Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Gold Gloves in '07

Just a little blurb about defense on a slow braves news day. Despite only fielding 7 eligible positions (LF was a platoon) it looks like the Braves have 5 players who have a chance at winning. I'm not sure how it would work for Tex, but the other 4 have a good shot. Take a look.

Chipper Jones: 9 errors, .971 F%, and .797 ZR in 1081.2 Innings
Edgar Renteria: 11 errors, .977 F%, and .800 ZR in 1019.1 Innings
Andruw Jones: 2 Errors, .995 F%, and .863 ZR in 1346.0 Innings
Jeff Francoeur: 5 Errors, .986 F%, and .875 ZR in 1441.2 Innings

Chipper ranks 1st in Errors, 3rd by .002% in F%, and 5th in ZR.
Edgar ranks 2nd in Errors, 8th in F%, and 10th in ZR.
Andruw ranks 1st in Errors, 2nd in F%, 7th in ZR.
Frenchy ranks 6th in Errors, 4th in F%, 7th in ZR.

In all honesty, Chipper has the best shot at winning this year from this snapshot. Rowand seems to have CF locked up, Vizquel has SS, and Corey Hart has RF. Btw, it looks like LaRoche is going to win the award at 1st.

It's Official

AJ is not coming back next year. Honestly, i'm actually happy about this from a team perspective despite my sorrow to see such a good person leave. Honestly, on the field Andruw had a knack of being a rally killer. His entire career he seemed to come up when we needed a hit and failed to produce. Despite the same last name, he was the antithesis of Chipper.

At this point I invite the opening of the flood gates on his replacement. Is Tori Hunter going to be doing the Tomahawk chop in 6 months or will we see Frenchy firing his cannon from center? One thing is for sure, AJ is gone, Gold Gloves be dammed.

Soriano at the End

For those of you doubting Soriano's abilities to close games here's a line you should keep in mind. In close and late situations hitters had a .163/.207/.294 line. For reference, these are the lines a few other closers posted in the same situation:

Octavio Dotel: .275/.363/.435 (Former Closer W/ KC)
Bob Wickman: .267/.336/.435 (Former Braves Closer)
Mariano Rivera: .267/.330/.416 (HOF AL Closer)
J.J. Putz: .149/.197/.248 (AL Saves Runner Up)
Trevor Hoffman: .233/.279/.370 (HOF NL Closer)
Jose Valverde: .202/.294/.370 (NL Saves Leader)

Soriano's better than all but Putz. I have no complaints for $2.5m.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Game Over.

After tonight's loss the Braves are done. It's bad news but it allows fans to start speculating about next year. Oh, and screw you TBS. Just cuz you dropped the Braves for next year I'm dropping you from my Tivo for the playoffs. I'll get my games from MLB.com.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

More numbers

Despite the excitement of still being in the hunt for October come September 26th i'm going to shift focus to next year. The question now is what is going to happen in CF and what is going to happen in the rotation? First, let's look at the contracts that are going to stick around.

SP) Mike Hampton: $15m
3b) Chipper Jones: $15m
1B) Mark Teixeira: ~$13m
SP) John Smoltz: $14m
SP) Tim Hudson: $13m
RP) Mike Gonzolez: ~$4.5m
RP) Rafael Soriano: ~$2.5m
RP) Oscar Villarreal: ~$1.5m
C) Brian McCann: $.8m
RF) Jeff Francoeur: ~$.5m
RP) Tyler Yates: ~$.5m
RP) Lance Cromier: ~$.5m
RP) Buddy Carlyle: ~$.5m
SP) Chuck James: ~$.5m
LF) Matt Diaz: ~$.5m
SS) Younel Escobar: ~$.35m
2B) Kelly Johnson: ~$.35m
CF) Willy Harris: ~$.35m
RP) Peter Moylan: ~$.35m
RP) Royce Ring: ~$.35m
RP) Jose Ascanio: ~$.35m
RP) Many Acosta: ~$.35m
C) Corky Miller: ~$.35m

Scott Thorman: ?
Chad Paranto: ?
Ron Mahay: ?
Chris Woodward: ?
Edgar Renteria: $7m
Andruw Jones: ?
Octavio Dotel: ?

That totals just over $85m w/o bench players and a starter.

You may notice that I have 10 relievers listed. 3 of which will not make the opening day roster. I predict that Lance and Buddy won't make it and Gonzo is out for 1/2 the year. But you never know with baseball. Either way, none of the pitchers listed as being sent down make much so it won't affect totals significantly.

You also can see I also have 6 players listed separately from the rest. These are the 7 I see taking a walk. With the exception of Mahay, all come with baggage (contract, inability to play baseball). Mahay is a great pitcher but he might be too expensive to keep in his role as space filler.

Now let's look at what's missing. The biggest hole is in the rotation of course. Personally I see Glavine coming back at $10m (if the Mets decline his $13m option as they likely will do). Plugging him into the #3 hole and adding his $10m we have a payroll of just north of $95m which is about where we would expect Liberty to set it.

However, I doubt JS will be standing pat with Hampton being counted on. I see Thorman going to another club for a down on his luck starter. I have a feeling Cliff Lee might be that guy. His $15m contract extension looked great at the time, but since then his ERA is well over 6 and he has been limited to a relief role. The boy is a classic change of scenery guy. But Thorman won't be enough to net him. I don't know what beyond that will be called for but this is a deal that can get done, and before you even thing Rent's name i want to point out that the Indians have a SS and would rather shed payroll than take it on. Btw, Lee is making $3.75m next year. If Hampton goes down again that's quite a bit less than the insurance will pay out.

In terms of Renteria I see him getting moved. With his contention for the batting title and his solid performance it's almost a certainty that some team will be drooling over him. The return is based on what other teams have to give but anything from a rising star in center to some pitching prospects is not out of the question.

Add in bench players and we're looking at around $100m and the devision title.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Good news!

The Pads lost yesterday dropping them into a tie for the wild card with the Phils. They now need to loose about 4 more games for the bravos to overtake them! Go Braves!

Monday, September 24, 2007

A wild card?

This is going to be an exciting week. Take a look.

The braves are currently 3.5 behind the Pads for the wild card with the Phils and the Rox between them.

The braves face the Phils for 3 with favorable pitching match ups all 3 days. If we sweep the Phils will be 1 game behind us.

The Pads face the Giants w/o their spark plug, Bradley, who is likely done for the regular season. We need the pads to drop 5/7 between the Giants and the Brewers.

The Rockies face the Dodgers and the D-Backs. That is w/o doubt the worst sched for the last week. Even worse, the Dodgers series is away from Coors.

It's not impossible but it's never happened before. GO BRAVES!

Friday, September 21, 2007

A Game of Numbers

Let's play:

If you do the math, the only way the braves get into the post season is if at least 2 teams from either the east or the west play .500 ball and the braves don't loose again.

NL East,
Only 4.5 back but 3 back of the Phils. who are on fire.

NL West,
The Rox and the Pads are up on us with the rox having 1 game and the Pads having 5.5. Have i mentioned the braves have the second longest winning streak in baseball? Second only to the Pads and tied with the Rox.

The race for the batting title is among 3 people, 2 Braves and a Rockie. For the moment CJ is on top and Rent is 3rd but over the last several days the mix has shuffled over and over. All i have to say on the matter is, if a brave doesn't win and the team misses the playoffs here will be hell to pay.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

See

It's just like I said, the Braves can't prove it wasn't a fluke. Well, the good news is that the braves played fairly well in all three games. Both the losses came by one run affairs so it's not as horrible as the last time these two teams matched up. If you're wondering, after the last 2 one-run losses the braves now stand at 6-18 in one run games away from the Ted. Ouch. If they won 1/2 those 24 games the bravos would be in second and nipping on the heals of the Mets. Opportunities lost.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

La La LA!

Recently i'm feeling like a 3year old when it comes to the Braves. I know they're all but done for, but I still hope for the miracle. The problem is, everyone is proclaiming their downfall. Every time i hear it I imagine myself sticking my fingers in my ears and yelling "LaLaLA I'm not Listening!" And then the Braves go and do something stupid like pound the mets to a pulp with our friend Buddy pitching. What the hell is wrong with this team? Can't they see that all this hope is crushing us? Can't they understand that '08 is where our emotions should be focused, not today. You can't just go out and beat up on the best team in the national league and then come into work the next day and say "Woops, we're tired from yesterday." The Braves' job now is to prove that they're not one hit wonders, if only to themselves. But we all know the truth, the Braves are done, just don't yell it at me. Speak it softly, whisper it among friends when you can be sure no one is listening. It's to early to wake this giant.

Sunday, September 9, 2007

National Joke

I've never seen a team so ready to give up. It's scary, but good news for the Braves. That big comeback against the Phils has really given the team a shot in the arm.

Anyway, here are a few things that make me hopeful for '08.

-Andrew's struggles. Yes the fact that our star center fielder is hitting just north of the mendoza line give me hope. As I've said before Andrew's complete inability to hit, his bone jarring swing, and his less than desirable unwillingness to adapt to the situation at the plate make him kriptonite to a rally. And that makes his price tag lower. Take a look at what Torri Hunter is asking for. $70m for 4 years. Andrew won't make that, but he might pull off another deal like his last.

-Diaz for team MVP. When was the last time you saw a platoon player mean as much to a team as Diaz? He's still hitting close to .350 with over 300 ABs. The unfortunate thing is that due to his lack of playing time and pinch hitting duties his peripherals are low. (Hey you try and hit coming off the bench).

-Escobar is my hero. The boy has a talent for being in the right place at the right time, and producing. Rent is a great player, but i'd take similar production and defense for 1/27th his salary. Add in the fact that the $9m we're playing him is only part of his total contract and you have an even bigger bargain.

