First flight of the season

March 2011
Laguna Hills, CA - An earlier conversation with my son John Lamb confirmed he will be throwing for the Double A Northwest Arkansas Naturals on Saturday at Kauffman Stadium against the Triple A Omaha Storm Chasers during an exhibition game for the Kansas City Royals fans. John indicated, “I feel good and I’m looking forward to it, ” which is really a good example of a typical answer for most games during my son’s pro baseball career. Game is set to begin following the regularly scheduled Royals game 3 of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim season opening series. John and many other fellow teammates will be boarding their first flights of the season and for most I’m sure their first time playing in front of a Kansas City crowd that is anxious to win again and return a championship to the city.






There has been a large media buzz about the Royals prospects and their farm system throughout the baseball community. I have seen local, regional, national and even worldly reports about the players within the Royals development system and it brings me tremendous satisfaction over the acknowledgement. However, I’m confident most, if not all, of these talented young men realize the true value of these articles, lists and opinions soaring about the world of communication. I know of one for sure that will not be satisfied by the words of the media until he is in the show helping his team win another championship ring. Saturday’s minor league assignment and game in front of the watchful eyes of an eager crowd will be exciting for players, coaches, staff, families and fans alike.



Plans to break down my son’s performance through heavy evaluation and opinion are not for this media platform, but for those of you that may have never seen my son in person throw a ballgame I would like to make a few suggestions. He works at a smooth but fast pace, so hit the concessions and bathrooms early unless your fully satisfied with the left-center field view of pitching on the monitors throughout the stadium. John’s typical strike throwing performances seen in the past can quickly expedite an already quick pace of work for the 20 year-old from the South Orange County area of Laguna Hills, CA. John said he was up first for the Naturals but offered no indication to his restricted pitch count numbers this early in a full-season schedule. John is merely one of many other prospects within the Royals system on display Saturday.






Enduring any form of long travel right now is an ongoing challenge and will need to be delayed until a little later on during this second full-season of my son‘s career. Hope to catch a glimpse of the game and John pitching on the television but not holding my breathe of finding a feed. I plan to simply listen to the radio broadcast just like I did when I was a little boy sitting in my Grandmas’ kitchen and grin during the game. While John Lamb takes another first step in his professional baseball career playing in front of the Royals fans, I may have a slightly bigger grin than when I was 6.



The Lamb family extends well wishes to all professional baseball players, coaches, staff, families and friends during the grind of another season trying to live out a dream.

Line of the Day: 03/31/2011

March 2011
C Ramon Hernandez was 4-for-5 with a home run, three RBI, a run and seven total bases. Oh, by the way, the homer was a walk-off, three-run blast that gave the Cincinnati Reds a 7-6 Opening Day victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.

Line: 5 AB, 1 R, 4 H, 3 RBI, 1 HR

Hernandez is only owned in 0.2% of ESPN leagues and 5% of Yahoo! leagues. If you skimped out on or punted a catcher in a two-catcher league, Hernandez might be worth a look. I know it's just one game but an offensively-productive catcher is always worth a look.


Agree? Disagree? Nominate your own Line of the Day player using the comments section or hitting me up on Twitter.

President Obama Stays in the Bullpen

March 2011
Copied From Big League Stew

Last season, President Barack Obama created one opening day's biggest headlines, pulling out a cap belonging to his hometown Chicago White Sox and tugging it over his head before a ceremonial first pitch at a Washington Nationals game.
This year, there was no such controversy as the President and the White House elected to skip his standing invitation to opening day festivities at Nationals Park — or any other ballpark, for that matter.
So why didn't Obama loosen that left arm on Thursday for his second opening day pitch since taking office?  (He was out of the country for opening day in 2009, but he did throw out the first pitch at the 2009 All-Star Game in St. Louis.#
The White House didn't cite an official reason for staying home, but it's not too hard to speculate why he left the Nationals' first pitch duties to representatives of the five branches of the armed forces this time. With the war going on in Libya and Japan still trying to recover from its natural disasters and nuclear threats, perhaps President Obama and his advisers felt it wouldn't be appropriate to take an afternoon off from his duties to create a frivolous headline with more serious matters at hand.
After all, even George W. Bush — a big baseball fan who threw out five opening day pitches during his tenure — refrained from participating in opening day in 2002 and '03 as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were just beginning.
There's also the possibility that Obama plans to scale back his public athletic endeavors for awhile after taking plenty of heat for filling out a NCAA tournament bracket on television the week after the tsunami and earthquake in Japan.
At the very least, he's aware that he received some criticism for that move:

"A lot of folks focused on the fact that I filled out my bracket," he told ABC's "Diane Sawyer on Tuesday. "Obviously I hadn't been spending that much time studying it since I don't have anybody in the Final Four."
The president shouldn't feel too bad. Hardly anyone has a respectable Final Four these days.
Also, there's something telling me he'll be back on the rubber next year. The only president to ever throw a first pitch in each of his years was Eisenhower, who did the deed eight times and is tied with Franklin Delano Roosevelt for most presidential opening day pitches ever.
*FDR might have done more, but he did not participate in any opening days after the United States entered World War II. For more trivia, check out this list of presidential first pitches.
Plus, next year is an election year. Doing something as presidential-looking as throwing out a first pitch never hurt anyone at the ballot box.
Put Obama down for a 2012 return, right alongside Stephen Strasburg#notes#.
Want more baseball fun all season long? Follow the Stew on Twitter and Facebook!


