The Atlanta Braves have found their replacement plan after failing to sign Ken Griffey Jr.
According to published reports, the Braves signed free agent outfielder Garrett Anderson (formerly of the LA Angels of Anaheim) to a one year deal;
Anderson, who had played his entire career for the Angels, agreed to a one-year deal worth approximately $2.5 million, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Sunday.
Here are Anderson's 2008 stats:
BA: .293
HR: 15
RBI: 84
SLG: .433
Braves Go With Plan B
Oh For Christ's Sake
According to John Schlegel, a beat writer for MLB.com, it looks like the drug A-Rod fessed up to taking isn't exactly legal in the Dominican Republic;
Primobolan, understood to be the substance Alex Rodriguez referred to as "boli" and reported by Sports Illustrated to be what triggered his positive drug test in 2003, is not and was not legal in the Dominican Republic, that country's top drug regulatory official told ESPNdeportes.com.
Dr. Pia Veras, who oversees the agency that monitors pharmaceuticals legally sold in the Dominican Republic, refuted the account Rodriguez told during his Tuesday press conference of his cousin getting "boli" legally over the counter in the Dominican Republic.
"What Alex Rodriguez stated at the press conference doesn't make sense," Veras told ESPNdeportes. "It is important for us to clarify that such substance has not been registered and is not currently registered for legal sale in Dominican pharmacies -- not now and the same applies for the years 2001 to 2003.
Ol' Lefty is Giving it Another Shot
According to an article written by ESPN's Jerry Crasnick, Tom Glavine is returning to the Braves for at least one more season;
Tom Glavine reached agreement on a one-year contract with the Atlanta Braves that could pay him $4.5 million if he attains all his incentives.
Glavine will make a guaranteed $1 million, and an additional $1 million in his first day on the major league roster during the regular season. He'll be owed $1.25 million after 30 days, and an additional $1.25 million after 90 days, a source said.
Who Says You Can't Go Home?
Looks like Ken Griffey Jr is returning home, to the Seattle Mariners.
According to various reports, Junior notified the Atlanta Braves that he'd be returning to play for the Mariners:
Two baseball sources said that Griffey made his decision after two days of debating between Atlanta, which is close to his home in Orlando, Fla., and Seattle, where he's been a fan favorite since breaking in with the Mariners as a 19-year-old phenom in 1989.
Griffey spent last season split between the Reds and the White Sox.
His 2008 totals were as follows;
BA: .249, 18 HR, 71 RBI, .424 Slugg%.
Two Outfielders Taken Off the Market
In what we're considering a really strange move, the Los Angeles Angels of Anahiem signed free agent outfielder Bobby Abreu to a one year deal worth $5 million ($8 million with incentives).
The Angels now have an extremely crowded outfield; Torri Hunter, Gary Mathews Jr, Vlad Guerrero, and Juan Rivera.
Abreu is expected to bat ahead of Vlad in the Angels lineup.
Abreu batted .296, 20 HR, with 100 RBI last season for the New York Yankees.
The Washington Nationals and free agent slugger Adam Dunn agreed on a two year contract believed to be worth $20 million.
Dunn figures to add a lot of life to the Nationals lineup, joining pals Ryan Zimmerman and Austin Kearns in a tough National League East Division.
Dunn, 29, hit .236 with 40 home runs and 100 RBIs with the Arizona Diamondbacks and Cincinnati Reds last season.
The Blame Game
It’s the age-old “who-done-it” question that will continue to baffle until answered.
Who was the snitch, low life, leaky faucet who released Alex Rodriguez’s name to the media, regarding his failed steroid test in 2003?
Lets take a look at all the players in this saga, and examine who might be the culprit;
The Profiteer in the Bookstore;
Isn’t it a little too convenient that Joe Torre and Tom Verducci have a book out that centers around an A-Rod bashing story? Would someone with insider knowledge be willing to sell their soul in order to push a few more books?
Analysis: Torre is one of the most respected men in baseball, so it would be a far reach to assume that he’s the one that leaked A-Rods’ name. Verducci is a reporter held in high regard by fellow peers and wouldn’t waste his credibility just to sell a couple more copies of “The Yankee Years”.
