with a 4.65 career
ERA in a pitchers’ park. Meche has had an ERA in excess of 5.00 in two of the
past three seasons. He has one season where he posted an ERA under 4.00, and he
did not even throw 90 innings that year. The Royals should be ashamed of
themselves for that deal. It was an irresponsible deal done solely to quiet
their critics who justifiably complained that they were pocketing a great deal
of money made in revenue sharing. The thing is that it was better off when they
were cheapskates. Then at least it was conceivable that one day they would
spend their savings on something worthwhile. Now their payroll is tied down by
this absurd deal. Some have argued that Chris Carpenter and Jason Schmidt did
not start thriving until they were Meche’s age. Those guys are the exception to
the rule. When a guy has pitched in mediocre fashion for as long as Meche has,
the vast majority of the time that guy has stayed mediocre through the course
of baseball history. Even if Gil does turn into an ace, this was a very low
percentage gamble.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Alex Gordon should make an
immediate impact at third base. He is the best position player prospect in
baseball. Mark Teahen, David DeJesus, and Ryan Shealy are other solid young
players in Kansas City’s
lineup. Mike Sweeney keeps on plugging away in obscurity, battling injuries.
Unlike Johnny Damon and Carlos Beltran, Sweeney never escaped Kansas City in his prime to show his talent
to the baseball world. It is sad that many fans could not appreciate a good
career because it was spent on such a lousy team. Angel Berroa, John Buck or
Jason LaRue, and Mark Grudzielanek, and Emil Brown round out a lineup full of
guys who are either past their primes, far away from reaching their primes, or
never had primes to begin with.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The rotation consists of the mediocre
Meche. The similarly mediocre Odalis Perez follows him. Next come Luke Hudson
and JorgeDe la Rosa. Neither guy is good at all. Brian Bannister and Zack
Grienke are the first starters who will see time that have any potential at
all. This is simply going to be an abysmal rotation. The bullpen is not much
better. Octavio Dotel is the alleged anchor although he has not pitched
effectively since Tommy John surgery in 2005. After him is a veritable who’s
who of no names. &lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Royals have a few quality
young players, but none are likely to be impact players without seasoning. Of
the veterans on the roster, few are quality. This team is going to be abysmal
once again. Some bad teams at least bring in a few good players in the
offseason to create some sort of preseason buzz. It is sad when Gil Meche is
the highest profile acquisition a team has made in three years. There is at
least more young talent in the organization than at any time in recent memory,
but it needs time to develop and to be surrounded with other quality
acquisitions. The other four teams in the division all could realistically go
to the postseason under a certain scenario. Not finishing last would take a
miracle for this team. The Royals are years of developing talent and making
good front office decisions from even tasting respectability. &lt;/p&gt;

</description>
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<title><![CDATA[AL Central Preview, Part 2]]></title>