-Get out your brooms. The braves look for the sweep today but face their nemesis Jason Bergman. He owns the Braves. An ERA of 1.00 with 22ks in 3 starts and 18 innings this year. Ouch. Looking at his overall numbers i wouldn't mind seeing him in a Braves uni next year, if just to not have to face him again...

Friday, September 7, 2007

Projecting '08 Roster (Part 1)

I updated the roster on the left to reflect the September 1 call ups. That got me thinking about 2008. In part 1 of this three part series I take a look at '08 on the field.

The biggest question about '08 is what will Andrew do? Will he sign a 1year and stay with the Braves and cash in after the season? Will he take the money and run? I think it comes down to how he feels. He's been dealing with a lot of nagging injuries and that's kept him down this year. If he thinks it's going to get better, why not stick around with the only club he's known and push for the pennant in '08? If he knows the end is nearing he should try and milk the market for everything he can. I predict the former, AJ will reup with the Bravos @ $10m.

The next biggest question is where does Escobar play if Rent sticks around? He's to valuable to ride the bench and too cheap to trade off. That means Rent needs to move, hopefully for a pitcher. Bottom line, Rent gone, Escobar here.

The final question is what happens in left? What am I saying? We know who's won the spot. Diaz in Left, Willy OF #4.

This makes our lineup:

1) Escobar/SS
2) KJ (8th is not where I'd put him)/2b
3) Chipper/3b
4) Boomstick (Tex)/1b
5) Frenchy/RF
6) Diaz/LF
7) AJ/CF
8) Heap (McCann)/C

What should scare the mets is that the #8 hitter already has 84 RBIs in '07. BTW, 5 braves are on pace to drive in over 100.

There you have it. 1-8 and they look great. Next up, The rotation.

Braves Pitching

We all know the line about Chuck James being a decent #3 in the rotation and Hampton coming back and being slotted into #4 next season if the braves don't get another starter. It's bull. JS is sweating over that thought. I'm fairly sure he'd quit if he couldn't fix the rotation over the winter. With this in mind there are a few names that might save his sanity.

1) John Garland- This trade got shot down before but might be revisited. Rent and a starting prospect might be enough to being him in. However, i'm not sure if 11 hits in 6 innings against the Pirates inspires much confidence.

2) Josh Towers- The Jays seem to be eager to move him but his flyball tendencies and a .295 opponents average keeps his value down. He'll be the wrong side of 30 on '08 but he'll be pulling in only a few mill in arb. I'd put him as a #4 or 5. Not a #3.

3) Tom Glavine- Yes old Tommy boy is available again (he has a $9m player option). His option is decent but i'm sure he can get more on the open market. He has just north of a 4.00 ERA and a respectable whip. The only down side? Greg doesn't seem to want to return. Oh, and he'll cost over $10m (Garland gets $12m in '08 btw).

4) Joel Pineiro- The guy is an innings eater and a lock for stying in the NL. The AL has his number. The good news is that he'll come cheap. I don;t see him being a #3, but back of the rotation could do worse.

5) Dontrelle Willis- This is the perfect #3 for the Braves. D-Train has tons of raw talent but needs a better defense behind him and some vets to mentor him. The best news is that he could earn $7m in arbitration meaning the Marlins might want to move him. Now we just have to outbid the Mets...

What ever happens we know it'll be major. JS is playing for keeps in '08, just look @ the Tex trade. Let the rumors start!

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Off Day

Gotta love an off day in September, especially when the team you're facing the next series is the Nats. Coming off such a big win as yesterday, a win in this series would vault the braves back to respectability. I hope. Take a look at every one else's next matchup.

Houston @ NY, The mets split their only other series with the 'Stros @ Houston. A fun number to throw out is that the Astros outscored the mets 17-14 in the series.

Fish @ Philly, The Phills dropped 2 of 3 to the lowly fish before coming to Atlanta. Oh, and the Fish hit Philly very well. They're slugging .512 against the Phills .456 in meetings this year. BTW: 5 Fish are hitting over .330 and slugging over .610 against them this year. One of which is pitching on Sunday.

The Braves are 7-5 against the Nats including a sweep last time out. The Bravos have a 60-31 run differential and Chipper has an OBPS of 1.149 against them. Ouch.

If we win the last 5 series we have an outside shot at the wildcard. Not much hope. Good news is we can at least finish second this year.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Matt Diaz is my Hero

If you missed today's 9th inning you should go ahead and smack your head against the wall. I'll wait... done? No? Come on man, I don't have all day. Good. Now that you've punished yourself here's what happened. Braves down 2 Bret Myers on the mound. After 2 quick outs Frenchy and Prado hit infield singles. Escobar then walks on 4 pitches. Bases loaded, Diaz at the plate. Honestly, who would you rather have up there right now? Of course Diaz smacks a double off the glove of Roberson. Escobar was in motion at first on the crack of the bat and chugged all the way around form first to beat the throw. Braves 9, Phills 8. If you wanted a spark plug game this was it.

It Lives!

Despite being forced to build a new computer from scratch (all i saved was a fan from the old computer) and finding an undying hatred for Comcast and their slow frigging service I am back online. I know i've missed almost a month of prime braves news, but i'm picking up today and not giving up until this comp dies.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Dead computer

Despite some amazing news for the Braves my week has been horrible. First gradschool classes have just resumed, eating much of my free time, and second my main computer committed suicide taking with it 2 weeks worth of work. Joy. So let me catch up a bit.

First off, Braves starters have been very good lately. Behind Smoltz and Hudson, James and Buddy have been all you can ask for. The only knock on the pair is James' inability to pitch over 100 pitches. He seems to hit a wall at 92 pitches. Looking at his delivery it's understandable that he gets tired, you try throwing in the 90's with only your arm. However, 90 pitches a 3rd starter does not make.

Second, the pen has been overused. Add together too many extra inning games with too many short outings by starters and you get a recipe for disaster. Add to that the struggles of Soriano, the inconsistencies of Dotel, and the omnipresent threat of Wickman's forthcoming meltdown and you get one pen that opponents love to face. But hey, Bobby has a formula for who pitches when, past cruddy performance be dammed.

Third, it's no surprise that the Braves are in more late inning games since acquiring Tex. Think about it this way. If you trot out Franco every day (who was the best hitting 1B we had before Tex) you essentially have 2 spots in the order not producing (including the pitcher's spot) and thus you loose about 25% of your production opposed to about 12%. That extra 1/2 to one run has been the difference for the braves all year. There have been a lot of one run losses that now turn into tie games.

Fourth, has anyone seen who shot Andruw in the foot? oh, wait, it's self inflicted. Remember back in April and May when he couldn't get a hit to ave his life? 7th in the order isn't quite right when the guy hitting 8th is batting over .300. I'm just saying.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Jo-Jo sent down

The Braves optioned him to AAA Richmond and called up Lance Cormier. Because the entire pen was used last night he will be available out of the pen tonight if needed but is scheduled to start in Jo-Jo's spot on Tuesday.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

5 hours of insanity!

Rather than write a long winded post i'm just going to bullet point this.

-Boomstick hits another dinger

-Rent goes down with a twisted ankle

-Chipper plays SS

-Harris plays 3B and has 3 good plays... and bangs into the wall twice

-Diaz connects for the rare homer

-Andruw hurts himself on a swing

-Chipper stings his hand on a ground out

-Soriano gives up the lead and a slam

-Frenchy gets hit by a pitch similar to the one that took out Utley

-EVERY pitcher and position player was used except Smoltz, Hudson, and Buddy

-The braves have now scored 11 or more runs in 4 straight

-21 hits tonight, but three errors. (McCann, Harris, and Rent)

-Wickman makes a great play on a little pop behind the mound, and sets of car allarms arround the block when he falls over afterward

-McCann caught all 14 innings. I'll bet Corky will start Friday.

-Jo-Jo looked awful and is quickly earning himself a demotion. Oscar or Moylan will likely take his spot in the rotation.

-Mahay went 3 innings giving up only 1 earned run.

-Friday's lineup MUST look like this:

1) Escobar (SS)
2) KJ (2B)
3) Diaz (LF)
4) Boomstick (1B)
5) AJ (CF)
6) Frency (RF)
7) Woodward (3B)
8) Corky (C)
9) Smoltz (P)

If AJ or Frenchy is hurt badly we're screwed because it looks like Harris, Rent and Chipper can't play much.

Who is this Dotel person anyway?

Octavio Dotel is a great pitcher. He holds a 1.2 K/IP and a 2.7 W/K ratio for his career. That's up there with some of the better closers of our era. By comparison, the other closer moved at the deadline, Eric Gagne, has a 1.1 K/IP and a 3.4 W/K. The obvious difference is in his control but it doesn't equate to much. Gagne has a 1.11 WHIP and Dotel has a 1.24 for their carers. I'd take that for 1/2 the price (with incentives it's less than 1/3). NB: Dotel also has a rider in his contract for performance bonuses. From Cot's:
  • $0.2M each for 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55 and 60 GF
  • $0.25M for 65 GF
In fact Dotel might be a Brave for a while. Apparently, he's dreamed of being a brave for years.

"I've always wanted to play for [the Braves]. I like all the good players they have here and all their years of winning."

If that isn't a plea for an extension I don't know what is. We all know that Wickman is walking after this year (if not before) and that leaves the closer spot open. There's a chance the Braves will pickup his option ($5.5 mil) but i'd bet they'd try to sign him for longer at less. $3-4m/year for 2-3 years sounds right. However, in today's market it's likely it'll take $6-7m/year if he decides to become a FA. He's still fairly young (33) and has been reasonably effective. I think it'll get done and we can count on 1/2 the pen being closer material. Gonzo, Soriano, and Dotel is even scarier than what we had going into this year...

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Boomstick's Wife


We can officially add her to the "hot baseball player wives" list. More to come as I find more pictures...

Game Notes

Tonight was a big night for the Bravos. Not only did they win they posted their third straight game of 12+runs. That's a big offensive outburst from a team that looked like it has resigned itself to missing the playoffs a few games back. Seriously, who gets swept by the Reds?

