If the Yankees are seriously interested in Kuroda we better move on is right. Kuroda's agent is just milking the situation for a few extra dollars before the Yanks makes the announcement.
Oswalt?
And Hale took a lot of grief for being too cautious. As I recall Manny ran through Hale's stop sign several times and made it home safely. Maybe Manny will be a good third base coach.
I can't see any way they would give up all that farm talent for Gonzalez. I think a one year deal for a starter, and they hope that Buchholz comes back, maybe Bard gives some starts, maybe Lackey comes back next year. I know that's a lot of hopes and maybes but I think that's what we're looking at this year.
I don't know if there's really enough data to be sure about that. He's only had 9 career starts.
OPS against by pitch count:
1-25 .610
26-50 .639
51-75 .806
76-100 .453
He had some very good outings of more than 3 innings in 2011.
You have to figure if the Rangers were willing to post a 50 million + fee, they've got another 80 million or so behind it for his contract. Crazy money, for sure.
The view from the top floor of the Prudential building is worth checking out. Also the brunch at the Top of the Hub restaurant there was pretty incredible the last time I tried it...mind you that was 25 years ago, but I would guess it's still pretty damn good. Only trouble is you might have to lie down for awhile after eating it.
I've got quite a few Sox books:
Both Shaughnessy books
All Bill Lee's books
Yaz-recent autobiography
Faithful-Stephen King
Now I Can Die in Peace-Bill Simmons
Feeding the Monster-Seth Mnookin
Personally I think the Shaughnessy books are actually very good, although I hate a lot of his columns. The Bill Simmons book is a very good read-it's just a collection of his online essays but it works. The Seth Mnookin book is good. Bill Lee's autobiographical books are excellent, and very funny of course. The Yaz autobiography stands out as a great coffee table book-some fantastic pictures of the Sixties/Seventies teams.
I've borrowed some from the library as well. Damon's book Idiot is good for a laugh only. Pedroia's autiobiography is worth reading, because his personality really comes through it.
As crazy as it seems $15 million a year isn't ace money anymore. It's #2 money. Burnett, D-Lowe, Lackey, now Buehrle, all getting that much. Ace money is 22 million plus-Sabathia, Santana, Cliff Lee. That 50% more than $15 million...incredible.
nick, they took on two enormous 7-year contracts last year...this offseason they're in the position of being close to the luxury tax threshold without even doing anything...I can't see how that signals what you're suggesting...the Yankees haven't made any big moves yet either, does that mean Hank and Hal are getting ready to sell?
Yep, the Crawford signing and the Gonzalez trade/extension certainly demonstrated the cheapness and lack of commitment. Some people might say 300 million on 2 contracts shows some commitment. Good for you for seeing through all that.
The Rays have done a brilliant job in the draft, especially with pitching. Can they maintain that now that they're finishing so high in the standings? We'll see. At some point the combination of high finishes and low budgets has to catch up with them...
Here's another way to look at it. In the 10 years of the Henry ownership the Sox have reached 95 wins 6 times. In the prior 52 years they reached 95 wins 4 times.
I think the re-signing of Andrew Miller makes plenty of sense, though I trust they're not actually counting on him. It's a non-guaranteed deal which can cost at most a little over $1 million. We're getting a new pitching coach, maybe something can be salvaged from this guy yet. At the least maybe they can convert him to a decent reliever.