<pubDate>Thu, 29 Mar 2007 04:37:57 GMT
</pubDate>





</item>
<item>
<description>

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="1" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;New York Yankees&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Yankees have won their
division in each of the past nine seasons. They have to be the favored to
extend that streak to a decade in 2007. The biggest reason is their offense. No
team in baseball has a deeper lineup. The anticipated first base platoon of
Doug Mientkiewicz and either Josh Phelps or Andy Phillips is the only spot that
can even be considered a remotely easy out. If Mientkiewicz posts something
close to his .359 career on base percentage, that would give the team excellent
production from the ninth best hitter in a lineup. What was an extremely
productive offensive unit last season figures to get only better with walk
machine Bobby Abreu in the mix from the beginning of the season and Hideki
Matsui returning fully healed from the broken wrist that cost him most of 2006.
Making Jason Giambi the full-time DH will keep him fresh and less likely to
succumb to injury, and using Melky Cabrera as a quasi-regular supersub in the
outfield will have the same effect on the aging trio of Abreu, Matsui, and
Johnny Damon. Alex Rodriguez is in a contract season, which means he will be
poised to prove his naysayers wrong and put together a big year. Derek Jeter
and Robinson Cano cannot be expected to put up the same numbers they did last
season, but they still should post elite numbers for their positions. New York’s lineup will
not get itself out. It will wear pitchers down, take walks, and hammer the ball
once it gets pitches to hit. This lineup could score 1,000 runs if everybody
stays healthy. It gives them a chance to win every game.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Yanks gave their rotation an
overhaul in the offseason. Chien-Ming Wang and Mike Mussina are back to anchor
it. After that, the Yanks sent the cantankerous and over the hill Randy Johnson
packing and brought back Andy Pettitte, who was one of the best pitchers in the
second half of 2006 after a dominant 2005 campaign. Unlike most recently
acquired hurlers, the Yankees will not have to worry about Pettitte proving
that he can pitch in New York.
He already did so in his first stint with the team. Pettitte embraces the
pressure that comes with being a Yankee. He gives the Yanks a terrific top
trio. At the end of the rotation, Carl Pavano and Kei Igawa are question marks,
Pavano’s ability to stay healthy and Igawa’s ability to adjust to the Majors
being the biggest concerns. However, should either falter, New York has plenty in reserve backing them
up. Brian Cashman has done a brilliant job in the past two seasons restocking
his farm system with Major League caliber arms. Darrell Rasner, Jeff Karstens,
Humberto Sanchez, Tyler Clippard, and Ross Ohlendorf all could potentially see
time in New York
this season. The Yanks also have a prospect in Phillip Hughes who most
observers feel would be a well above average Major Leaguer right now. The team
will start him in AAA to limit his innings early in the year, but he should see
action in the show and keep a rotation spot later in the season. The Yankees at
this point have a great shot at signing Roger Clemens as well. There are some
concerns about Pettitte’s balky elbow and Mussina’s age, but again there are
guys who can fill in and do an adequate job. This influx of talent also gives
the teams plenty of trading chips with which to acquire a veteran before the
deadline. With this offense, all the Yankees will need is adequate to make the
postseason. The big horses are for October, when runs will not be so easy to
come by, facing top pitching.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;New York is also going to have a deep
bullpen to hold the opposition down in close games. Mariano Rivera, the
greatest closer ever, is the anchor. An under the radar acquisition was Luis
Vizcaino, who came over in the Randy Johnson deal. Vizcaino is a reliable short
guy in late innings who has a lot of success against lefties. He will help take
some of the load off Kyle Farnsworth and Scott Proctor, who is coming off a
breakout year where he finally discovered that sacrificing some velocity for
the sake of movement is what will make for an effective pitcher. Ron Villone
and Mike Myers give the team a pair of reliable veteran lefty relievers. New York also has a
plethora of young arms to call on if needed in Brian Bruney, Chris Britton,
T.J. Beam, J. Brent Cox, Jose Veras, and even Sean Henn and Colter Bean if
necessary. These pitchers all could make a dent in New York this season. The Yankees have
finally committed to making their roster younger, deeper, and more flexible
than at any time since 2002. That is bad news for the rest of a division that
