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A great chapter in Canadian baseball is beginning this week... Justin Morneau of New Westminster, BC was called up yesterday to the Minnesota Twins.

Morneau is coming up to replace Chris Gomez, who is going on the DL, but I don't think he's going to play much middle infield. Morneau creates an unholy logjam in Minnesota at first base, DH, and right field, with five players (Kielty, Morneau, Mientkiewicz, Mohr, and LeCroy) fighting over three spots... and Jacque Jones's leftfield spot should be in contention too. At any rate, Morneau is too good, too promising, to pass up for a team with a pretty good and pretty safe lead, but a mildly struggling offense. The Twins, awash in hitting talent, are nevertheless ninth in the AL in runs scored and tied for eighth in on-base percentage. Morneau might not help now, but he has a chance to be huge... and the one largest thing the Twins offense lacks is a hulking presence in the cleanup spot. GM Terry Ryan has said he hopes the move will be for good, and not just a temporary accommodation, leading one to believe that a trade may finally be in the works to land a proper second baseman in Minneapolis.

Another great chapter in Canadian baseball may be soon to begin... the Sacramento Bee says that Rich Harden may be in Oakland as early as next week.

Hideki Matsui still hasn't gotten the groundswell that I expect will push him, somewhat farcically, into the AL starting outfield for the All-Star Game. Matsui is 6th in the outfield voting with 206,653 votes, about 70,000 votes behind Torii Hunter for the coveted third place in the AL outfield race. I still think Matsui will start receiving an avalanche of support from parts various, sometime in the near future.

It appears that Sammy Sosa will be suspended during the Cubs' trip to Toronto this coming weekend. Sosa's appeal is expected to be heard today or Wednesday, and his revised suspension is very likely to be at least six games, and will start after the appeal decision, sure to be before the weekend.

I always love the "make-up" names on the All-Star ballot, the guys who have been waived, are in AAA, are hitting .135, or have been injured all year and have 13 plate appearances. Every year, I try to make one ballot with those names and submit it; if there's no one good, I try to formulate a good write-in in that category (but only where there's no good candidate on the ballot, and max two write-ins per ballot just like real life). But in almost every category, there's someone whose year has been bitterly awful.

Drum roll please for the Bizarro World All-Stars, 2003 Ballot (teams are as they appear on the ballot):



AL NL

1B Paul Konerko, CWS 1B Mo Vaughn, NYM
2B Brandon Phillips, CLE 2B Brent Butler, COL (write-in)
SS Omar Infante, DET SS Julio Lugo, HOU
3B Ricky Gutierrez, CLE 3B Brandon Larson, CIN (my NL ROY pick!)
C Brandon Inge, DET C Michael Barrett, MON
OF Kevin Mench, TEX OF Jeffrey Hammonds, MIL
OF Gary Matthews, BAL OF Danny Bautista, ARI
OF Aaron Rowand, CWS OF Darren Bragg, ATL (write-in)
DH Dean Palmer, DET


I hope you all enjoy the release today from yesterday's baseball withdrawal symptoms. And one final thing... don't look now, but the Big Hurt is back.
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The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
_Jurgen - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 01:10 AM EDT (#100482) #
don't look now, but the Big Hurt is back

Glad to see it. When I was in High School, the White Sox were my favourite team (and it wasn't just because I got to wear the coolest cap). It was during the Thomas-Ventura-McDowell years, and Thomas was my favourite ballplayer. It was Thomas who taught me the value of OBP, who kept walking when coaches kept urging him to be more aggressive.