Related: Stephen Strasburg, Chicago White Sox, Washington Nationals, Opening day 2011

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El Presidente Obama

March 2011
La temporada pasada, Presidente Barack Obama creado los titulares más importantes del día una apertura, extraer una gorra pertenecientes a su ciudad natal de Chicago White Sox y tirón a medida en la cabeza antes de un primer lanzamiento ceremonial en un juego de los nacionales de Washington.


Este año, no hubo ninguna controversia como el Presidente y la Casa Blanca elegido omitir su invitación permanente a la apertura de fiestas de día en el parque nacionales — o cualquier otro estadio, para el caso.


Así que ¿por qué no Obama Afloje ese brazo izquierdo el jueves para su segundo lanzamiento del día de apertura desde que asumí? (Era del país para el día de apertura en 2009, pero él tirar el primer lanzamiento en el juego de estrellas 2009 en St. Louis. #


La casa blanca no citan una razón oficial para quedarse en casa, pero no es demasiado difícil especular por eso dejó el primeros lanzamiento derechos de los nacionales a los representantes de las cinco ramas de las fuerzas armadas esta vez. Con la guerra en Libia y Japón todavía trata de recuperarse de sus desastres naturales y amenazas nucleares, quizás Obama del Presidente y sus asesores sentían no sería apropiado despegar una tarde de sus funciones para crear un titular frívolo con asuntos más graves a mano.


Después de todo, incluso W. de George Bush, un gran fanático del béisbol que arrojó cinco apertura día lanza durante su mandato, se abstuvo de participar en el día de apertura en 2002 y ' 03 como las guerras en Afganistán e Irak estaban empezando.


También existe la posibilidad de que Obama planea reducir sus esfuerzos atléticos públicos para un rato después de tomar un montón de calor para rellenar un corchete de torneo de la NCAA en televisión la semana después del tsunami y el terremoto en Japón.


Por lo menos, es consciente de que recibió algunas críticas por ese movimiento:



"Mucha gente se centra en el hecho de que llenar mi soporte," le dijo a "Diane Sawyer la ABC martes."Evidentemente ya no gasto mucho tiempo estudiando ya que yo no tengo a nadie en la Final Four."


El Presidente no debería sentir mal. Casi nadie tiene un respetable Final Four en estos días.


También, hay algo me dice que será el año próximo a la goma. El único Presidente nunca tirar un primer lanzamiento en cada uno de sus años fue Eisenhower, que hizo la hazaña ocho veces y está empatado con Franklin Delano Roosevelt para apertura más presidencial día lanza cada vez.


* FDR podría haber hecho más, pero no participó en la apertura de cualquier días después de que Estados Unidos entró en la segunda guerra mundial. Para más Curiosidades, consulte esta lista de lanzamientos primeras presidenciales.


Además, el año próximo será un año de elecciones. Hacer algo como presidencial-mirando como tirar un primer lanzamiento herido nunca nadie en las urnas.


Presentado Obama para un 2012 retorno, junto a Stephen Strasburg # notas #.


¿Desea todo temporada mucho más divertido de béisbol? Siga el guiso de Twitter y Facebook!





Relacionados: Stephen Strasburg, Chicago White Sox, Washington Nationals, abriendo día 2011



Correo electrónico

Estofado de grandes ligas

Shakeup in The Atlantic League

March 2011
http://www.independentbaseball.net/independent-baseball-teams/newark-bears-join-canam-league/

The 2011 Golden Spikes Award

March 2011
http://web.goldenspikesaward.com/index.html

Hitting and Pitching Books

March 2011
Tommy Leavitt Loves Baseball and He loves to Blog About it This is a Reprint from    
Sunday, March 21, 2010.
TOMMY CAN BE READ ON http://baseball1967.blogspot.com/ OR REACHED AT ondeck99@hotmail.com