has had enough trouble with this team.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="2" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Boston Red Sox &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;After months of searching, the Red
Sox have found their closer. It is the exact same guy as the old closer. Fans
from Beantown should be ecstatic that Jonathan Papelbon is back in the role in
which he thrived last season. Papelbon spent his summer making sure that the
Bosox did not give away games that they had as well as any reliever in the
Majors. The plan was for him to move to the rotation in 2007, but the reality
is that he is more valuable in a very thin bullpen. If he was not closing
games, Boston
would have to choose from the likes of Mike Timlin, Brandon Donnelly, and Joel
Pineiro. That would have led to a lot of ninth inning losses. Papelbon’s
presence takes Boston’s
bullpen from abysmal to simply below average. He allows everybody else to slide
back into a spot where they are slightly less overmatched and gives Terry
Francona at least one guy he can count on in his relief corps. It is tough to
figure why Boston
made the move in the first place. Papelbon was so valuable for them in that
role in 2006, and his lack of a reliable off speed or breaking pitch meant that
he probably would not have been a frontline starter. His best pitch, the
fastball, also would not have been as effective since he would have to pace
himself during games, instead of putting every bit of effort he had into every
pitch, which he does as a closer since he only has to throw one inning per
game. Relief pitchers can get away with relying purely on a fastball and a
splitter since hitters only see them once per game and have to adjust from the
style of the previous pitcher. As a starter, that will not work because hitters
can adjust between at bats with the previous at bat being a valuable reference
point. Papelbon probably would have been rotation worthy, but he would not have
been nearly as effective as he has been out of the bullpen.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Boston’s rotation is heralded as elite upon
the addition of Daisuke Matsuzaka. The reality is that it is as hit or miss as
could possibly be. Matsuzaka has to adjust to an entirely new league of
hitters. Curt Schilling is old and came into camp out of shape and overweight.
Those are two factors frighteningly suggesting that an injury is possible. Josh
Beckett has all the potential in the world to become an ace. The problem is
that has been true for his entire career, and outside of a stretch for a few
months in 2003, he has yet to deliver on that promise. The back of the rotation
with Tim Wakefield and Jon Lester should be solid, assuming that Lester will be
ready to go once the team gets out of April and actually needs a fifth starter
and is fully recovered from cancer. Lester’s presence is another factor in
showing why Papelbon as closer makes sense. Lester has proven himself to be an
adequate rotation guy. If Papelbon was starting, the Sox would have a massive
hole at closer, and Lester would be either serving long relief duty or pitching
in AAA. At any rate, this rotation is the textbook definition of hit or miss.
No amount of success or failure would be surprising.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Sox will be led offensively as
always by Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz. Boston
spent its offseason seemingly bolstering its lineup by adding J.D. Drew and
Julio Lugo. Both signed massive contracts worth more than either was worth.
This epitomizes the puzzling nature of Boston’s
recent front office moves. In the past, they have made moves that have not
worked out, but at least the logic was evident. They did not want to overpay
Johnny Damon so they got Coco Crisp, a younger, cheaper player with a lot of
potential. They traded for Josh Beckett, a former World Series MVP who had a
history of beating the Yankees and was still years away from free agency. The
recent moves underscore the lack of common sense thinking emanating from the
Red Sox’s front office recently. Drew is the kind of player that Boston fans will hate. He
is not as good as his numbers would indicate. He is always hurt and is
unwilling to play when banged up. He does not perform in big spots. He is not a
good clubhouse influence. He does not play hard at all times. In tough times in
2003 and 2004, the Red Sox relied on their great chemistry in the clubhouse.
They were a bunch of blue collar guys who liked and respected each other. This
trust made them fearless, oblivious to pressure. Drew is the kind of guy who
will put a hamper on that, the anti-Trot Nixon. He cares about his paycheck
more than anything. The problem is that Boston
has painted itself into a corner. Now the Sox fill holes by drastically
overpaying big name players, leaving no money for glaring weaknesses like the