You might also note that Boomstick had a 3run HR and a walk for an RBI. He also struck out twice. Reminds me of another 1B I know... JK. The man is fierce and deserves his new nickname.

The two new arms also got some work with Mahay looking good, but giving up a walk, and Dotel looking sharp. In fact Dotel needed only 7 pitches to get a strike out, ground out, and line out.

And the bad news. Buddy went down during his warm up in the sixth. DOB reports a hyper extended elbow. Now, depending on his makeup this might be nothing more than a twinge. I personally do this 2-3 time a week playing tennis and have had no problems... yet. What i do know is that it feels funky when it happens (like hitting your funny bone) but subsides quickly. The only lingering result is usually a little tenderness that goes away in a few days. However, buddy is scheduled to start on Sunday. I'm not sure if he'll make that. I'd expect Villarreal to make the spot start (no one has options that can get us a starter right now) if Buddy can't go.

Also of note, I'll be at Sunday's game in the $25 "All You Can Eat" seats. I hope to have good pics and even a TBS appearance to show for it (not to mention all the hotdogs I can eat).

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Beltran and the Braves

So here's a recap of the last few days in the NL east.

Phillies- Despite passing the Braves in the standings, they don't look to good right now. With Utley out for at least 3 weeks and now Victorino and Bourn out for 2 the lineup is looking a little thin behind Howard.

Mets- Carlos Beltran and Paul Lo Duca are both out with leg issues and the former is now on the DL. The plan is to play the rambunctious Lastings Milledge in center and get Lo Duca healthy quick.

Braves- Send of no player currently contributing for no less than 3 impact players. 1B is now as good if not better than anyone in the NL East (With no protection Howard is going to have... fun), the missing lefty is here and the braves have one of the best setup men available.

Survey says... Braves have a chance of winning the strong NL East. The good news beyond that is that the Braves will likely play either the Brewers, Cubs, Diamondbacks, or Padres in the first round. Honestly, none of them scare me.

Oh, and if you're wondering our lineup looks like this:

1) Harris/Escobar
2) Rent
3) CJ
4) Tex
5) AJ
6) Heap
7) Frenchy
8) Johnson/Diaz
9) Pitcher

Honestly? That's the best lineup in baseball. For god's sake our #8 hitters would be 5 or 6 on most teams.

This does not bode well for the braves...

Texas offered Tex $140 mil for 8 years at an average of $18 mill from 2009 on. Yikes. He obviously turned it down.

News and Notes

-Tex trade is done, and does not include Davies.

-Dotel trade can happen with Davies going to KC.

-Ring is a Brave via a trade with San Diego.

-Wickman is now expendable for the right price. DOB speculates that this might be done through waivers. Now, with relief pitching the way it is I doubt Wickman will make it through waivers but his contract is fairly big (almost as big as him). Perhaps if he struggles down the stretch...

-Jo-Jo has been offered for Arroyo but the price is likely more. Thorman, Yates, Paronto, Ladezma, and other prospects being discussed.

Monday, July 30, 2007

The Trifecta

How bout Arroyo in a braves uniform? Not as sexy as other options but that would likely make the Braves the favorite in the East if not the NL. Not sure why JS is cleaning out the farm system... or is he? Take a look. These are the prospects that have been, or likely will be traded:

Jarrod Saltalamacchia - MLB Bench, Backup Catcher
Elvis Andrus - A+Myrtle Beach, 4th on SS depth Chart
Matt Harrison - AA Mississippi
, 3rd on Prospect Pitching Chart (Behind Jo-Jo and Devine)
Neftali Feliz - Rookie Danville, 17th on Talking Chop's Prospect List
Kyle Davies- AAA Richmond, Failed 5th Starter

Look what we got back:

Mark Teixeira - MLB All Star and Gold Glove 1B
Ron Mahay - Veteran Lefty Reliever
Octavio Dotel- Veteran Closer and Setup Man

We even still have players to trade:

Scott Thorman- Failed 1B in need of an everyday job
Wilfredo Ledezma - Failed Lefty Reliever with plus power
Chris Woodward - Veteran Utility Player
Brent Lillibridge - Middle Infield Prospect

I like that return personally (I hope Harrison isn't the to be named later, he i'd keep). It's a whole lot better than the Farnsworth, or Aybar/Baez trades. And remember, 2 out of the 3 will get us high draft picks if they walk. In fact, if we win this year and next these picks will be about as good as what we get normally.

Oh, and I seem to remember the system is stocked with talent about 2 years away from prospect status... Mostly pitching.

A Couple of Things...

...have been bothering me lately. First, this trade for Tex seems to be unfavorable to the Braves long term. Second, why was Escobar held onto so tightly? Finally, why does Atlanta seem to be willing to suddenly trade prospects when for years they've held them so tightly? Tough questions.

Let's start with the obvious answer to the first question. Tex makes the Braves a threat to win the devision and the NL overall. I shy away from saying World Series because year after year the team with the best pitching wins the series. The Braves just don't have that pitching... yet. But I still don't like this trade if that's all we're looking at. Personally, and I have noting from JS to back this up, I think that this move serves the purposes beyond the contention part. First, we now have a ligitamate #4 hitter to put behind Chipper, and that also forces Andrew into the 5 hole, a position where he's had some success. Second, it puts pressure on AJ in the off season. If he knows the Braves are going to be good (and they are as he's the only big player looking to leave) it's harder to walk away. AJ has spent his entire career here and wants to win here, plain and simple. Finally, I think JS is confident that one of two things will happen. Either the prospects will not reach their full potential or Tex will resign.

Next let's look at Escobar. If you've ever seen him play you'll know why Bobby loves this guy. The heads up play on Saturday was a perfect example. To steal that base right under the nose of 4-5 players who should have been paying attention is amazing. That kind of play is not something you can really teach and not something that comes across in scouting reports. That leads to him being undervalued and thus important to hold onto. Further, if the Braves want to trade Rent today/tomorrow or next year they'll need a SS ready to play in the majors. That's Escobar.

And the deep question, why trade prospects? Amazingly enough this one is the easiest to answer. They're over valued. Plain and simple. 5 years ago you couldn't get a guy like Tex for 3 minor leaguers and a backup catcher. I don't care how promising they are, these trades almost always included a proven ML player. Today, trades like this don't happen because it's become more economical to play with players who are home grown than to sign a FA. The down side is it's hard to predict young player's contributions. That makes being a perennial contender difficult.

I think JS is doing the right thing. The common sentiment in baseball has swung one direction, and JS is pioneering another. Good work.

Dotel Too?

Update: It looks like Davies is the one going over. Can you say H-Ram take 2?

Rosenthal is now saying that the braves are one of 3 finalists in the Octavio Dotel race. The Indians and Dodgers are still in play but it looks like the braves might pull off the Trifecta. Adding not only a power bat and a lefty to the pen but a proven closer to split time with Wickman. In an ideal world Wickman closes at home and Dotel closes on the road. Now if only there was a starter coming too. oh, and before you ask, no players have been mentioned besides Dotel in this deal.

Tex is a brave!

Rosenthal is reporting it's done pending medical stuff. Despite my conviction that JS won't trade pitching for hitting he managed to give up 2 pitching prospects along with Salty and Elvis for Tex and Mahay. Depending on the prospects this could be a good deal or a mediocre deal. Either way the braves have a real first baseman and a lefty for the pen. Rosenthal speculates that one of the prospects is Harrison.

We all know about Tex, but Mahay is having a very good year. The league is hitting .236 against him (.250 vs. lefties) and he has a tiny 2.77 ERA. In comparison to the braves' pen only Moylan has a lower ERA (2.04). Also of note is how few innings he's pitched. He only has 39 IP compared to Moylan's 57. The down side is he's a FA after the season. Here's hoping we resign him quick. Speaking of which, he has the same agent as Smoltz and Davies, Career Sports & Entertainment.

BTW, I am eating humble pie right now. Happy Chipper?

Sunday, July 29, 2007

DOB Gets Nervous

David O'Brien, the Braves beat writer for the Atlanta Journal Constitution is getting a little nervous about the recent rumors that the D'Backs are in on Tex. Today in his blog he posted,

"Yes, I do believe Braves will get it done. Just not quite as sure as I was Saturday morning."

This coming from a man who was "very, very surprised if it didn't get done."

"Take off one of those “verys”" he said today "That’s why I usually like to avoid saying “never” or “sure thing” in these scenarios."

Even if this trade falls though, few people around the organization think that Tuesday's deadline will pass without the braves making some move. Chipper Jones just last week expressed his confidence in JS and the front office staff "It's nice to know our front office is giving us a shot of new blood," Jones said, "and cares about us continuing on in the playoff chase. Hopefully we can make a move to get us over the hump."

I know I speak for all the ravenous braves fans out there when I say, JS make us a winner!

Friday, July 27, 2007

This deserves it's own post.

While perusing Chop-n-Change I came across this post by Edo River. I understand if Edo wants me to remove this but I think that it speaks to every Atlanta fan who hasn't been completely enamored with JS and Bobby, and there are a few of us. Read and Enjoy.

"Will,

I’m going to have detach myself from all this. I agree with you completely, I think. I get this feeling from the wave-after-wave I am subjected to about this one trade and nothing else. I am superstitiously feeling that this will happen. No evidence except just like the news from Iraq, that is repeated on the hour every hour, things are happening (and even some of the on the hour news is comparable to sports trade-rumors, fiction by the way, as far as ultimate effect on us.

I grew up not far from Atlanta and endured doubling with Floyd Farless and his dad, in their car, for 1 and a half hrs, talking about the moral and physical superiority of the St. Louis Cardnials over the Braves, there and back when “our” team came to Atlanta in the first few years of the relocation.

It seemed back then that our farm system, (what farm system?) wasn’t worth crap. It hasn’t been but in the last 7 years or so that I have really paid attention to what they are trying to develop and now my hometown has an A level team.