Hitting and Pitching
If you are new to baseball and want to get great insights into how to teach the Little Leauger players how to hit and pitch,you might want to pick up the following books on Pitching.
NOLAN RYAN'S PITCHERS BIBLE by NOLAN RYAN and Tom House. Tom House was a pretty good pitcher in his day and couple him with the Strikeout King and you will learn
a thing or two. Amazon should have it available.The book is invaluable for a young mind and if you are teaching 13-17 year olds it teaches discipline ,mental and physical and training
skills. It is a great tool to help you coach and encourage or if you want to learn the rigors of what a Pitcher actually has to go through.Page 167 will give you statistical analysis of RYAN's
career from 1980-1988 while with the Houston Astros,it is jaw dropping what that man could do with a baseball!!! . Baseball is a game of stats and one stat just floored me was that Ryan
 threw harder at the end of games than at the beginning during that time period. He is a Living Legend and well earned !!!
The second book every baseball fan should read in their lifetime is The Science of Hitting by Ted Williams and John Underwood . The cover says it all The classic guide to "the single
 most difficult thing to do in sport'. Again Amazon should have it and MLB batting champs such as Wade Boggs have endorsed it.Ted Williams in my opinion was probably the best hitter,
 to ever play the game given that he fought in two wars and was the last player to hit.400 that is amazing. He entererd the Hall of Fame in 1966 and passed in 2002. You might also want to
 google Rod Carew ,Tony Gwynn and Charlie Lau.Remember to have fun and another great book to help you do that is THE ULTIMATE BASEBALL ROADTRIP. A FAN'S GUIDE TO Major
 League Stadiums by Josh Pahigian and Kevin O'Connell published in 2004 ,so the current ballparks built in the  last 6 years will not be in their Yankees,Mets Twins and Nationals to think
of a few.It does have great insight and will help you plan family outings,i.e. its great background material.Check out the link I provided and go to youtube and look up some of baseball stars
 of today and the past. Remember to stretch before and after you throw batting practice

Opening Day For The Red Sox

March 2011
http://boston.redsox.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20110329&content_id=17185776&vkey=news_bos&c_id=bos

Opening Day Sox Lineup

March 2011
As expected, the Red Sox Opening Day line-up (against 'tough' left-hander C.J. Wilson) has J.D. Drew sitting, Mike Cameron in right, Kevin Youkilis hitting clean-up and David Ortiz bating sixth.

REVIEW—MLB11: The Show

March 2011
OK, let's start with a disclaimer. I'm over 50 and remember when "Pong" was the hot video game. So, my assessment of MLB11: The Show is purely based on the extent to which I'm having fun playing it—and very little to do with the geeky technical aspects. I left that part to my 15-year old son, who contributed his evaluation of the game to this review. Not that he's a geek or anything—you know what I mean!

Bottom line? MLB11: The Show is really fun to play. Some of the most impressive things to me are the little details that add so much to the realism of the experience—something SONY has always been good at. For example, if you look closely, you'll see that some players have clumps of mud on their cleats. Nice. I also noticed that in this year's version the pitcher can balk if he's not careful—excellent. And, while I hate the fact that hitters can call endless timeouts during real MLB at-bats, the fact that you can do it in this game lends even greater credibility to the experience.

OK, now the semi-geeky stuff. My son tells me that he likes the 'pure analog controls'. OK. He also likes something called the '2 versus 2 multi-player mode'. I'm down with that. And the 'Road To The Show' minor league mode is even better than before.

So, all in all, if you like baseball and you like playing a very realistic virtual version of it, go out and get MLB11: The Show. There's still none better.

You can find out more about MLB11: The Show HERE.

Tune-Up In Texas

March 2011
Josh Beckett may have silenced a few of his doubters (your humble scribe included) by tossing 5 crisp innings in the Sox final Spring Training game in Houston. Beckett gave up just one hit (a squibber that got through A-Gon and Pedroia) to the Anemic Astros—and that might just be enough to get him out of his pre-season funk.

For The Love Of The Game

March 2011
This is a Reprint from March 22,2010.
By Tommy Leavitt. Tommy Leavitt Loves Baseball and he writes and blogs about it. He can be reached at ondeck99@hotmail.com or his blog http://baseball1967.blogspot.com/



Monday, March 22, 2010
Love OF The Game
When you grow up playing baseball and looking at baseball cards you start to form your love of the game and your favorite team or players!Now kids and adults are playing MLB games on WII,
Play Station or XBOX. Kids nowadays have their ds ,psp,kindle and soon the ipad. Info is everywhere. You can surf the web and pick up info at any time of day on your favorite Team, franchise,
or ballplayers.We all follow players on the way up but what happens when the Lights go out and the Party is over. How about if the Party never started ? It does not take away your love for the game.


Baseball is everywhere and I thought you might like to go where some former stars go every night all summer long . We are going to the Independent leagues. Seven Leagues come to my mind off
hand and you can use the baseball search engine on my site to find info for game times if you live in the areas where they play. The first League I keep an eye on is the United League down in
Texas. Ita started May 16, 2006`. I just like the names of the teams . Two always come to mind the Amarillo Dillas in Amarillo ,Texas and the Coastal bend Thunder in ,Robston ,Texas.
I may buy a Dillas hat soon ,if I can hide it from the wife. I always just think of an Amadillo getting caught in a west Texas thunderstorm in a Flashflood and floating away.
Nothing to do with baseball I know but thats what I think of. The baseball must be good down in Texas because ole Nolan Ryan came from there and he was pretty good I would say!