I think how Thomas and Bagwell finish up their careers will go a long way to determining McGriff's HOF candidacy. If either of them can approach or surpass McGriff's counting stats, I don't think Crime Dawg will make it in.
_jason - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 01:20 AM EDT (#100483) #
Let's hope that Matsui isn't an all-star starter. I noticed Aubrey Huff gets no love from the voters.
_Jurgen - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 01:28 AM EDT (#100484) #
I think Huff's problem is being listed at 3B. I've been voting for him as my 3rd OF (behind Ramirez and Wells) in the Write In box.
_Ryan Burns - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 02:41 AM EDT (#100485) #
What chance do y'all think our own Frankie C has at making the All-Star team? I think with his numbers he is - just barely -but with needing to have one player it gets a little tricky. Let's just hope that Huff makes it over Baldelli.
_jason - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 03:42 AM EDT (#100486) #
I don't think Cat will make it, although Delgado, Wells, and Halladay have very excellent chances.
_Jonny German - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 09:06 AM EDT (#100487) #
It's a given that Huff is having a better year than Baldelli, and obviously he's got a longer history. But as far as I'm concerned, Baldelli going over Huff is far from criminal. The All Star game is not for the thinking fan or even the hardcore clueless fan. The All Star game is for the masses... it's for the casual fan, it's about getting his attention and making him more interested in baseball in general. While Huff may be the guy you want want in your sabremetric lineup, Baldelli is hype, he's young and promising and exciting to watch. If I were a TB fan, my motivation for heading out to the ballpark would be to watch Baldelli play.

Sosa's suspension likely to be at least six games... Anybody else think it would be worth considering making suspensions longer in the case of frivolous appeals? I'm not saying that this necessarily applies in this case, but appealing of suspensions has become horribly automatic, and it cheapens the punishment. If there were the possibility of having an extra two games tacked on to my suspension, I wouldn't be appealing for the sake of choosing which opponents I'll miss. Another possible improvement would be to have a standard lag between infraction and suspension... i.e. If I do the crime on June 10, I do the time starting June 17. If there is an appeal it has to be wrapped up in that one week lag.
_Chuck Van Den C - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 09:56 AM EDT (#100488) #
It's a given that Huff is having a better year than Baldelli

Baldelli has an 815 OPS. Huff's is 929.

Baldelli has the reputation of being a good defensive center fielder. Huff has the reputation of being a poor defensive right fielder.

My question, does Baldelli's defensive edge (and positional adjustment) make up for the 114-point OPS difference? If not, how much does it cut into it?

My inclination is to give the edge to Huff, but I don't think it's clear cut. That said, the point may be moot. Baldelli is getting all the attention while Huff's performance is generally going unnoticed.
_Juan Acevado s - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 11:06 AM EDT (#100489) #
Just to throw this out there...I haven't looked at his '03 stats (they can't be too bleepin' hot) and I don't recall how effective he was when he was accumulating his saves in Detroit, but Juan Acevado is going to be released today by the Yankees, anyone think he'd appeal to Toronto in any shape or form?
_Jurgen - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 11:19 AM EDT (#100490) #
Juan Acevado is going to be released today by the Yankees, anyone think he'd appeal to Toronto in any shape or form?

Well, he's 33 years old, with a career 4.16 ERA (coming into the season) with a 1.55 K/BB in 531.2 IP. He was pretty good with Detroit last year, but thats looking more the exception than the rule. I think a lot of teams will look at that 28 saves and make a play for him... I can't believe they weren't able to get anything for him in a deal.
_Jonny German - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 11:54 AM EDT (#100491) #
...anyone think he'd appeal to Toronto in any shape or form?

I think Acevedo's shape and form would fit nicely with Toronto. The Toronto Walrus that is...

As for the Blue Jays? He'd be an upgrade on Tam... I think his performance would be similar to what you'd get from Pete Walker out of the pen. Big corollary: I don't have any confidence in Tosca to get the most out of any reliever.
_Chuck Van Den C - Tuesday, June 10 2003 @ 03:39 PM EDT (#100492) #
I think a lot of teams will look at that 28 saves and make a play for him...

I disagree. No one made a play for him in the off-season, and that was off 28 saves and a 2.65 ERA in 74 innings. The Yankees only signed him because of all the injuries to their pen, and for just $900K.

As per the amazing baseball-reference.com,
Acevedo's ERA+ since his rookie year in 1995: 83, 113, 164, 77, 118, 114, 158. For his career, 108.

He's been terrible this year, to be sure, but he'd ought to be able to squeeze into the Jays' pen somehow, no?

That said, Tam's career ERA+ is 127. His last three years, all in Oakland, 188, 144, 90.

I'd flip-flop Acevedo and Tam, given the opportunity.
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