So, I am extremely reluctant to see JS do this time after time, I have read an excellent analysis a while back, over at minorleagueball.com of JS record. and It wasn’t so great. THere are better judges of talent and trade value, JS is up there I think in the top 5. but even so the outcomes were suprisingly close to the .500 mark. Of course we remember the smashing successes, but when you put them ALL together and measure the outcome after a few years, He isn’t that impressive, well he is in comparsion to the really lousy GM’s and owners who deal, but I think we should give ourselves alot more credit when we taking what we can gather from the Internet and discuss the issues dispassionately and realistically, by

for example sitting in the other person’s shoes and trying to imagine what they would willingly give up, and want to get in return. See, this is what most of these hairbrain common tators don’t seem to think about. They wish for Miss America, and their willing to offer only a meal at McDonalds and a ticket to the drive-in. Why don’t they go and play fantasy baseball with their little 10 yr old brother, for pete’s sake? A 10 year old, and a slow one at that, is the only one who would agree to some of the suggestions I have read in the past few days over what they would do.

As I have mentioned, we all thought in spring training of ‘96 just like Smoltz did. And it didn’t work out that way, never again. never again, yet. So, As I also mentioned there are just too many holes I can see matching up against the Red Sox, esp with Chipper’s decline and Andruw’s disappearance at the plate.

I enjoy watching the growth of the Baby Braves that we hav e brought up, that my parents’ neighbors have seen play A ball years ago. That other friends of friends have seen Chipper in A ball, Andruw in A ball, and I am a hopeless romantic about Willie Harris. Why? because his success is an escape from worrying about Salty’s disappearance, Andruw’s percipitous decline, Chipper’s ankles, wrists, shoulder, Smoltz’s shoulder, Our bull pen. our #4 and #5 starters. our closer. Our First base batting average.

Most of all. Most of all I feel for Chipper and John Smoltz, and I have a little left over for Bobby Cox, JS and the other coaches, I met several at Orlando a few years ago (my parents now live in Tampa). I know from being around those guys and watching them up close why they attract such loyalty.

So its just a game. It isn’t Iraq. It is an escape from Iraq. I am a volunteer online English teacher for some kids in Iran, who are banned from schools there. there is no way out for them. Sometimes I have to compare my anguish over trading or not trading Salty to their situation, and I feel ashamed. I’m getting too caught up in this! lol. I feel this trade is going down. but as you say, the referee may not see it that way, we may be out ;-)"


Thank you Edo for putting it better than I ever could.

WOW!

Apparently all of us who thought that mega 3 player swap for Tex was also for a reliever were wrong! Rosenthal says it's Salty, Harrison, and Elvis for Tex STRAIGHT UP! That's nuts in terms of prospects. The willingness to do this deal (if it isn't a red herring) begs the question, "Is there something the scouts know that we don't?"

First off, i've been saying for a while now that Salty looks over matched at the plate, much like Frenchy did when he first arrived (but Frenchy was such a good hitter he could put a charge into any ball that touched his bat). Second, if you saw the Future's game you saw how slick Elvis was with the glove, but he isn't exactly burning up minor league pitching. Finally, Harrison is kind of a wild card. He was supposed to be the next #2 or #3 guy in our rotation but has stalled in the minors. His major problem is that he's a control/contact pitcher. While he has or is developing 3 plus pitches he has little power (Buddy throws harder) and has a propensity for the long ball. He also give up a lot of hits and doesn't strike out a lot of opponents. Unfortunately, this makes him less than a blue chip prospect.

So, if braves management is thinking that the three I listed above are having the same problems I think they are they might be willing to deal them. If not, I'm betting there's more to this story.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Braves Payroll

Will over at Chop-n-Change has a new post up about the Braves Payroll for 2009. He takes the safe rout and expects no trades to make his estimate. I however am not going to play it safe. Here's what Will thinks the 2009 payroll will look like.

C Brian McCann- $3.5 million
1B Jarrod Saltalamacchia- $420,000
2B Kelly Johnson- $2.5 million
SS Edgar Renteria- $11 million (option)
3B Chipper Jones- $11 million (option)
OF Jeff Francoeur- $3.5 million
OF Brandon Jones- $400,000
OF Matt Diaz- $2 million

SP John Smoltz- $12 million (option)
SP Tim Hudson- $13 million
SP Matt Harrison- $380,000
SP Chuck James- $2.75 million
SP Jo-Jo Reyes- $420,000

CL Rafael Soriano- $7 million
SU Mike Gonzalez- $4.5 million
RP Joey Devine- $400,000
RP Peter Moylan- $420,000
RP Tyler Yates- $2.5 million
RP Will Startup- $400,000



Here's what I think.

C Brian McCann- $3.5 million
1B Mark Teixeira - $18 million
2B Kelly Johnson- $2.5 million
SS Yunel Escobar - $420,000
3B Chipper Jones- $11 million (option)
OF Jeff Francoeur- $3.5 million
OF Brandon Jones- $400,000
OF Matt Diaz- $2 million

SP John Smoltz- $12 million (option)
SP Tim Hudson- $13 million
SP John Garland - $12 million
SP Chuck James- $2.75 million
SP Jo-Jo Reyes- $420,000

CL Rafael Soriano- $7 million
SU Mike Gonzalez- $4.5 million
RP Joey Devine- $400,000
RP Peter Moylan- $420,000
RP Tyler Yates- $2.5 million
RP Will Startup- $400,000
RP C.J. Wilson - $975,000

1B/PH Kala Ka'aihue - $380,000
INF/OF Brent Lillibridge - $380,000
2B/PH Pete Orr - $420,000

There will be two other vet. players riding the bench. Neither of which we can speculate on right now. I have the deal for Tex going through and the Braves resigning him @ $18 mill (between the two quoted numbers Boras has said). I also have the Sox taking the Renteria trade and Garland resigning for what he'll make in 2008. That makes the team payroll a nice round $100 million. Annual inflation puts the team salary at $85m in 2009 with no changes to pay structure. The extra $15 is a number right between DOB's estimates for Liberty's increase. You will note that AJ is not on this list in either incarnation. I believe that he will leave after 2008 (I'm fairly sure he'll sign a short contract for 2008 with the Braves).

There it is. The dreamer's team of the future.

Salty sits!

Thorman is in at first and McCann is catching. Espn was speculating the Franco's playing time was increased to ensure that Salty wasn't hurt before the deadline. As Julio's legs are about ready to fall off from the effort we would expect Salty in there tonight at first. Nope, we get Mr. Big Hack himself, Thorman. This might be an indication of a trade about to happen involving Salty (or for that matter Thorman). Too soon to tell, but this next 24 hours might be BIG!

24

24 hours and the NL East race has changed. From looking like a sprint to the finish to a late season grind, each of the three teams still in the race has serious injury problems to worry about. Today, Chase Utley went down with a broken hand, leaving the Phillies without their best hitter. Likewise, the Braves are without their best hitter, Chipper Jones who yesterday tweaked his groin. While both are freak accidents, Chipper's injury seems the less severe. "It's not serious," he said before the game. "I just don't want it to get any worse." Utley on the other hand has an injury that threatens to keep him out a month if not longer. "As breaks go, it's not that bad of a break," Utley said. When asked when he would return he replied "I think it will be sooner than [a month]." But, as injuries go this is not a good one for a power hitter to have. Even if he heals at the pace he expects, there will be deterioration.

Unfortunately for the Braves, the major injury to the Mets was long term and looks to be about over. Pedro Martinez, the Mets' hands down ace, recently began his 30 day trip back to recovery when he began his minor league rehab assignment. That means, that all three teams will be looking to The last month or so of the season to make their big push. That is unless someone pulls of a deadline deal.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Finaly some decent rumors!

The whole Teixeira mess has gotten so muddied the last few days I'm ignoring most of it. However Evan Grant at the Dallas Morning News has just posted this article. In it he discusses interested teams, leaving out the obligatory Yankies and Red Sox rumors. Both of those teams are not in need of 1b help as the Yanks have Giambi coming off the DL soon and the Sox have plenty of internal options.

Anyway, the current deal seems to be a bidding war between the Dodgers, Angels, and of course the Braves. I'm going out on a limb and say that Tex is not going to the Angels as the Rangers and Angels are both in the AL West and therefore division rivals. It would take an amazing package to get him moved there and I can't see it happening. That leaves the 2 NL clubs. The Dodgers are offering their 1B of the future (Loney), outfielder Ethier, and a pitching prospect, but they want Gagne back.

The Braves are offering Salty, Elvis, and Davies/Harrison. I think the Davies deal would be where JS would push considering his falling out with the team. The best news for the braves is that a Lefty Specialist (what they're requesting) is worth less than the picks Gagne would bring them if a trade falls through. Like Gagne, Mahay is also in the last year of his contract. The long shot here is C.J. Wilson who the braves covet but who is still a ways away from FA.

I'll assume the Rangers are rational here and value their relief at market value. This makes the following trades the most likely.

Braves: Salty, Elvis, Harrison
Rangers: Tex and Gagne/Wilson (depending on valuation of time under control)

Braves: Salty, Elvis, Davies
Rangers: Tex and Mahay

I'm putting the latter down as my guess if the Braves pull this off.

Wickman looks terrable

Last night's game was a disaster. Never mind Bobby pulling Huddy after an unfortunate inning. Everything but the first walk looked like Huddy was doing exactly what he wanted to do (the second walk was more a product of Winn not offering at anything). The thing that i'm mad about is Bobby not showing confidence in Huddy but showing way to much in Wickman. He looked horrible. Utterly horrible. This pitches had little movement and his fastball topped out at 92. It's like throwing a lollipop curve over and over. It takes only one or two looks before any major leaguer can belt it.