The next league I watch is the Northern League founded in 1993. This league has stadiums that seat 4000 to 8000 people and again some pretty colorful names.
The league is populated by teams like the Joliet Jackhammers from Joliet, Illinois . All I can think off is the Blues Brothers playing baseball and causing mayhem in the process.
The league also sports teams like the Winnipeg Golden Eyes in Winnipeg ,Manitoba. You have to love baseball to roadtrip on a bus from Joliet ,Illinois to Winnipeg,Manitoba .
Do not ever tell a baseball player that he has not paid his dues because even if you are a superstar you started some where and rode some buses in the process.In the Can Am League
you will fiind the Belleville Basher( Brian Daubach) managing a team this year Yes the daubberr ,Brian Daubach the former Red Sox will manage the new Pittsfield, Massachusetts team
the Pittsfield Colonials.They will compete against teams from Canada as well, like the Quebec Capitales,where Eric Gagne was plying his trade last year.

In the American Association you have teams like the St Paul Saints, Wichita Wingnuts ,Grand Prairie AirHogs and the Pensacola Pelicans. Major League Umpire Lance Barrett started in
The American Association.Former Saint Paul Alum Kevin Millar is trying to make the Chicago Cubs this year. Kevin is baseball famous for keeping it all fun and crazy in the clubhouse ,
check out the 2010 Pensacola Pelicans video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEYenCQZzJ8&feature=player_embedded this could be a future Millar. Hunter Davis could be a future star.
These players are playing to get there but what is wrong with a little fun on the way?


In the Atlantic League this year they have TOSHHISA NISHI former japanese Star with the Lancaster Barnstormers and the Newark Bears proclaim the signing of former Yankee prospect
Fernando Seguignol.
The Bears have some great Alumni including Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson after the superstar years. Rickey Loves Baseball so much he would not retire! The Bears can also claim Jared
Weaver and Ruben Sierra as Alumni. My favorite is the coach of the Somerset Patriots Sparky Lyle.
I stiil have not gotten over Danny Cater for Sparky Lyle ,or Larry Anderson for Jeff Bagwell ,and I think David Murphy for Eric Gagne may rank up there eventually.The Frontier League will bring
you the Big News that Dmitri Young has signed on to be a VP and Sr. Advisor for Baseball Operations for the Oakland County Cruisers in Waterford ,Michigan. This league also has teams like
the Washington Wild Things in Washington,Pa.and another favorite of mine the River City Rascals in O'Fallon ,Mo.
These team names are great and the baseball is great too.The final League I check in on is The Golden Baseball League. The Motto of this League is "WE LOVE BASEBALL".This league is
only a few years old but they have some great names associated with it Darrell Evans,Tim Johnson,Garry Templeton and Phil Nevin. The league has internet podcasts,and claims a couple of
Alums in the majors Chris Jakubaustas a former Fullerton Flyer and Scott Richmond former Edmonton Crackercat. You have to love a league that claims Bret Boone as one of your managers .
Boone comes from baseball pedigree his dad Bob Boone played in the majors from 1972-1990 and his grandfather Ray Boone played in the majors from 1948-1960. His brother Aaron is the
first MLB player to come back from OPEN Heart Surgery. Bret had a great career in the Majors and has picked a great place to start his new career Victoria,BC isn't a bad locale. It is on my
bucket list to visit , before I finish my journey.
Have Fun visiting these Independant Leagues and Teams and remember that if you want to take that Baseball journey across America someday include some of these teams in your stops.
Remember to root,root,root for the home team!

Wicked Zoo Pictures

March 2011





Poll: How many Royals wins in 2011

March 2011
Poll: How many Royals wins in 2011

Middle Relievers

March 2011
This is a Reprint from an Article by Tommy Leavitt on March 25,2010.
Tommy Leavitt can be reached by reading his Blog at http://baseball1967.blogspot.com/ or at ondeck99@hotmail.com

Thursday, March 25, 2010
HOW DO YOU SPELL MIDDLE RELIEF
When you think of a middle relief pitcher in Baseball ,no jumping for joy happens, A Pitcher does not start out their career thinking I want to be a middle reliever , a mop up man , or a setup man .
What exactly do you have when you get a good middle reliever.You end up with a key ingredient in the chemistry of a team. Often this position gets so overlooked that it really can be the key to a
team success or failure.

What pitcher on your favorite mlb team gives you quality innings;selflessly and does so in age old work ethic fashion.
Most people that are casual fans do not think about this at all. If you have a team that is going to win 90-100 baseball games ,that same team is going to lose 60-70 games .
Given the fact that some of those wins are going to come from behind ,if the team is good ,say 8 wins a season from behind;then say in the losses the score was like 7-0
in the third that is when the middle reliever shows up; what do these facts mean about the middle reliever.