bullpen. They need to be right because these contracts make their roster
inflexible. The only way to correct errors is by digging themselves even
deeper, eating bad deals, and signing new guys to even bigger deals. In the
process, it brings a collection of mercenaries with no loyalty that will not go
to battle with each other and falls apart when faced with adversity. The
Yankees tried the same approach, and it failed. Only now have the Yanks
reversed their ways because they have seen the error of this approach. Drew’s
signing is a signal that the Sox are heading into that same chasm. The same
goes for Lugo, a guy who became a productive
player in the anonymity of Tampa
 Bay but was abysmal when
traded to a contending Dodgers team last season. The Red Sox threw money at big
names that they will have to stick with for the long haul before considering
how they would fit in the clubhouse and how they would respond to Boston. In the past, they
looked for bargains that fit the mold like Bill Mueller and the ultimate case,
David Ortiz. They have just become another version of the Yankee teams whose
spending habits made their fans cry foul. Drew will put up numbers when he
stays healthy, but he will not have the same impact those numbers would
suggest. Lugo
probably will have a rough go of things in Beantown. &lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The real question is what Boston’s front office has
been thinking recently. They traded away starting pitching depth in Bronson
Arroyo last season to get a young slugger with potential in Wily Mo Pena. It
was a move that was going to hurt short term. The hope was that he would
develop into a slugger down the line. With the signing of Drew, Pena’s spot in
the lineup has been blocked for at least two years. Why hurt the team in the
short run and then never give the guy you sacrificed for a chance to develop?
Behind the plate, Jason Varitek for all the leadership he provides in the
clubhouse is on the decline. This would be a great time for Josh Bard to ease
his way into at least a platoon role and take some of the load off Varitek’s
shoulders. However, Bard is in San
  Diego now because the Red Sox panicked when he had
trouble catching Tim Wakefield early last season. The team got rid of him
because apparently an aging Doug Mirabelli was worth it and was the only
available catcher capable of catching a knuckleball. They also gave up on
Bard’s ability to do so too early. They played hard ball when Johnny Damon
wanted a new contract but threw loads of money at Drew. Damon embodied the
fearless nature of those Sox teams, was a great clubhouse presence leading to
that great chemistry that helped the team, and gave everything he had on the
field. Why let a fan favorite go to an archrival and break your fans’ hearts
only to give Drew more money a year later? These moves go against everything
the Red Sox said they were about. They used to be about sound financial
decision making, keeping an eye on the future, and finding the right players,
not necessarily the biggest names. There were a few times they forgot this
along the way, like in 2003 when the Sox got desperate at the deadline,
panicked, and surrendered 2006 NL Batting Champion Freddy Sanchez, who could be
playing shortstop for a much cheaper price than Lugo, and Mike Gonzalez, who
could help fortify that bullpen, for Jeff Suppan and Scott Sauerbeck, but those
moves were the exception to the rule. The Red Sox have gotten very short
sighted and impulsive in their acquisitions.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;At any rate, Dustin Pedroia should
be an above average starter as a rookie at second base. Mike Lowell will add
punch to the offense at third along with stellar defense. Kevin Youkilis will
keep the offense moving with his excellent eye. The catching position will be a
weakness with Varitek and Mirabelli in decline. Coco Crisp should bounce back
after a rough first year in Boston.
He is a talented player. Boston
is going to have an above average offense. It is not as deep or dynamic as the
Yankees’ lineup, but they do have good support for the two big guns.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The bullpen is going to need two
guys to step up for them. The first is Craig Hansen. The highly touted St. John’s product needs
to step up this season and finally make good on the potential he has. Hansen
has the stuff to become an excellent closer. All that the Sox need is for him
to become a bridge to Papelbon. Boston
also needs Joel Pineiro to become a seventh inning guy. He is a reclamation
project. Pineiro struggled as a starter for Seattle, but he has terrific stuff. He could
shine in a relief role where he only has to face hitters once per game. If both
these guys fill their respective roles and Boston leaves Papelbon where he belongs, an
aging and declining Mike Timlin and Brandon Donnelly can take on the reduced