I think it's time for Bob to pack it in. His best days are behind him and i think he knows this year is his last. The braves certainly do. If they thought he was going to say would they be trying to deal for ANOTHER setup guy? We already have 2 proven ones (even if one is on the DL right now).

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Nationals' plan...

Some media outlets are surprised that the lowly Nationals have been willing to trade away major league players for stars who will almost certainly walk at season's end. I am not. In the days of compensatory draft picks and overvalued veterans, teams who develop talent in house often have the most competitive teams. Just look at the Braves, or the Indians, or even the Marlins. All three are small or medium market teams who are finding success primarily through their farm system.

The Nationals know that to play with the big boys they need to develop some big talent. The best way to do that is to have a lot of high draft picks where, with good scouting, they can select future stars and get some of their most productive years on the cheep. But why trade every and any decent player on their current roster? It's simple, there really aren't many to build a team around. When Nick Johnson and Austin Kearns are your biggest financial commitments you can rest assured that a team rebuilt from he ground up can be nothing but improved.

Think of it this way, If the Nationals get Dunn w/o giving up any stars (not that they have any beyond Young and perhaps Cordero) then they've assured themselves 2 high level draft picks or Dunn for another year. Either way the team wins. It was the same way with Soriano last year. Take the star that got some people excited about your team then if he walks take the picks. For a team not looking to contend this decade it's a very sound move.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Confidence....

Confidence is the word of tonight's game. DOB has begged Bobby not to put Soriano in in the setup situation if Bonds was coming up in the order. Hell, DOB wanted Soriano benched even if it was just a tight game. No, Bobby wasn't listening. He trotted Soriano out before this sellout crowd, Bonds's home crowd, and asked him to pitch in a 4-2 game.

Soriano did more than that. After Striking off the leadoff man, Soriano pitched around bonds who managed a single up the middle. Then he induced Klesko into a double play to end the inning. 1 hit, no walks, no runs, one strikeout. That's a line we expect from Rafael Soriano, set up man. I think he'll be ok; now that this lion his his courage back.

Taking the weekend off...

I took the weekend off (as u might have noticed) to go lounge on the beach and read a good book. God i love living in the south! Anyway, while I was gone the braves won in resounding fashion then lost one. I have a few comments on both games.

On Saturday's game:

-Harris likes a light bat. He likes it a lot. In fact the first 3 hits of his 6 in the game were with a commemorative bat. Harris plays the game the way it's supposed to be played.

-Speaking of Harris, anyone else notice that he's trying to become Ichiro? When he expects an off-speed pitch (sinker, curve etc.) he takes a step forward in the batter's box. It seems to work for Ichiro, I hope Harris can get the feel for it.

-Hot bats + good pitching win games. Braves players take note. If you lack either you're going the be having problems. See Sunday's game.

On Sunday's game:

-Salty is looking a little over matched in pressure situations. Can you believe he's 0 for 9 in bases loaded situations? By the laws of probability he should at least have 1 if not 2 hits. I think chipper needs to take him aside and explain that pitchers fall back to their goto pitch in those situations.

-Julio is looking old. He still has some pop, but that heavy bat is slowing him down rather than helping him. Perhaps he should borrow Willy's extra bat.

-Jo-Jo is on a short leash. Cox pulled him in the 5th rather than letting him work out of his jam. He had been cruising before then. Fortunately Moylan is still the man.

-Andrew still can't get a hit to save his life. He was even trying to hit singles last night, thank god.

-Even when Harris isn't hitting and getting thrown out stealing he still is a defensive marvel. Perhaps we have our center fielder for the beginning of next year. Or at least until the next Jones is ready.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Good News, Bad News

Just when we were loosing all hope in life the Braves pulled up a major upset. The defending world series champion Cardinals came into today thinking they were unbeatable. "I bet they can't hit my fastball!" Cardinals starter Mike Maroth bragged before the game. "It's hitting 85 even 86 on the [radar] gun." That kind of speed is just unheard of in today's age of control pitching and gyroballers.

The Braves only hope was their star First Baseman, who after a bout with insanity, rejoined the team Thursday. "It's great to be back. When I was in the mental hospital at Shea i thought my career was in a death spiral." The youthful Franco said. Despite the maximum security status of Shea, Franco was able to escape when Manager Minaya accidentally left the seat of his gold toilet up. "It was a tight squeeze but I made it." Franco said of his escape.

When Franco started the game today it was the first time in over a year and a half that he had been seen out of his orange and blue jumpsuit since his incarceration. His first at bat ended poorly when he grounded out. Fortunately, some of the even younger players had already helped him out with putting runs on the board. In the first A. Jones homered to drive in his partner in crime C. Jones. The Jones boys are known for theft and assault, with a deadly tree limb or cannon being their weapon of choice. In the second, a future all star named Diaz hit another HR to put the Braves out to a meager 2 run lead.

The third found Julio up with 2 in, 2 on, and 2 out. Maroth, promptly wet himself at the imposing visage of Franco and promptly offered him a free ride to first. "He was just so big up there, ya know?" Maroth said later "You could see it in his eyes that he was just going to bunt anything I was going to throw for a home run."

Back at bat in the fourth, with only an 8 run lead, Franco was called upon to drive in both runner on base ahead of him. Francoeur, a frenchman of unknown origin, and the same Diaz who had homered in front of Franco in the 2nd. Wasting no time Franco singled with authority to drive both in. Francoeur later described the scene in his heavy French accent. "Maroth was like huh huh huh, you can not hit my pitch! And Franco was like, you can not pitch to me you silly American, I will hit it to the Eiffel tower!"

Franco, the obvious pick for game and now season MVP, has another chance for a home run in the pitcher, Russ Springer, used his mind to force Franco's solidly hit ball to the ground at his feet. "It was like that Jedi guy, you know, Old Bean One Canofbeans." Catcher Jarrod Saltyalamaccccchisciaqlacia said. "You gotta be careful when hitting against fictional characters."

Braves 10, Cardinals 1

W: T. Hudson (10-5)
L:
M. Maroth (0-3)

HR: A. Jones (19), M. Diaz (5)

Notes: J Saltalamacchia was removed from the game after it was realized that no-one could pronounce, let alone spell, his name. He was replaced by Brian McCann, who's name we could spell... Jeff Francoeur left the game during the bottom of the 8th for a cigarette and expresso and hasn't been seen since... Today's pitcher, Tim Hudson, recently started a rival website to Kevin Youkilis's site www.ihaveagiantassbeard.org. Hudson's site discusses the benefits of small amounts of facial hair. It can be found at www.shutthehellupYouk.net... Julio Franco tuns 103 tomorrow... Brian McCann refused to play in Thursday's game due to the fact he was afraid "all of my shiny little clones are out to get me."... Man i'm hungry... Willy Aybar was spotted on a New York street corner giving handjobs to passers by for "crack or crack money"... Scott Thorman was asked to try out for "Who Wants to be a Superhero?". Initially excited at the prospect of being his idol Thor, he quickly refused when he was told that his secret identity was that of a major league caliber first baseman... Chris Woodward has been cast as the schizophrenic woodchuck in an upcoming Pixar film. He will spend the rest of the season learning how to chuck wood on the bench.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

JS Agressive? Really?

A quote from Stark's column today.

"Meanwhile, clubs that have talked to Atlanta say there isn't a buyer in baseball trying to be more aggressive or more creative than the Braves. 'They're in on everybody,' says one GM. 'Starters. Relievers. Bats. Older guys. Young guys. They're heating up to do something.'"

He also mentions teams asking about Elvis and Dan Smith. Despite the potential there I think those two are the best candidates to move. We all know Elvis' story, but smith is a little discussed secret. A 2003 undrafted FA he has since put up filthy numbers as a reliever and good numbers as a starter. His control is about where you'd expect for a AA prospect, but he's getting a lot of Ks. Right now he's striking out just under 13/9 innings with Mississippi.

How much you want to bet that Moore is the guy who's making a big stink over getting Smith in any trade?

BTW: If you haven't noticed i'm disavowing any knowledge of last night's game. It never happened.

Here's a new name

Dan Graziano of the Star Ledger is reporting the following "The Braves, looking for left-handed relief help, are working on a deal with Texas for lefty C.J. Wilson." It's a new one on me. I don't know how true it is but it is inline with the Braves' current philosophy. Wilson is a strikeout pitcher with some problems with control. However, he has the makeup of a future closer ala Soriano. if this trade does happen we might have 3 future closers again when Wickman walks.

That's not the best part though. Wilson is a card, through and through. He's a self proclaimed savant (and a left to boot!). Some of the things in this article crack me up! Just read it.

Some notes from Dayn Perry

Dayn Perry has a new article up on Fox Sports about what various contenders are looking for. It's an interesting read if you're bored. There are some notes that I haven't seen mentioned on the major rumor mills that might be interesting closer to the trade deadline.

First, the Rockies are looking for a catcher. Normally I'd write this one off, but there is both Francis and Helton on that team. While I doubt Francis is going to be moved, Helton is available and the Rockies have been known to eat a lot of contract. It's some money to spend, but much less than Tex will get in 2 years.

Next, the Padres are looking for middle infield help. They look very thin out there. They happen to have some good arms in both majors and minors so I could see a prospect for prospect swap there.

Finally, Perry brings up Millwood. His contract seemed huge at the time, but it's now about what you would expect from his past performance. Actually, aside from his walks Millwood's numbers this year would predict a better ERA and win total than he's getting. It might work, but i'm not sold.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Thoman has one foot out the door

With Franco on board the Braves have a decision to make. Thorman has potential, just not any that seems to translate into success in the majors. Yes, if you're looking to power Atlanta for a week, just hook up a wind turbine anywhere near Thor during an at bat, but powering an offense is a bit different. Thorman seems to have no ability to cut down his monster swing and thus he is likely soon to be traded or waived (he's out of options).

