Monday, March 26, 2007

Beware, Orioles have re-stocked

The Baltimore Orioles are the sleeper team of 2007. They have dealt with their issues from 2005 and 2006 in more ways than one. In 2005, it was the lack of team chemistry after the numerous injuries that plagued the team and Rafael Palmeiro pinning the blame on Miguel Tejada for him testing positive on steroids. In 2006, it was the lack of pitching they had to keep themselves in the game. They had no bridge from the starting rotation, which had some holes in and of itself, to Chris Ray.

Before the 2006 season, they let go of Rafael Palmeiro and they signed Kevin Millar. Millar has known to be a positive presence in the lineup and a member of the 2004 World Champion "idiots".

This past offseason, the Orioles have completely retooled their bullpen, improved the starting rotation, and added some depth on the bench and on the field.

The addition of Aubrey Huff adds some power to the Orioles' lineup. Huff, being a member of the Devil Rays and the Astros last season, now has a home in Baltimore. Orioles will be slotting Huff at the first base position, a position he has some experience playing. Although, Huff had an off-season with the bat last year, having a consistent position and a permanent home may help him get back to number that made him a dangerous hitter. Being 30 years old when the season begins, Huff is more than capable of posting 25 HR and 100 RBI as he has done previously in his career.

Brian Roberts, the allstar second baseman, is hoping his injury plagued days are behind him and hoping to return to his 2005 form. Roberts has the speed at the top of the lineup that can create excitement when he gets on base, stealing 33 bases in 2006. In 2005, he developed and showed off the pop he has in his bat by hitting 18 home runs and was 18th in American League MVP voting. He's a dangerous gap hitter, hitting 50 doubles in 2004.

Miguel Tejada, not much I really need to say about him. He's a stellar shortshop, who will hit over .300, hit for power, drive in runs, and hasn't broke triple digits in the strikeout department since 2000. Need I say more? He's the cleanup hitter.

Entering this season at 35 years old, Melvin Mora's bat might be slowing down a bit, Mora still has the ability of reaching 15 HR and 75 RBI and hitting .280.

In left field, it appears Jay Payton will be getting the starting role. He is a solid contact hitter which will be ideal for those hit and run situations. He's averaged 51 strikeouts over the past three season and will give you a .285 batting average. Last season with the Athletics, he developed his doubles hitting posting 32 in the span of he season.

Corey Patterson will be manning center field and has the speed to man the entire outfield all by himself. The speed demon has resurrected his career in Baltimore after struggling in Chicago. In 2006, he stole a career high 45 bases and coming into this season at 27 years of age, he still can get better.

The young and talented Nick Markakis finishes up the outfield in right this season. After the all-star break, he found his power stroke hitting 14 of his 16 home runs. As a rookie, 22 years old, his totals in 2006 were .291, 16 HR, 62 RBIs with 491 at bats, which isn't a full season. His 10 home run August shows his potential to be a 30 home run person. Markakis showed very good plate discipline with a .351 on base percentage. Also, Markakis only made 1 error in all of 2006. With all of this on his resume at 22 years old, his future looks bright in the major leagues.

Ramon Hernandez had an excellent return to the American League in 2006 after his brief stint with the San Diego Padres, hitting a career high 23 HR and 91 RBIs. With the improved protection in the lineup, look for him to post similar numbers to last year.

Jay Gibbons, the oft-injured former right fielder, will be fitting into his role as designated hitter. When healthy, Gibbons is a power threat and capable of driving in runs. With a healthy Jay Gibbons, Miguel Tejada, Nick Markakis, Aubrey Huff and even Ramon Hernandez, the Orioles have a dangerous middle of the batting order.