Its pretty logical that straight up if your dealing with 16-20 games that could make or break your season then if your middle reliever gives you an average of 4 innings per
outing over those 20 outings;and another 50 or 60 innings over the course of the season then a good middle reliever is giving you 130-150 innings in a season .
This is equivalent to 15-17 starts per season,if the starting pitcher went 9 innings. Now if you look at a season when the first pitch is thrown you have 162 games and
9 innings per game which equals 1458 innings on average excluding the extra inning games and rain shortened games. If you have 5 starters and they give you an average
of 7 innings per start with about 30 starts each , your talking 1050 innings, in reality its probably closer to 6 2/3 innings per start.That takes away 50 innings from your starters.
Your setup man may give you 60 innings each ;and your closer 40 innings.If you add it all up the starters are giving you 1000 innings, the setup guys 60 innings each righthander
and lefthander. So 1000 plus 60 and 60 and 140 from you middle reliever ; plus 40 from your closer equals 1300 innings of quality pitching on a successful team wth 90-100 wins.

As the math becomes a reality to most managers the bottom line is that you will still be shy 158 innings. Those become the innings of prayer as I call them and the bottom line is that
158 innings is about 17-18 games. Now you know why a middle reliever is important. The middle reliever also preserves the staff ; he gobbles up innings that give no glory, and
sometimes the team comes back; and he gets the win! Most of all the middle reliever with a good outing helps the team momentum. Baseball is a game of momentum.
The middle reliever preserves opportunity for the team. Look up any championship team and I guarantee you that you will find a great middle reliever.

BaseBall 2011 Let The Games Begin

March 2011
By Tommy Leavitt
Tommy Leavitt Loves Baseball and He writes and Posts about it.
Currently you can reach him at
http://baseball1967.blogspot.com/ or at ondeck99@hotmail.com

This is it for MLB,Little League ,High School and College Baseball!
Are you ready for the season? Have you got your gameplan and tickets ?
 What teams are you following? This is my sample gameplan .
 You want to spread out your different levels of Fandom .
 I follow my High School alma Mata so I check out their away games in the town I live in,fortunately they play in the town I work in, against the school I work at, shhhh!!!
 As for my college its a tough one , unless I play hookey one day and skip down to the Northshore of Boston.
The kids are at three different levels so their will be many minivan shuffles over the next ten to twelve weeks
. Their will be lots of double shuffling! We love the Red Sox and we are excited about the Futures at Fenway in August,2011 and we also love the SeaDogs.
 Plus we have our local New England College Baseball League Affiliate the Sanford Mainers and we are set for a great season! Follow your teams have fun and stay limber.
You never know when you have to throw a batting Practice. Also sign up for your baseball camps early its a great time for the kids. I like the Sanford Mainers camp.
I will give you a link to the Mainers WWW.SANFORDMAINERS.COM Have fun and score a game or two with the little ones or your friends or other half.

FN Predictions On ESPN Boston

March 2011
FenwayNation's predictions for the 2011 Red Sox appear today in the Gordon Edes column on the ESPN Boston website. You can read the entire article HERE.

Defending World Series Champions Poised for Victory

March 2011
http://www.mercurynews.com/giants/ci_17714848?source=rss&nclick_check=1

USC The Defending NCAA Division 1 Baseball Champions

March 2011
http://gamecocksonline.cstv.com/sports/m-basebl/scar-m-basebl-body.html

LSU BASEBALL

March 2011
http://www.andthevalleyshook.com/2011/2/7/1979333/2011-lsu-baseball-preview-positional-players

Sox Trade For Back-Up Catcher

March 2011
Despite passionate denials from Red Sox brass earlier today, Boston did, in fact, trade for back-up catcher Mike McKenry from the Rockies.

JetBlue Park In Your Future!

March 2011
According to a tweet by Eric Fisher of Sports Business Journal, the Red Sox have extended a sponsorship deal that will result in their new Spring Training ballpark being called (are you ready?) JetBlue Park. Let's hope they don't hire the concession workers from the same pool as certain of their flight attendants.

Sister-Kissing In Palm's Finale

March 2011
The last game the Red Sox will every play (as the home team anyway) at City of Palms Park ended in a 1-1 tie. Oddly, what seemed like a sure thing game-winning HR by Jarrod ('Am I having a hot Spring, or what?') Saltalamacchia was blown back into the field of play for an out. Apparently, the Baseball Gods (by the way, shouldn't baseball be mono-theistic?) did not want this one to end in a Red Sox victory. City of Palms, we hardly knew ye!

2011 Predictions

March 2011
With 2 days remaining until the open of the 2011 season, it's time for my annual predictions post.

Last year didn't exactly show me to be a master prognosticator (AJ winning Cy Young? Ugh!), but this year I have my Nostradamus hat on and will undoubtedly fare much better!

AL East-

1. Red Sox
2. Yanks
3. Rays
4. O's
5. Blue Jays

While it is true the Sox picked up 2 very good players this off season, they also lost 2 substantial pieces from last year's team. Replacing Beltre with Gonzalez and Vmart with Crawford may or may not be a push, the Sox still have a better rotation than the Yanks and I think it will carry them to a very close win of the AL East crown.

AL Central-

1. Twins
2. Tigers
3. White Sox
4. Cleveland
5. Kansas City

2011 may be the last year teams will be able to kick the Royals around...enjoy it while it lasts!