This means that Salty is being handed the 1B job OR there is already a trade pending for a 1B. I severely doubt that Bobby is going to go with Franco as an every day first baseman. Our best indicator of who's being moved actually is not currently on the Braves' roster. Brian Pena is next in the depth chart for the braves and any move involving Salty must have as it's precursor a Pena call up. In the unlikely situation that Pena is not pulled from the minors first, the Braves still have Diaz as an catching option, but Matt is no one's first option behind the plate.

With today's move I want to make a guess at the next move (note the guess aspect of this):

Thorman to KC for Jimmy Gobble
Davies and Escobar for Arroyo

Davies in the Pen, Salty at 1B

Not what we expected but Kyle Davies will now be working from the pen. I'm not a huge fan of this move but it seems to have it's advantages. A reliever can be useful with only 2 pitches (which Davies usually has) and that gives him time to find his location. However, the reason i don;t like it is that Davies will now be counted on to pitch in pressure situations, something he could not do as a starter. He also pushes out Devine, who has been effective in limited use this year.

The better news is that Salty is again at 1B against a righty. "I just want to see him against right-handers," Cox said. "I haven't seen him against them all year." This makes me happy beyond all reason as it suggests that he has earned Bobby's trust. I hope we don't have to see Thorman struggle there again.

KC with the parts the Braves need?

Looking for a serviceable closer? Want a lefty specialist? How bout a flame throwing youngster? KC is your one stop shopping mecca and they're looking to deal. What's even better is that Moore knows the Braves farm system and isn't afraid to ask for what he wants. Why is this so good? Well, in short Moore is not going to ask for the same prospects as other teams (in general, but it's a limited type of thing). This makes trades with him much more attractive as what we give up doesn't impact what we have to sell much. This makes getting that great young starter AND that relief help much more plausible.

Let's take a look at what these two teams might want to trade.

Royals Have:

Zack Greinke: The Good: By far the highest ceiling of all the Royals relievers. His stuff is filthy at times and his fastball can hit tipple didgets. A converted starter (yes, it works that way too), Greinke can go long innings and has the stuff of a future closer. On top of that, he's only 23. The Bad: He has been troubled by confidence issues (isn't everyone these days) and has seen his ERA balloon up due to the occasional bad outing. Have i mentioned everyone and their brother is calling about him?

Jimmy Gobble: The Good: He has decent stuff and has a track record of getting lefties out. He also has a few years left before free agency. The best part is that it won't take much of an effort to come up with a good nickname. I will call you Bubba. The Bad: Righties light him up. They're hitting .350 against him this year Vs. lefties that are hitting a tiny .239.

David Riske: The Good: A solid reliever with blowup tendencies. In several years with Cleveland he was an effective setup man but could never move to closer. He has struck out about on an inning over his career. The Bad: if ever you wanted a man who can have a breakdown on the mound, David is your guy. Cleveland fans didn't need a nickname for him, they just moaned his last name whenever he was announced.

Braves Have:

Middle Infielders: Prospects, ML ready players, the braves have so many middle infield prospects they're considering moving one of their Minor League all stars to the outfield. Moore has already picked off one (Pena) and i'm betting he'll want another.

Young pitching: Moore helped draft many of the players currently sitting at low A ball in the braves system. He knows what's there and the Royals have always shown a willingness to develop talent.

Payroll Flexibility: The braves are getting back a significant portion of Hampton's 2007 salary so they have money to spend. KC has increased their payroll with several FA signings that haven't made them close to contenders (A later post will analyze this strategy). I'm sure they are looking to dump some of these and look to the future.

Basically, if Moore wants a braves prospect he has the pitching to trade. If he sees nothing he likes then the Braves are out of luck as our vets are too expensive for the KC payroll.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Rally Falls Short

The Braves lost again to fall to 0-2 this series against the bottom feeding Reds. Honestly, the onus of this responsibility falls squarely on the shoulders of Peter Moylan. That's not to say that he didn't pitch well, he just didn't do what we've come to expect him to do. Other than Peter's uncharacteristically poor performance the night was full of hope. The Braves attempted one of their patented late inning rallys, falling short by only one run, Salty got the rare 1B start against the righty, and Jo-Jo proved he could play with the big boys. I think Chipper Jones summed it up best.

"I was impressed with him," Jones said. "Young pitchers — you've got to try to get them ahead in the count because they get predictable if they get behind in the count. Big-league hitters will take advantage of that. If he pitches ahead in the count, he's pretty darn good." (AJC)

It looks like Jo-Jo is starting to feel more at ease pitching up here. This kid has some stuff and the makeup that others sorely lack. Let's hope he is a pleasant surprise the rest of the way.

I know everyone else will be covering the Salty bit so i'll skip it. I still say Salty is better behind the plate long run.

Braves 5, Reds 6

W: Arroyo (4-10)
L: Reyes (0-1)
S: Weathers (18)

HR:
A. Jones (18)

(BTW: How does Reyes get the loss if he only gave up 4 runs?)

Ugly, Just Ugly

I tuned the game off after 3 batters last night. I couldn't take it. Davies has likely punched his ticket out of Atlanta (AAA or otherwise) with his performance. Evil Davies? I say Demonic. Hopefully Jo-Jo can throw some quality pitches tonight and let us beat the awful Reds.

Braves 3, Reds 10

W: Livingston (2-0)
L: Davies (4-8)

HR: K. Griffey Jr. (24)

The Mets and Roy Oswalt

Rumors are circulating that the Mets are "trying like crazy" to get Oswalt from the Astros. We all know that the Astros want to keep Oswalt and that the only reason they would part with him is if someone offered them such an amazing deal that they couldn't pass it up. The Mets just don't have that kind of prospects. Their top trading chip, Lastings Milledge, is currently being relied on to sure up the outfield while Moises Alou and Endy Chavez are hurting. Even if they had a surplus of outfielders, the Mets still couldn't pry Oswalt away by trading Milledge as his value is quite low at the moment.

That said, if a contender really wanted Oswalt they might be able to snag him. Let's take the Dodgers for example. If they offered Russel Martin AND Matt Kemp they might be able to convince the 'Stros to give him up. But we know that won't happen. From the Braves perspective, Oswalt is actually not what we need. The braves have two front of the rotation starters. Both Smoltz and Hudson could carry the moniker with little problem in today's pitching light NL. But the question is not "Should we get Oswalt?" it's "Can we get Oswalt?" As I've said before it is possible. If the Braves were willing to part with Salty, Escobar, and Harrison that might get it done. However, that's a bounty the Braves can't afford. Perhaps by including younger talent (Elvis) they could salvage Harrison. A package of Salty, Elvis, Jo-Jo and another pitcher might get it done. But again, we're talking 3 of the top 5 braves prospects.

Braves fans, we need to face facts. We have some good prospects, just no Great prospects (Yes Salty is Vary Good, still not Great). That is likely enough to pull off a trade fro a 3rd or 4th starter but likely not a #1 like Oswalt. That said, i do like what the Pirates are peddling (Ian Snell and Tom Gorzelanny) but I'm not sure that the price is worth the return. Either way, Salty needs to play and his value is not maximized at 1B. Salty needs to catch.

Free Salty, free him to catch.

Monday, July 16, 2007

The Pen Question...

Does Wickman have what it takes to finish the year as the Braves closer? Beyond that, do we trust him in the post season? Honestly, both questions worry me right now. I believe that Moylan will regress a little toward the end of the year and Soriano is better than he looks right now. However, Wickman has been inconsistent all of his closing career. His biggest asset is... his bigness. His stuff isn't filthy, he doesn't throw it by anyone, and he has a problem keeping the ball down. Not the makeup of a ML closer.

That said, i think he can be effective if there is someone to take the stress off of him and Soriano. Gonzo will be that guy next year, but for the moment there seems to be nothing in the system that can be an effective 7th inning guy. My apologies to Moylan, but some power is needed.

That said, is there anyone on the market that can help?

Update: ideas

Eric Gagne: Former allstar closer for the Dodgers. Cy young award winner in 2003. Currently plays for the Texas Rangers. He pitches effectively when healthy but had been plagued by trips to the DL. Currently pitching well in the closer role but sill in recovery from season ending back surgery in 2006.

Gagne is certainly an interesting option for the pen, when healthy. His 14.6 VORP is much better than Wickman's 1.9 mark. However, Big Bob has more appearances. That said, i'd take Gagne any day over Wickman. However, he's not just up for the taking.

Gagne will likely command a top prospect for a rental. Plus, since his one year contract is incentive based and has a full no trade protection, I'm betting the contract will become guaranteed.
At $11mil that a big chunk that the braves would have to eat or pay to have eaten. I just don't see it.

Akinori Otsuka: Quality relief pitcher and fill in closer. This Japanese import has been a steady contributer in the pen. He is currently experiencing arm issues and is listed as day-to-day with the rangers.

Otsuka is another Soriano style reliever. Good stuff and can close, but has been blocked. That does not make him a closer. Think of what happened last year. His contract is a 1year @ $3m but i think he still has arbitration left (not sure on this). Unfortunately, everyone and their brother is asking about him. On top of the requisite pitching prospect, I can see a prospect like Escobar being demanded for him if not more. That's likely more than the Braves are willing to pay. However, he would stabilize the pen. JS needs some magic on this one.

I Was Going to Quote This...

...but found myself coping most of the article. Just read it for yourself. Oh, and if you haven't seen. Enjoy.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Braves Win

Sorry about the short post. I had a long rant about how bad the Pirates are and then had a random reboot and it's lost. Shoot. Anyway, Braves won again. Good hitting and good pitching. Who would have guessed that wins games?

Braves 5, Pirates 1

W: Carlyle (4-2)
L: Maholm (5-12)
HR: F. Sanchez (3)

Open Forum: Where's salty going?

There has been alot of speculation on the future of Jarrod Saltalamacchia as of late. Various rumors have him going to any team with a decent starter available, Texas for Big Tex, and even that he's a franchise player. Overall, the causal observer can't help but be confused.