roles they belong in, and the Sox will have a top flight bullpen. If not, this
team is going to give away a lot of games in the seventh and eighth innings.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Sox have a ton of question
marks. There is enough talent on the roster for them to leapfrog Toronto in the division
and win the Wild Card as they have in three of the past four seasons. Last
season’s team was hampered by an ungodly amount of injuries which led to its
downfall more than anything else. Matsuzaka has enough above average pitches
that he should thrive in America.
Schilling is a major injury concern. It would not be surprising to see him end
up on the DL multiple times. Beckett has to prove that he will do the job
before anybody can place trust in him. The same goes for Hansen and Pineiro. Lugo is probably going to
struggle like Edgar Renteria. Drew will help bolster the offense when he is in
the lineup but probably will miss time. Crisp has the talent to show the Red
Sox what they thought they were getting. These are my takes on how these
questions will be answered. They will need more of these to go right than wrong
because there is nobody adequate behind these guys. I think enough will go
right for Boston
to be a good team, but there are too many issues to have them beating the
Yankees. Their lack of cohesion and depth will come back to bite them in the
postseason.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="3" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Toronto Blue Jays&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Jays made a splash once again
this offseason by giving Frank Thomas a two year deal, luring the Big Hurt from
Oakland. Thomas bounced back from injury in a big way last season, cranking
thirty-nine homers en route to leading the A’s to an AL West title. He will
join Troy Glaus and Vernon Wells in the middle of a power-packed Toronto lineup. Alex
Rios, Lyle Overbay, Reed Johnson, and the
underrated Greg Zaun are all above average hitters in this deep lineup, and
highly-touted Adam Lind could crack the lineup at some point this season. Toronto will more than
adequately be able to make up for the losses of Frank Catalonotto and Bengie
Molina. With all these above average hitters, Toronto is going to score runs.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The problem is going to be
pitching. The Jays have Roy Halladay at the top, a pitcher more effective than
anybody not named Santana. Things get dicey from that point. A.J. Burnett is
very highly regarded, but he is perennially inconsistent and always good for a
few trips to the DL per year. After Burnett there is Gustavo Chacin, a pitcher
hampered by elbow injuries in 2006. Even if he is able to pitch, it is unclear
whether he will be fully recovered from his issues. Even if the top three are
effective, the last two slots in Toronto’s
rotation could not be weaker. They will need to hope that some combination of
John Thompson, Tomo Ohka, and Victor Zambrano puts aside past injury and
effectiveness issues. None of the three are very good, and they will get sixty
percent of the starts minimum unless the Jays call up David McGowan and Shaun
Marcum, neither of whom is ready to take on the AL East. Toronto is badly going
to miss the stability that Ted Lilly brought to the middle of the rotation,
although its tough to blame them for not matching the outrageous contract the
Cubs gave him.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Toronto is going to have to win a lot of
high-scoring games. On paper, their bullpen appears to be above average. B.J.
Ryan is one of the game’s best closers. Behind him, Toronto lost a very effective reliever,
Justin Speier, to the Angels, but Jason Frasor and Brandon League both should
be reliable in late inning roles. Neither will likely be as productive as
Speier, but a lot of teams will do worse. The Blue Jays have a plethora of
other young arms to choose from to fill out their pitching staff. They should
be able to find some mix given the options.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Toronto will be able to score with just about
anybody. Their bullpen should win them more games than they lose. All that
their starters need to do is keep them in most games. Unfortunately for the
Jays, that will be a lot to ask. Halladay virtually guarantees them a win every
time he pitches. However, the back end is going to be abysmal. If any of the
top three misses any time, the lack of depth is going to become even more
glaring. John Gibbons also seems to do a good job alienating himself with his
players as separate feuds with Shea Hillenbrand and Ted Lilly last season seem
to indicate. There is a real danger that this team could tune him out the
second things start to go south. Ultimately, though, the end of the rotation is
going to cost too many games for this team to make the postseason.&lt;br/&gt;. &lt;/p&gt;