AL West

1. Oakland
2. Texas
3. LAA
4. Seattle

A solid, young staff and some nice additions make the A's the team to beat out west

NL East-

1. Phillies
2. Braves
3. Marlins
4. Nationals
5. Muts

The turmoil continues in Queens where Reyes is traded mid-season and the team loses 100 games.

NL Central-

1. Brewers
2. Reds
3. Cards
4. Cubs
5. Pirates

Don't worry...by all accounts teams will be beating up on the Pirates for years to come!

NL West-

1. Giants
2. Rockies
3. Dodgers
4. Padres
5. DBacks

AL Wild Card - Yanks
NL Wild Card - Braves

AL
Yanks over Twins
Sox over A's
ALCS - Yanks over Sox

NL
Phillies over Giants
Brewers over Braves
NLCS - Phillies over Brewers

WS - Yanks over Phillies

AL MVP - Alex Rodriguez
NL MVP- Troy Tulowitzki
AL Cy Young - Justin Verlander
NL Cy Young - Josh Johnson

NESN Touts Robotic Cameras

March 2011
It's a good thing Adrian Beltre has moved on. God knows what he would have done to one of the new NESN robotic cameras in the Red Sox dugout. If they ever came too close to his head—look out! You remember NESN, don't you? It's the same network that saw fit to televise a paltry number of Spring Training games this year (e.g., you can't see today's final game ever at City of Palms). They do, however, cram replays of Liverpool and Camelot Hotspur soccer games down our throats. (Hint for John Henry: Americans don't care about sports where the use of hands is illegal.)

So, that's nice that we have more robots in the dugout and more 'miced up' players. Maybe next year you can try out all that fancy technology on an acceptable slate of Spring Training games. Just a thought.

Hug a Blogger: a Social Site

March 2011

January 2010, the Pioneer Cemetery, Phoenix, Arizona, Sharon (who is known to everyone in the blogger world as Autumnforest) and I met in person at Debe's workshop.  From then on we hit the road together many times in search of abandoned places and old cemeteries around the state.  Those abandoned places inspired our book we coauthored: Abandoned Places: Abandoned Memories. (Look on the sidebar for links to the book for sale on Kindle and Nook.)

We got the idea for hug-a-blogger after we met another blogger, Devin (MyFavoriteMonsters).  It started as an idea for a book.  We would hit the road and meet other bloggers we were following.  Bloggers who had the same interests but had their own uniques paranormal stories. This trip was going to be documented by us by blogging a post, tweeting game questions, and showing pictures or videos on facebook.  Sharon pitched the idea to a publisher but no one wanted to take a chance financing a couple of unknowns.  Basically we posted a few things to the blog, twitter and facebook, but it stayed inactive for a few months.

Just recently Sharon came up with an idea to revamp the Hug-a-Blogger blog and concept.  Here is what she posted on her blog:  http://autumnforestghosthunter.blogspot.com/2011/03/hug-blogger-blogging-social-site.html

Check out the blog and become a follower:  http://hugablogger.blogspot.com/
Become a follower on Twitter:  http://twitter.com/#!/hug_a_blogger

Only a few

March 2011


The video above was the fourth out recorded by John Lamb during a simulated game on March 24, 2011 in Surprise, AZ. The out was recorded against a future teammate Mike "Moose" Moustakas. Fairly certain that John and Mike have not played on any teams together during their Royals careers. All players in the video are deemed by many to be the Kansas City Royals top prospects in a talented farm system.




Laguna Hills, CA - The 2011 professional baseball Spring training days are dwindling down. Some teams have already left the Cactus of Grapefruit League facilities based on their schedules for their opening series. For example, the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim are scheduled to play at Dodgers Stadium tonight in the customary Freeway series here in Southern California. Some guys are continuing to compete for last minute roster spots on the 25 and 40 man rosters with only a few days left for the opening day of the 2011 Major League Baseball season. All teams are equal in the beginning throughout professional baseball. Just about everyone within the rookie level, class A, double A, triple A and the big leagues, whom are scratching and clawing their way up the ladder, is a bit on edge right now while they wait for their official assignments.



My son John Lamb is more than likely to be assigned to the Double A level, in the Texas League, with the Northwest Arkansas Naturals to further develop his professional baseball career. John got a taste of the big league camp this Spring as a non roster invitee for additional opportunity to learn and grow around the game. My son has made me smile throughout these early stages of his professional career path and we are looking forward to many more throughout this and coming seasons. So for now, nothing official, other than a current Naturals roster spot, can contradict my position on where John will begin the season for the Royals organization. Believe me when I say that there are plenty of things a 20 year-old could be doing other than playing at the Double A level in professional baseball and we are grateful for his opportunity and baseball development.


It was nice to get my first live action of my son playing in his third Spring training with the Royals since signing out of Laguna Hills High School following the 2008 Major League Baseball First-Year Player draft. Life does not permit staying out in Arizona during his work but whenever the stars line-up to get a peek I make every effort possible to watch him throw. Travel has been a serious challenge for sometime now since my spinal injury back in 2009 and has drastically impacted my ability to see my son pitch during his professional baseball career so far.




