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  • Mets 1b/Trade Candidates
    By DSchwartz on May 18, 2009 | 2 Comments2 Comments  Comments

    Well Carlos Delgado will have surgery and be out until around the All-Star break. Possible replacements that may possibly arrise via trade are Aubrey Huff/Orioles; Nick Johnson/Nationals; Victor Martinez/Indians; and maybe even Jorge Cantu/Florida if any of these guys are or become available. I can see all these teams saying they need 2 of the Mets top  prospects, and I honeslty don’t think any of them except Victor Martinez warrant them, however, I would be willing to trade both if we can also land a SP in the deal ala Cliff Lee or Fausto Carmona (even though he hasn’t been great) from Cleveland; and Jeremy Guthrie (even though he hasn’t been great) from Baltimore. I doubt the Indians are willing to trade Victor Martinez and or Cliff Lee/Fausto Carmona so soon, but if so I would be willing to trade Fernando Martinez(of), Jon Niese(sp), Reese Havens or Wilmer Flores(ss) for BOTH Victor Martinez and Fausto Carmona or Aubrey Huff and Jeremy Guthrie, potentially. I think at catcher and 1b, Victor Martinez would be a dream fit, but Huff/Johnson would be less attractive becasue then what do we do when Delgado is back? I guess Huff could play LF again which moves Murphy to RF and then Church and Sheffield become unhappy or Murphy loses playing time which I would thoroughly disagree with. I guess Nick Johnson/Washington can come quite cheap since they also have Adam Dunn and a sundry of outfielders. I just strongly want to emphasize if we trade for a 1b then we should attempt to land a SP along with them if we rid of our top prospect(s). Agreed?

    Some other random suggestions/potential candidates:

    Russel Branyan/1b, Jose Lopez/2b, Erik Bedard/sp – Mariners… I think something could work here

    Adrian Gonzalez/1b, Jake Peavy/sp – Padres… I wish something could work here

    Jermaine Dye/of – White Sox (Move Murphy to 1b)…He’s solid but we really need a SP also

    Matt Holliday/of – Athletics (Move Murphy to 1b)…May require way too much for thus far subpar performance

    Helton/Atkins/1b – Rockies… Hmm, maybe Helton Could come cheap other than money cost?

    All these guys are probably tradable minus Adrian Gonzalez, but they have a top notch 1b prospect.

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  • 2009 MVP: Johan Santana vs. Albert Pujols
    By DSchwartz on May 7, 2009 | 7 Comments7 Comments  Comments

    Hopefully you read one of my last posts regarding Johan Santana as the NL MVP for 2009 (http://www.majorleagueblogging.com/baseball-news/mets-rotation-johan-santanamvp-trade-needed/). Basically it gave Johan Santana’s stats up to that point and iterated the need for a starting pitcher via trade.

    In Santana’s 1 loss, he had a line of 7 innings; 3 hits; 2 runs (BOTH UNEARNED); 1 walk; and 13 strikeouts. Unfortunately, he went up against Josh Johnson/FLA. Last night he went up against Chan Ho Park/PHL (horrendous). Nauseatingly, Park went 6 innings; 1 hit; 2 walks; 1 HBP; and 5 strikeouts. Santana 1-Up’ed him (not in hits) going 7 innings; 2 hits; 3 walks; and 10 strikeouts.

    Johan Santana is now 4-1 with a .91 ERA and a .91 WHIP. He’s got 54 K’s in 39.2 IP. He’s 2nd in the NL in wins; 1st in strikeouts; 2nd in WHIP; and 1st in ERA.

    Prior to last night’s game he was giving up 1.1 runs a game and was only getting 2.2 runs a game from his offense. Now he’s given up only .91 runs a game (not even a run a game!) and in last night’s win, he got less than half his 2.2 runs a game support. The Mets really need to start provding him with some runs. No matter how much I stress that statement, it will still be the understatement of the world.

    Johan Santana is still undefeated against the Phillies, the Mets new and beyond obvious, nemesis. He is now 3-0 lifetime against the Phillies in 7 career starts with a 2.44 ERA – phenomenal.