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<title><![CDATA[AL East Preview]]></title>

<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2007 20:08:18 GMT
</pubDate>





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<item>
<description>&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 4. Baltimore Orioles &lt;br/&gt;



&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Being an O’s fan must be a
miserable experience. The team spends, spends, and then spends some more every
offseason but never seems to get any better. At least one thing has changed
this year, though. Peter Angelos did not break the bank bringing in free
agents. The Orioles focused on their bullpen, surrounding incumbent closer
Chris Ray with Jamie Walker, Chad Bradford, and Denys Baez. The O’s also took a
flier on Scott Williamson, a guy who will pay huge dividends if he can stay
healthy for once in his career. With that, Baltimore became the owner of one of the
game’s deepest bullpens, giving Sam Perlazzo a number of bullets with which to
turn late in games. The problem for the Orioles is everything else.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The Orioles’ offense lacks punch.
There are some good hitters like the emerging Nick Markakis and the always
dangerous Miguel Tejada. Ramon Hernandez is a very good offensive catcher, and
Jay Gibbons and Aubrey Huff are decent hitters. However, relative to the other
teams in the division, this lineup does not have much firepower. Brian Roberts
reverted to pedestrian form in 2006. Melvin Mora at age 35 has headed downhill
in a hurry as has Kevin Millar. Corey Patterson simply never gets on base,
which is a shame considering the damage his speed could do on the bases.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The picture does not get any
brighter when considering Baltimore’s
rotation. Erik Bedard gives Baltimore
a legitimate ace. Daniel Cabrera has all the potential in the world behind
Bedard, but he appears to be heading on one of those frustrating career paths
as a guy who never could put it all together. Adam Loewen has promise, but he
is still green. He will have to endure growing pains before he learns how to
effectively pitch in the AL East. Jaret Wright proved with the Yankees that he
is a solid backend starter last season and will be reunited with Leo Mazzone,
the pitching coach with which he had the most success of his career. However,
he is not dominant enough to carry a rotation or go deep into games even when
he does pitch well. Baltimore
signed Steve Trachsel to replace the injured Kris Benson, and that is a recipe
for disaster. Ignore Traschel’s fifteen wins last season. They were the product
of great run support. He almost posted a 5.00 ERA in the National League.
Imagine the fluctuation that will come with a move to a hitter friendly park in
the American League East. Baltimore’s
rotation will again be its downfall.&lt;/p&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;There is a scenario where the O’s
can contend. Mazzone is the best pitching coach in the game. If he can finally
help Cabrera put the puzzle together, and Loewen matures ahead of schedule, the
Orioles will have a tough rotation when one factors in Bedard and Wright.
Basically they need Loewen and Cabrera to become this year’s Bonderman and
Verlander. Then Angelos will certainly not be afraid to open his wallet at the
deadline to beef up the offense. The much more likely scenario, though, is that
Baltimore battles Tampa
Bay to stay out of the cellar than New York, Boston, and Toronto for the division.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;ol style="margin-top: 0in;" start="5" type="1"&gt;&lt;li class="MsoNormal" style=""&gt;Tampa Bay Devil Rays&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ol&gt;





&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;The good news for the Rays is that
things are not getting worse. The bad news is that they are not getting better
by much. Tampa Bay will not be as abysmal offensively
as it was last season. The team has quality big league hitters in Carl Crawford
and Rocco Baldelli. Akinori Iwamura, a Japanese import, carries a nice stick of
his own as well as a steller glove at third base. Ty Wigginton is a decent
hitter. Dioner Navarro and B.J. Upton should get better with another year under
their respective belts, and Delmon Young will make an immediate impact as long
as he hits baseballs with his bat instead of umpires. (Sorry for the cheap joke.)
The Rays are going to score runs because they have guys who hit a lot of homers
and steal a lot of bases. The problem is that while they make the most of their
chances in this way, too many of their youngsters are too undisciplined with
the bat to get on base often, which means that while the offense will be
better, it still will not be great. There will be a lot of developing talent in
Tampa Bay’s stacked farm system and on the
Major League level. Before long, this offense should be pretty potent.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in;"&gt;Pitching is even more of an issue
in Tampa Bay. The Rays have a bona fide young ace
in Scott Kazmir. There is absolutely nothing behind him. There might not be
another quality pitcher on the roster. James Shields has a chance to become a
quality pitcher one day, but that day is not today. Thesame can be said for
J.P. Howell. Mediocre journeymen Jae Seo and Casey Fossum serve as warm bodies
to fill out the rotation. The bullpen is in even more shambles. Seth McClung
will be the closer. The Rays have quality youngsters, but they are still a few
years away from making a mark on the Major League level. Their hitting is not
good enough to overcome such bad pitching. Beating the Orioles for fourth place
will be a major accomplishment. &lt;/p&gt;

</description>
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<title><![CDATA[AL East Preview, Part 2]]></title>

<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2007 20:06:05 GMT
</pubDate>





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