Erik Bedard has been a quality starter for the Orioles with a 3.76 ERA in 2006 and is expected to put up similar numbers, if not better. Daniel Cabrera has improved every year since his rookie season. The flame-throwing right hander is capable of striking out any hitting in the big leagues with his fastball topping out at 98 MPH. The one thing he has to learn is throwing a 95 MPH fastball with location is better than a 98 MPH erratic fastball. Once he puts that together, he'll be one of the dominant pitcher in the American League. Bringing in Jaret Wright from the Yankees has been overlooked as a good move this offseason, but taking Wright out of the New York spotlight will alleviate the pressure he felt with every outing. Wright had a breakthrough season with Atlanta in 2004, going 15-8 with a 3.28 ERA. He has the talent. In a more relaxed atmosphere, expect those numbers to return in 2007. Adam Loewen is a young and unproven pitcher with potential. With Leo Mazzone as pitching coach, the same pitching coach that coached two future hall of famers, Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux, Loewen will learn his trade and improve as the season progresses. Steve Trachsel in the five spot in the rotation is an inning eater. He went 15-8 last season, mostly because of large run support, but the Orioles have the capabilities of doing the same in 2007.

The revamped bullpen features a former closer in Danys Baez who will be the setup man to closer, Chris Ray. Ray had 33 saves in his first season as closer for a team that had only 70 wins. But the duo that will be frequently seen warming up together will be that of Chad Bradford from the right and Jamie Walker from the left. Bradford, after having seasons with injuries, put together a solid 2006 with a 2.90 ERA and a 4-2 record with the Mets. Walker, with the AL champion Detroit Tigers last year, posted a 2.81 ERA. ERAs below 3 is what you look for in relief pitching and Orioles found what they have been missing with these pitcher.

The key member of the Orioles bench is Kevin Millar. He can be a backup first baseman or outfielder. But the most important aspect is he's part of the insurance policy for if Jay Gibbons is to return to the disabled list during the season. If Gibbons is to get hurt, which has happened each of the past few seasons, Aubrey Huff would take over the DH role and Kevin Millar would play first base.

Adding Paul Bako, as a backup to Ramon Hernandez, brings a veteran presence to the team to help out with the young pitchers. Bako will play once a week to give Hernandez a rest, but his main purpose is to shape pitchers like Daniel Cabrera and Adam Loewen into productive starters.

Chris Gomez, the super-utility man, was able to do it all last year. Gomez played all infield positions for the Orioles at different times throughout the season and committed only 3 errors while batting .341 off the bench. Put him in for defense, put him in as a pinch hitter, no matter what role the Orioles need him to play, he can do it and do it very well.

The Orioles have the tools and depth to be a dangerous team even in the tough AL East.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Miller astounding, Ramirez in regular season form

Wade Miller looked like the Wade Miller of old posting 3 hits and 5 strikeouts over 5 innings and making a strong case to make the starting rotation for the Chicago Cubs. Miller hasn't completed a full season since 2003 due to injuries. He's trying to put that all behind him and start fresh with his talented arm. If he remains healthy, he'll be a key member of the Chicago pitching staff and a dangerous pitcher to opposing lineups. He's capable of consistent pitching and posting an ERA in the 3's. A great pitcher to pitch behind Carlos Zambrano in the rotation.

Aramis Ramirez seems poised to continue his dangerous hitting into the 2007 season, hitting .333 with 5 home runs and 12 runs batted in this spring. Ramirez in his 3 years with the Cubs has averaged 35 home runs and 105 RBIs. With Derrek Lee completely recovered from his wrist injury and the addition of Alfonso Soriano to the lineup, this could give the protection that Ramirez was missing last season. Even though, Ramirez posted 38 home runs and 119 RBIs, which isn't too shabby, in 2006, he may improve on those figures in 2007 by getting a better selection of pitches to hit.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

The Mets have a starting rotation

With Pedro Martinez out probably until August, there was a tough competition for the last slot in the pitching rotation. In the offseason, Mets GM Omar Minaya brought in pitchers to compete with the young pitchers in the Mets minor league system.

Minaya brought in Aaron Sele, Jorge Sosa, and Chan Ho Park to name a few to compete with highly touted prospects Philip Humber and Mike Pelfrey. Poor outings in the starting roles quickly weeded out Sosa and Sele. The inexperience of Philip Humber, set back a year because of Tommy John surgery, showed up in his outings and resulted in him getting sent down to the minors. Leaving Mike Pelfrey and Chan Ho Park left for the fifth spot.