John should be up again today following his last start in another minor league assignment, per his indication during our last visit. Despite the struggle of my painful spinal condition I managed to see him throw for the first time this year during game speed this past Thursday against and with other Royals prospects. I could not stop grinning with pride and excitement to see him work and throw against his fellow teammates. Good, bad or indifferent it was a good first for this Dad to see this year while his son continues living his dream around the game of professional baseball. Of course the recorded game where he pitched one inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers in a big league game gets an occasional replay on the home television for a smile, but nothing beats a live performance to fully appreciate his special experiences during his young career.


He physically looked great and said he feels good going into another full season assignment for the Kansas City Royals along side a large number of very talented prospects in the farm system. No mystery why there is a genuine buzz throughout the Royals camp with all the talent from top to bottom levels of development. With only a few days to conclude the 2011 Spring training work the Lamb family patiently waits for a call regarding work and the official announcement of John Lamb and his fourth year of assignments by the Kansas City Royals baseball club.


Hazelbaker The Mighty!

March 2011
Now that's a deep farm system! A guy hardly anyone has heard of—2009 fourth round pick Jeremy Hazelbaker*—smacked a 2-run home run to provide the margin of victory today for the Red Sox, 3-2. This prevented an historic 11-game losing streak in the Grapefruit League. Oh, the game was also shortened by thunderstorms.

*Hazelbaker has been ranked as the 26th best prospect in the Red Sox system by SoxProspects.com

2011 Draft Results: First Basemen Targeted

March 2011
If you are new to the world of fantasy baseball, you should be very aware that first base is traditionally a position of great depth filled with some of the most impactful players. Heading into the 2011 season, this still holds true. MockDraftCentral.com is showing 10 of the top 50 players being drafted currently qualify as first basemen. If your league uses a corner infielder (CI or 1B/3B), extra infielder (IF), designated hitter (DH) or even a utility slot (UTIL) or two, there's a great opportunity to add one or more of these highly coveted players.

I went into all of my drafts having some players within the different tiers of first basemen as targets but draft position was really going to determine who I grabbed in the early rounds and how that would shape my entire roster. I wound up drafting 1st, 6th, 8th and 7th in my four snake drafts which meant three of my four drafts would have a lot of familiar faces...so I thought.

But before getting to the snake draft results, I wanted to talk about my online auction draft, which had me aggressively biding for the players I deemed "must have" and produced some interesting results:
I was in on all of the big name first basemen (Pujols, Miggy, AGon, etc) early but wound up bailing when I realized the prices were going to go a lot higher than I was willing to go. That strategy allowed me to focus in on and win such big names as Tulo ($39) and CarGo ($34) and drop down into the next tier of players and outbid everyone for a nice Dunn/Konerko duo to fill my 1B and CI roster slots. Moreland was a definite "sleeper" target while  Johnson was simply a late-round flier to add some possible depth to my bench, IF he wins the starting job in Tampa Bay. There were 390 players drafted in this league, so I fell pretty confident in what I was able to acquire and look forward to putting this plan into action.


Snake drafts definitely allow you to focus in on player tiers a little easier than an auction because most people are choosing from the best available ranked players (minus the ones you know will be autopicked). And here are the results of my four snake drafts for players that currently qualify at first base (draft pick in parenthesis):
Okay, so I may have a man-crush on Adam Dunn. What's not to love about a guy that can crush 40 bombs in his sleep? The possibility of a devastatingly low batting average will always be there but I try to balance that out on my roster with a player that might offset the two categories where Dunn won't help you much these days (batting average and stolen bases). I believe so heavily in this strategy that one of the first fantasy baseball articles I ever had the opportunity to write was titled "Surviving Adam Dunn" in August of 2008.

The league where the only first baseman I drafted was the best one, Pujols, was a lot shallower than the other three and I was able to grab the versatile Michael Young (97) for my CI slot and heavily invest in quality outfielders in the early rounds; Matt Kemp (24), Ichiro Suzuki (48), Jayson Werth (49) and Hunter Pence (73).

Heavily investing three very late-round picks in Brandon Belt ("sleeper"?) seemed worth the upside risk of him becoming this season's Buster Posey. There's still a chance he will break camp with the Giants and receive a ton of playing time but, if not, June could be more realistic for his arrival. Either way, I was willing to take a shot to see how the first few weeks of the season play out and whether or not Belt will bring me any value on this relatively inexpensive investment.

Ike Davis and Gaby Sanchez are similar offensive players (.270/20/80) and the best available to fill a roster need in the middle rounds. Period. I may not be overly excited to own either but I think, at the end of the year, their steady production will prove to be valuable to the overall success of my teams.

Similarly to my catcher targets, my teams have a lot of commonalities on purpose. One, it makes it easier to manage multiple teams when it comes to injuries or slumps and two, these are the players I am most interested in following. The goal of all of my teams is to win (especially the one money league I decided to join) but I also enjoy having fun as a fan of the game of baseball.