    Johan Santana now has 31% of the Mets wins on the season. With complete concerns and inconsistency from Mike Pelfrey, Livan Hernandez, Oliver Perez, and John Maine (pitched solid other than bb’s in his past 2 starts), Johan Santana is infinitely important. I understand that the CY Young is the award to receive for a pitcher, and it epitomizes how great of a season a starter had, however, the MVP is how fantastic a player is and helps his team. There’s no doubt in my mind that Johan Santana at this point is the NL MVP and should be by season’s end. Of course the obvious competition is Albert Pujols/1b-STL. He is absolutely amazing: .364avg-28r-11hr-31rbi-4sb-.467obp-.747slg-1.215ops. According to ESPN, he’s on pace for 167r-66hr-185rbi-24sb. These stats are sensational. He’s the best hitter in the MLB. And if those stolen bases keep up he’ll be by far the best fantasy player (even with out them he will be). If you’re willing to trade him for needed roster slots, you better get a top notch player at each position you need: I’m talking Youkilis/1b; Hamels/sp; McCann/c. And then you can provide an extraneous SP & C back (just a wee-bit of fantasy talk).

    Honestly, it’s up in the air, and Albert Pujols (#1 overall on ESPN Player Rater) is so utterly valuabe to the Cardinals. They have other hitters performing right now though – Ryan Ludwick/of; Chris Duncan/of; and Yadier Molina/c. They also have 3 starting pitchers performing well: Joel Pineiro; Kyle Lohse; and of course Mets’ horror Adam Wainwright. I’ve explained before in my last post. The Mets have solid offense: Reyes-Murphy-Beltran-Delgado-Wright, but they only have one great starter: Johan Santana (#5 overall on ESPN Player Rater) – http://games.espn.go.com/flb/playerrater?

  • Dan Uggla’s Big Pay Day – New Contract
    By Jeffrey Gross on February 16, 2009 | 1 Comment1 Comment  Comments

    Dan Uggla is going to cash in on a big payday.

    How much will he be earning is the big question mark.

    It was decided on Tuesday that the Marlins second baseman will be hitting $5.35 million this 2009.

    Uggala was seeking the said amount, and the Marlins countered him with $4.4 million. In that instance, Uggala’s salary went to an arbitration hearing Wednesday in Arizona. The three arbitrators was forced to decide on to which of the amounts the All Star would be receiving.

    The Marlins could have kept their negotiations with Uggla’s agent, Jeff Borris until the hearings began. But the team followed their policy to stop these kinds of talks if no agreement has been made after the said deadline.

    “You never want to go to a hearing, win or lose,” Borris said. “You try to settle, but the Marlins have a policy. … Bottom line is the team is trying to make the best deal for them, and you can’t fault them for that. And the player is looking for the best deal for him, and you can’t fault him for that.”
    Finding a resolution on this matter in a hearing is not a primary option, since by nature of the said arguments, derogatory compliments and other side comments are mostly conceived. In this regard, the Marlins and Uggla repeatedly said while going to the meeting, is but a business transaction.
    Uggla said during the Marlins’ club caravan and Fan Fest last week, that there are no hard feelings. The Marlins felt the very same thing. In that same event, team president David Samson said in a town hall meeting that Uggla was deserving of the amount of money that he requested.

    With the issue resolved, Uggla and the rest of the position players are expected for their first workout on Tuesday while Pitchers and catchers will begin on Saturday.

    Spring Training will be opening its doors this Saturday at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter Florida.

    Uggla, who in 2008 reaped 32 home runs and fellow All-Star shortstop Hanley Ramirez had 33, are the club’s top players, thus forming one of the most prolific middle-infield combinations in the Major Leagues.
    Last year, he (Uggla) also set his personal high with 92 RBIs along with a .260 batting average with a .514 slugging average.

    Uggla was voted twice as a reserve in the All-Star Game. He was picked as a rookie last 2006 and 2008.
    As a Rule 5 Draft pick in December 2005, Uggla has become a stalwart image due to his history of making it into the big league, having steady numbers for a second baseman, garnering 90 home runs in his three seasons in MLB.

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