Mike Pelfrey over the spring has posted: 14 IP, 1.29 ERA, 2 ER, 17 H, 1 BB, 3 K
Chan Ho Park over the spring has posted: 12-1/3 IP, 6.57 ERA, 9 ER, 14 H, 7 BB, 15 K

Pelfrey has performed better and it appears Willie Randolph has noticed this as well. Park pitched today against the Orioles and was surprisingly pulled after 3 perfect innings, much to the chagrin of Park. He was informed later on that he will be pitching again in a few days to see how he performs if he was to come out of the bullpen. That might be the clue that Pelfrey has won the 5th spot.

Mets projected rotation at the beginning of the season: Glavine, Hernandez, Maine, Perez, Pelfrey. Park could be an asset in case one of the starters happens to get hurt during the season. Keeping him on the pitching staff adds extra depth to the Mets rotation. Orlando Hernandez has had a few injuries that have hampered him this spring. Park, who has known to be a quality starter at times in his career, will be a good insurance policy.

Chien-Ming Wang is down for the count

Yankees report Chien-Ming Wang will begin the season on the DL after tweaking a hamstring yesterday. Wang, last season, was arguably the best pitcher and the anchor of the Yankees starting rotation. Yankees were hoping for Wang to build upon the success of last year and was slotted as the number one starter in the rotation (probably making Mike Mussina happy, who never liked being number one in a pitching rotation).

There's speculation that oft-injured pitcher, Carl Pavano, may be slotted to pitch Opening Day against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Pavano has had an inconsistent Spring Training so far, with him posting 4-1/3 IP, 3 R, 3 ER, 8 H, 2 BB, 2 K in his last outing. Not stellar numbers this late into spring, with Opening Day a little over a week away. I'm sure Joe Torre will wait to announce who will start Opening Day in order to see how his other starters perform.

The Yankees are going to face Scott Kazmir, a young and very talented lefty. It would be a better idea for them to start a pitcher that has been consistent and better over the past month.

Mike Mussina has been the Opening Day starter before, so why not choose him? He's been a consistent starter throughout the spring and he's known to pitch quality games. They'll need a good starter out there to match up with Kazmir. Of course, the manager needs to have faith in every pitcher he has on his staff, but you also want to start the season on the right foot.

Although Kazmir is young and has limited major league experience, he has a winning record in his career even though he's been on a lackluster team. His ERA in 2006 was 3.24, with 163 strikeouts, over 144-2/3 innings pitched.

Even newcomer Kei Igawa has pitched better than Pavano has. Andy Pettitte might have some injury issues, so he could be out of the question. The point is Pavano is not who you want against Kazmir.

The Devil Rays do have a very balanced and potent lineup that few give credit for. Carl Crawford has power, speed and hits for average, as does Rocco Baldelli. Delmon Young is a great young talent and showed his talent off with his brief stint with the Devil Rays last year batting .317 in 126 at bats. Ty Wigginton had a break out season with power hitting 24 HR in 122 games. Jorge Cantu will try to bring himself back to his 2005 numbers of .286, 28 HR, 117 RBI after an injury plagued season last year. There's a lot of talent right there.

The Yankees lineup is very potent as well, but don't expect the Yankees to be teeing off Kazmir. They need a pitcher that will guarantee keeping them in the game and Pavano hasn't proven that he can be counted on, yet. I'm sure the Yankees will beat upon the following starters because the Devil Rays don't have much depth in the starting rotation, but to win that first game you need a solid pitcher. The Yankees can throw any pitcher out there the next two days. They could be very high scoring games as the Yankees tee off on Devil Rays pitching, they'll have enough offense to win games even if their starter is weak, because the Devil Rays are weaker.

They need to start the season on the right foot and maybe Pavano could be a surprise and have a solid outing, but go for more of a sure thing.
 
flower power by time life
flower power by time life