What we do know is that EVERY discussion with JS starts and ends with Salty, but until now we could only speculate what the bounty on Salty's head is. We now know what JS has asked of at least one team. "Atlanta management would seek nothing less than an impact-caliber young pitcher in exchange for promising catcher/first baseman Jarrod Saltalamacchia. The Pirates are among several teams to have inquired about him in the past month." The only starter from the Pirates I've seen linked to the braves has been Snell so I'm assuming that's what JS asked for.

What do you think? Will Salty become the next career Brave or will he be gone before he has a chance?

A scary one

Frenchy just had to come through after that rain delay montage. But he should not have had to. Consider this, before the pen began racking up innings it was stupendious. Now, Yates has an ERA of almost 20 in July, Wickman is at 7.2, Villarreal is at 5.19, and Soriano is 2.08. The last number is the most troubling because it comes on the back of 3 really bad outings at the end of June. What do these 4 have in common? Well, they all have been effective from the pen, and have been handed the ball in tight situations. Personally, I think Yates is working through some discomfort but the rest look to just be serving up some of these pitches. This needs to be fixed before the rotation begins to break down too.

Braves 5, Pirates 4

W: Wickman (2-2)
L: Chacon (4-2)

HR: A. Jones (17), R. Doumit (7)

Saturday, July 14, 2007

AJ and the Longball

Those of you keeping track right now will note that Druw has 5 HRs in his last 10 games. That makes 9 HRs from the 4 & 5 spots in the last 10 games. Yikes. If AJ and McCann keep hitting like this the Mets might need a change of pants... I'm just saying.

Bobby Not to Hot on AJ Right Now

Update: Autocorrect sucks. Thanks Chipper.

Despite having homered in his previous at bat, Andruw was pulled from last night's game in the 6th inning when the braves batted around. The explanation given today was that Druw had a "right quad injury" but he'd play today. I don't buy that for a second. I saw him sitting in the dugout with his batting gloves on chatting with his teammates seconds before the switch. He was not in pain.

We all know about Druw's struggles. The fact that we had a big lead at that point AND that there was 1 out with men on meant that AJ's patented rally killing double play grounder was what bobby feared. Regardless, other vets came out for a much deserved rest later in the game too. They just weren't pulled during a hitting spree.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Lucky 13

It turns out that Friday the 13th is the Braves', especially Brian McCann, lucky day. Not only did the braves pull within 1 1/2 games of the Mets, but they also proved that the break didn't affect their bats. In fact, every starter reached base at least once and all but one had a hit (Thorman walked twice). That included Tim Hudson who picked up his 9th win along with an RBI. I think that's a pretty good early birthday present. Hudson turns 32 Saturday.

Hudson pitched a good game but McCann was the star. Going 3-4 with all three of his hits being for extra bases and two going out. He also accounted for almost 1/2 of the braves runs. Those of you keeping track might want to note that McCann has 4 HRs, 12 RBIs, and 4 runs scored in his last 6 games. The runs scored is a worrying stat as in those games Brian has had to drive himself in. Fortunately, he seems quite capable of doing so.

Braves 9, Pirates 1

W: Hudson (9-5)
L: Snell (7-6)

HR: A. Jones (16), B. McCann 2 (11)

More speculation on starters

Update: JS was quoted today as saying " “I don’t have any intention of trading [Salty].” That makes this trade a whole lot harder. Escobar won't get it done with the Sox due to the presence of decent infield prospects in the Sox system. However, the more I hear the more I think Oswalt is our target. The Astros are out of it and need to rebuild and the braves have proven that we can field a minor league team and still win. If you want to rebuild fast you look at the example of the Marlins and get a lot of prospects for your older expensive vets.

So as you can tell, I'm a bit of a rumor monger and I've got one that looks to have some legs. Chris Solberg over at Baseball Opinion is speculating that Vazquez could become a Brave before the deadline. I've been watching the Sox's pitching situation since Buherle's name first came up in June and I must say that Vazquez is a very good #3 for the braves. He eats innings very well. His shortest outing was April 13th @ Cleveland where he was pulled after 5.1 innings due to the pitch count, other than that he goes 6-9 consistently while keeping his team in the game. He doesn't allow base runners primarily due to his control (he walks less than 1 per 4 Ks). Best of all he comes cheap ($11.5 mil/year), is signed long term (through '09), AND has a limited not trade clause to only teams in the west. It should also be noted that JS likes this guy. He's been linked to the Braves almost every year since 2003. There was even a rumor of us sending AJ to the yanks for him back in the winter before last season.

What would it take to get him now? Solberg says Salty and a top pitching prospect. I disagree. I think Salty would definitely have to go as behind Pierzynski there's nothing in the system. But a young starter might not be what the Sox are looking for. The rotation in Chicago is fine but the pen is horrendous. No one outside of Jenks has an ERA under 4 and the pen has blown a lot of games. I can see one or two of our young players in the pen going. I'd bet Villarreal and Devine. Villarreal is a proven long reliever and Devine has the stuff to be a setup guy if he works out his confidence issues.

Now, do i think this trade makes sense for both sides. Yes. Do i think JS will let that much talent go all at once? No. This deal is one that we will only see closer to the deadline as JS will be reluctant to give up two pieces of the pen at once. We may see a vet from the pen and a minor league pitcher go instead. That minor leaguer is almost certainty not Harrison. I consider Jo-Jo part of the staff right now btw.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Julio Franco

Update: It's Official. Say goodbye the the extra relief.

Update: Time to man up on this
one. I still don't understand it.

When we need a coach... one of those "Don't call us, we'll call you" type deals. I'm not taking a roster spot away from a better player for him. End of story.

Braves in 08 (Part I: Starting Pitching)

Update: Mike Plugh has mentioned the Braves as one of the top suitors for Uehera. He also mentioned that winning this year would go along way to getting Uehera to sign.

It's never too early to look at 2008. This post is the first in a series of posts relating to the 2008 team and it's contracts. What better place to start than the part of the club that's been giving fans heart attacks all year, the starting rotation.

We know these players will be on the team:

John Smoltz:
Contract: $14mil 1 year contract with options for '09 and '10. The '09 option vests on 200 inning pitched and is for $12mil. The '10 option is a club option for $12mil with a $2mil escalator with 200 innings pitched in '09.
Status: We all know John will be at the top of our rotation next year. However, injury concerns this year have him currently on the DL. I'm not sure how a man over 40 can pitch like he has and I don't see him improving next year. Still, on his worst day he's a better #2 than most of the rest of the league's #2s.

Tim Hudson:
Contract: $13mil for '08 and '09 with a mutual option for '10 at $12mil or a $1mil buyout.
Status: Tim is another one we know will be at the top of our rotation next year. I can foresee him being the #1 to take some pressure of Smoltz. There aren't realy any worries here as long as Huddy keeps himself committed like he is this year.

Mike Hampton:
Contract: $15mil left on his monster 8 year contract and a $20mil '09 option (the buyout is being paid by Colorado).
Status: We count on Hampton for nothing. Anything we get is gravy.

Chuck James:
Contract: none (still under team control and not arbitration eligible). $.395mil contract likely.
Status: In an ideal world Chucky would be a #4 or #5 in our rotation. He's been decent this year but nothing spectacular.

Buddy Carlyle:
Contract: None ('07 is a 1 year contract at $.4mil)
Status: He's been useful filling in at the bottom of the order, but i doubt he'll stick in the rotation for '08.

Kyle Davies:
Contract: None (still under team control and not arbitration eligible).
Status: If he fixes his problems and banishes his evil twin he can win himself the #5 spot. It's just not his yet.

Jo-Jo Reyes:
Contract: None (still under team control and not arbitration eligible).
Status: Too young to really stick in the rotation but the pen is an option worth looking into.

Matt Harrison:
Contract: Minor Leaguer
Status: Very young but he has the stuff of a middle to top of the rotation guy. If the braves loose confidence in Davies for '08 we could see this kid right out of spring training.

External Options:
I very much doubt that JS is going to make a big splash in the FA market. However, trades are possible. I won't even dabble in who's even available in the trade market this winter, but i know JS is looking for a #3 or a potential replacement for Smoltz. An international signing is not out of the question.

Koji Uehera:
Status: FA after the 2007 season from Yomiuri Giants.
Upside: He is a command pitcher who pitches like Greg Maddux did. At 32 he'll be well seasoned and ready to pick up a #3 spot and contribute. No posting Fee.
Downside: After Dice-K, Uehera was likely the best starter in Japan last year. This year he's been a closer out of need. Both of these facts make it almost assured that he's on a few people's radar. He won't get a monster contract like Dice-K but he might pull off something in the $30mil 3 year range w/o pitching a day in the bigs. Also, to my knowledge, the braves haven't signed a player directly out of the pacific rim yet. Take a look at MLBtraderumors.com has to say on him.

Final Prediction:
1) Smoltz
2) Hudson
3) ???
4) James
5) Davies/Harrison

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Mark Teixeira

Good player, not coming here. End of story.

No all stars

I tuned into last night's all star game for two things. Ichiro's inside the park homer (thank you random banner in RF) and McCann's 9th inning. And, as it turns out, neither was hyped at all by our good friends at FOX. I've already said my piece about them, so i'll move on to the topic of this entry. The Braves really have no all stars.

When you look at the numbers put up by even our best hitter this season (Edgar hands down) and our close second (Chipper of course) you see something amazing. First, Hanley Ramirez should have made the team over Hardy hands down, but Edgar is well behind Hanley in BA, HR, SB, and Slugging. That's more than a trifecta. Edgar isn't an all star this year. Second, Chipper is on par with Miguel Cabarera in most categories over the same number of at bats, but Chipper has gotten to the dish 70+ times fewer than Miguel. That alone would make the decision easy for the players. When you have to guys producing at about the same rate, but one has been hurt, you choose the healthy one.