The Spurned Lover in the Bedroom
C-Rod and A-Rod get down and dirty in their divorce, as details of A-Rod’s elicit affairs with blond Canadian bimbos and Madonna are spewed throughout the newspapers over the past year. Could this be a case of a “woman scorned”?
Analysis; C-Rod seems to like the press and limelight (remember that F-You Shirt she wore to the Stadium?). C-Rod’s stock depends on what type of a relationship her and A-Rod had; if Alex talked to her about everything between a pitcher’s tendency to throw him sliders and failed drug tests, then she becomes a prime suspect. If their relationship was “don’t ask, don’t tell” then she quickly falls out of favor.
Jealous Teammate with an Axe (to grind) in the Clubhouse;
Jose Canseco; baseball’s biggest tragedy since the invention of the Designated Hitter. The guy could hit a baseball 500 feet but never got paid accordingly (in his opinion). In his second book “Vindicated” Canseco wrote that A-Rod had taken steroids and his name was left off the Mitchell Report.
Analysis; Canseco, ever ready to make a quick buck due to financial woes, seems to be the most likely candidate out of the group. He’s got the motivation (jealousy, greed, desperation) but the question that remains is; “How did he get the names on the report?”
The Nerd in the Computer Room;
Wouldn’t it be great that we find out the guy who brought A-Rod down was a twenty five year old computer programmer in the Commissioner’s Office? This one makes the most sense.
Analysis: Dorky. Dweeby. Un-athletic. Couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn. Wouldn’t hit water if he fell out of a boat. Has to hit the inhaler after walking up two flights of stairs.
Has the brainpower to unlock the password that protects the document that has the name of all 114 failed drug-tested players in the 2003 tests.
Remembers every athlete who stuck him inside of a shower stall/locker/garbage can after administering an atomic wedgie.
Hits send on his email program after attaching A-Rod’s name with supporting documents.
Thousands of years of cruelty to the weak-bodied-able-minded erased with the click of a mouse.
Pitchers and Catchers Report Dates
Organization | Pitchers & Catchers | First Workout | Position Players | First full workout |
Arizona D-Backs | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Atlanta Braves | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Baltimore Orioles | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Boston Red Sox | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Chicago Cubs | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Chicago White Sox | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Cincinnati Reds | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Cleveland Indians | Feb. 12 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 17 |
Colorado Rockies | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Detroit Tigers | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Florida Marlins | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Houston Astros | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Kansas City Royals | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Los Angeles Angels | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Los Angeles Dodgers | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Milwaukee Brewers | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Minnesota Twins | Feb. 15 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 20 | Feb. 21 |
New York Mets | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
New York Yankees | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Oakland Athletics | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Philadelphia Phillies | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
St. Louis Cardinals | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 17 |
San Diego Padres | Feb. 15 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
San Francisco Giants | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Seattle Mariners | Feb. 13 | Feb. 14 | Feb. 17 | Feb. 18 |
Tampa Bay Rays | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Texas Rangers | Feb. 14 | Feb. 15 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Toronto Blue Jays | Feb. 15 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 20 | Feb. 21 |
Washington Nationals | Feb. 15 | Feb. 16 | Feb. 18 | Feb. 19 |
Orioles Continue Flurry of Offseason Moves
Baltimore, sit down and ask yourself this question;
Only a day after trading for Rich Hill of the Chicago Cubs, Baltimore's front office lands a two year deal with uber-utilityman Ty Wigginton.
Someone in Baltimore is clearing off shelf space for the 2009 Baseball Executive of the Year Award.
According to ESPN.com:
The deal, pending a physical, is worth a total of $6 million, according to the Baltimore Sun. Foxsports.com was the first to report the story.
Wigginton, 31, is a right-handed hitter who mostly plays third base, but also has played first, second, and all three outfield positions.
Wigginton, who played for the Houston Astros last season, hit .285 with 23 homers and 58 RBIs. He is a career .270 hitter in seven seasons; the Orioles will be his fifth team.