The only other players on the team worth mentioning were the two actually voted on, John Smoltz and Brian McCann. John Maine has been better all around than Smoltz, end of discussion. As for McCann, as i noted previously, there just isn't anything at catcher this year to write home about beyond Martin. Barrett is hitting like a clone of Brian, Estrada, Molina, and Lo Duca all have better BAs but the rest of the stats are a tossup between the 5. Personally, i think McCann was voted in because he's the only likable one in the bunch. Lo Duca is an ass, Barrett doesn't get along with anyone, Estrada has always been a little anti-social, and Molina... well i don't know anything bad about him, nor do i know anything good.

But how can a team with no all stars be 2 games back from a team with 4, three of which were starters? Easy, the Braves are playing like a team. It's something i've never seen before from a Braves lineup. You have 10 guys producing (with the notable exception of AJ) and doing it differently every day. Besides Chipper, who seems to work more like a stabilizing influence than anything else, no one hitter has distinguished themselves as the go to guy. Theres not Reyes who makes runs for the team. No Beltran who will unbeatably be up in the bottom of the 9th and hit a bomb. Nothing. Our hitters go out there day after day and hit, our pen goes out there and cleans up when the starters falter, and most importantly they do it time and time again.

Folks, this is a team. Honestly, if i was an opposing pitcher i'd fear our lineup more than the Mets, Yanks, or even the Red Sox. If JS can get the rotation patched up before the deadline, I say the Braves are going to October, maybe even November.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

AJ Back with the braves in 2008?

Several of the major sports news channels have been talking about how our FA to be CF has likely hurt his chances to sign a huge contract with his poor play. Even if he hits his career mark the rest of the way he'll finish at .238/.327/.455, the worst line since his 1997 rookie campaign. That hurts. However, hitting up to his career mark is not out of the question if he hits like Chipper the rest of the year. I think he's boned, but that's me.

Andruw has a few options at season's end if he finishes with the above line. First, he could sign a 1 year deal and try and improve. I'd be willing to bet the Braves would give him 1 year @ $8-10mil with performance bonuses in a heart beat. He could even probably get 1 year $14-16mil guaranteed from the Braves. The previous number is a common 1 year deal that players looking to rebuild their careers sign. Piazza is signed for $8.5mil, The Big hurt is making $5.56 (and hitting better than AJ), and Luis Gonzalez is making $7.16 mil. Two out of 3 of these contracts look like bargains but all three are older players. And that's where Andruw is unique. There hasn't really been this much of a funk by a star player who isn't injured so it's hard to compare.

Second, he could take a long term contract that's heavily incentive laden. For example. A 4 year contract with a fifth and sixth year vesting that become guaranteed at a certain trigger. This deal could start somewhere around $65mil and end somewhere near $110 mil. Not bad in the grand scheme of things. The sad thing is that if he had played even his average this year he would have gotten 8 years/$136mil easily.

Finally, he could pull a Buherle and resign with the Braves like he did last time. This last one is is a bit more likely now that this cold streak has come on. Druw is a notoriously streaky hitter and any of the big market teams that would try and sign him would have trouble stomaching that inconsistency. Think about the pressure he would be under someplace like Chicago, LA or, god forbid, New York. He'd be picked apart by the media so quickly his head would spin. A $75 mil contract for 5 years, back weighted of course, would be about right.

But who knows what will happen in the world of Scott Boras.

Vet @ 1B?

Update: Ken Rosenthal is speculating this just. It's good to be a step ahead of the experts...

If JS wants a vet at 1B then he may want to look past Shea Hillenbrand's bad attitude. The Angels really didn't have a place for him this year and his numbers have tailed off. He's still fairly young (Almost 32) and will be making league minimum the rest of the year. The only caviot beyond his... interesting personality is that he wants to play every day.

Personally I think Hillenbrand is just an older clone of Thorman. His numbers are down, due to playing in the AL West most likely, but he also hasn't played much. It's a low risk pickup and it gives us the option of sending Salty down for some work on playing first for next year.

Liberty willing to pony up for a star?

So i've been thinking about the conventional wisdom that a corporate owner is less likely to increase payroll and allow the team to make a big splash in the free agent market (% investment in a single player). Now, some of you are just going to stop listening now as you've hear this all before, but I promise this is NOT the logic you've heard before.

First, let's examine the team value (Data from Forbes) Vs. Payrol (Data from USAToday). Note: Forbes' numbers only reach up to the 2004 season so please take this with a grain of salt. When we compare the Year/Year change in value to the same measure of payroll we find the following statistics.

1999: 3.73
2000: 4.04
2001: 2.06
2002: 11.08
2003: -.07
2004: 2.55

As you can see, payroll is directly related to team value with a multiplication factor of between 2 and 4. The blip in 2002 and 2003 indicates an over valuation (actually a bubble if you look at all teams) and then the correction (taken together the two years produce a multiplier of 1.12). So, now that we can SEE that investing in a team actually returns 2-4X the investment, what else would a team need to see that increasing payroll helps?

Well, making big FA signings also draws people to the park. Let's look at Texas' signing of A-Rod. Before the signing, The ballpark at Arlington drew 2,800,147 fans (Data from Ballparks of America). After the singing it drew 2,831,021, a change of 30,874 fans or ~1.1%. Not impressive. But when you include the fact that major league baseball LOST 135,000 fans between 2000 and 2001, a bump up like that is impressive. Further, the only comparable draw ballpark (Houston) lost 150,000 by itself between the two years. That's a 5% drop, making the net gain for Texas over 6%. That ain't bad for a single player*.

Finally, there's the TV and merchandising revenue. Every jersey, hat, bat, or anything else with a team logo is money in the team's pocket. When A-Rod was traded to the Yanks no store in town has an A-Rod jersey in stock 2 days later. TV also got a boost with the YES network reporting record ratings that year. Add to that increased AD revenue and you'll need a dump truck to carry your new loot.

So why don't teams under corporate management make big splashes? Well, unfortunately it's politics. Corporations budget money well in advance and are forced to channel dollars into capital expenditures, not human resources. As much as we think of a great player as a building block, he's just another employee to the company. It's always a tough sell to get the CEO $5mil a year, it's even harder to get someone 5 levels down $20mil.

Such is business. But will Liberty break with tradition and allow JS to pony up for a star? Well, we already know that the payroll is all but fixed at around $80mil but there were early indications that that could be flexible if there was a good opportunity out there. My feeling about that is that if JS can pull off another Hudson trade and needs some cash to get him signedin the short run Liberty is on board. Look at the McCann signing. There was no way the braves had to make that deal, but it was certainly worth the money even if it cost us short term.

But who would Liberty be willing to pony up for? Well i can be all but certain that Liberty would have approved Hudson's deal, and if Buherle had come over, they would have likely approved the deal he signed with the Sox. I know they would not approve an A-Rod type deal, or a Zito deal. That leaves us with some promising ideas. Any young starter with a proven track record would likely get a decent deal with a Liberty seal. That means Snell, Willis, or even Zambrano (though i doubt he's leaving the Cubs) would get a nice deal.

Long story short:
1) the Braves will not be signing a big FA any time soon
2) the Braves do have some money to lock up young talent long term (Frenchy?)
3) a trade that brings in young talent, especially a starter, will likely result in rentention

*I know other things happened, but i'm making a point.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Ending the 1/2 on an up tick

The Bravos won again last night beating the offensively challenged Padres to capture the series (The braves clenched the season series with their win on Friday) and move to within 2 of the lackadaisical Mets. Those of you who watched know hoe bored to tears i was listening to the ESPN color guys. I actually think they tried to work in a Monty Python reference at one point... but failed. I think that also summed up the game from the booth. Complete and utter failure.

The good news is that Greg Maddux is human as he proved giving up back to back jacks to McCann and Johnson. After the one to Johnson, Greg seemed upset with the home plate umpire and avoided getting tossed based on reputation (Wells got tossed Saturday at the first word about it). They even had a little man-to-man after the inning. Anyway, the more i see KJ hit the less I want Escobar in at second. Escobar is clutch but KJ needs that assurance that he's the man at the position.

Another blogger brought up the point that Escobar does a decent job at 3b (i dare say better than Chipper most days). What are the chances that Escobar takes everyday 3b, Chipper moves to 1b to give his aches some time to rest, KJ gets 2B every day, and Salty gets sent back down? I love Salty to death, but I think at the moment his most useful talent is knowing how to catch Jo-Jo (oh, and that bat thing). Perhaps the two should become better friends and move to the majors together come September. For now, neither looks to have a spot.

This makes the roster:

Lineup:
1) Escobar, 3B
2) Rent, SS
3) CJ, 1B
4) AJ, CF
5) McCann, C
6) Frenchy, RF
7) KJ, 2B
8) Diaz, LF

Rotation:
1) Smoltz
2) Hudson
3) James
4) Buddy
5) Davies
6) Option (who ever is available for a spot start)

Bench:
Harris (4th OF, pinch runner)
Thorman (Pinch hitter, 1B)
Woodward (2B, 3B)
Pena (Backup Catcher)

Pen:
Wickman (CL)
Soriano
Devine
Moylan
Villarreal
Paronto
Yates
Ledezma

It's not a bad lineup. The bench is thin though...

Anyway, the only down side to last night was Wickman. He looked awful. 5 hits, 3 runs, 3Ks. The oddest line i've seen in a while and almost the saddest. This adds fuel to the fire of letting Soriano take closing duties for a while and letting Wickman rest. Devine is up now, and he looks good. I think the 7th, 8th, and 9th should be Devine, Moylan, Soriano for the next few weeks, and if we can get more than a bag of balls for Wickman, the rest of the year. Just my 2 cents.

Braves 5, Padres 4

W: K. Davies (4-7)
L: G. Maddux (7-6)

HR: B Mccann (9, 2nd inning off G Maddux 1 on); K Johnson (9, 2nd inning off G Maddux 0 on)