What strategies did you use when it came to drafting players that qualified at first base? What unique settings does your league have in place that made some players more favorable than others? Do you change strategies based on a classic rotisserie league versus a head-to-head scoring league? Please feel free to comment on my players or share your personal experiences when looking back on your draft(s) outcomes.

Buck To Theo: 'Sorry'

March 2011
Orioles Manager Buck Showalter has apologized to Red Sox GM Theo Epstein for his comments last week.

In case you missed it, here are the results of the Buck Nickname POLL here on FN:

Uncle 'F'n' Buck 45.3%; 'F.' Buck Showalter 30.9%; Buckminster 'Full-Of-It' 15.1%; Buck 'F.' Showalter 8.6%.

Sox Roster Being Finalized

March 2011
The Red Sox 25-man roster is just about set. General Manager Theo Epstein confirmed on Monday morning that Matt Albers and Dennys Reyes had both made the team in the bullpen. Hideki Okajima and Alfredo Aceves—who both have options—were sent to AAA Pawtucket. Both Albers and Reyes had strong Springs.

2011 Draft Results: Catchers Targeted

March 2011
This season, I participated in five fantasy baseball leagues of varying types of formats but, for the most part, the players I targeted were pretty much the same. Now, that doesn't mean that I got all the same players in all five leagues but there were some commonalities.

I also want to go on record as saying I think two-catcher leagues of any type are ridiculous. Why as a commissioner would you want to force managers to carry what in my opinion are statistically the worst offensive bunch of players in the game? That being said, the first draft I participated in this season was an "experts" league with an online auction draft and wouldn't you know it...a two-catcher league. The difficulty level was escalated by the fact there are 13 teams and 30-man rosters per team (equals at least 26 catchers being drafted).

My strategy for this league was to get involved in the bidding for the two catchers I valued as being the best (as do most), Joe Mauer and Buster Posey, and hope to walk away with one and spend a little money later in the draft on a guy like Miguel Montero or Carlos Ruiz. Both Mauer and Posey were thrown out early and I was pretty aggressive in the bidding as planned, assuming each would go in the $20-$30+ range in this format. Well, when the dust settled, here's what my two-catcher strategy yielded:
  •  Mauer ($24) and Posey ($20)
Now, I'm not shedding any tears over having this duo on my roster, unlike the owner who's rostering Josh Thole and Devin Mesoraco (um, who?). I regret being so aggressive and using $44 of my $330 budget (13%) on a position I was hoping to get bargains but I'm very excited to see what these two can do, offensively, this year.



My four remaining drafts (three of which I am the commissioner) were all single-catcher formats but I went in to each with the strategy of trying to get an upper-to-middle tier catcher early, depending on my draft position, and grabbing a second catcher at the end of the draft for bench depth and spot starts. Here's what that strategy wound up producing (draft pick in parenthesis):
In all four of these leagues, I went in targeting Soto as my primary catcher but he only fell to me once. My backup plan for a starter was Montero and that worked well for me twice. I can live with that to start the season. My biggest failure at catcher came in my last draft of the season. Soto, Montero and even Ruiz were all gone before the 140th pick and I passed on Mike Napoli with the 190th pick, only to see him taken with the 191st pick.

So I am left hoping Montero and Soto provide me with with enough offensive production to make the backup catcher a position I don't have to carry the entire season. My problem is that I am heavily invested in Martin returning to some level of his old self. Will having Joe Girardi and Jorge Posada as influences be a good or bad thing? I'm hoping he can provide a .270/60/10/60/10 line at the bottom of the Yankees lineup. I guarantee you I won't be in the Russell Martin business very long if it looks like he won't be effective. I'll be searching the waiver wires for who's hot and dumping who's not.

How did you go about drafting catchers this season? Do you have a preference for one or two-catcher formats? In hindsight, did you overly invest in specific players across multiple drafts like I did? Use the comments section to share your thoughts of my catcher targets and your strategies during your 2011 drafts.

The New Dice-K

March 2011
Ever since new Sox pitching coach Curt Young persuaded Daisuke Matsuzaka to use two days, not one, to do his long-toss and side-session work, the right-hander has turned in three outstanding performances—notching a 1.62 ERA over that span. Yesterday, he went six full, yielding just one earned run (in the first inning), and continued to challenge hitters in the zone with his fastball. Thanks to Bobby Jenks blowing a 5-run 9th inning lead, he did not get a win. Could Dice-K be becoming a "pitch-to-contact" hurler? If that's the case, line-up the Noble Prize for Preventative Hiterature to Mr. Young.

White Tanks

March 2011

I was excited to hear that the mountains near my house not only have petroglyphs but are haunted as well.  The White Tank mountain range is located west of Phoenix near the city of Surprise.  They get their name for the white granite near the base of the mountains and its many depressions also known as “tanks”.   It is believed that the range was formed about 30 million years ago by earthquake activities and detaching from a fault line.  Although the peaks of each range are approximately the same altitude, the tallest is Barry Goldwater Peak at 4,083 feet.  The rocky terrain is beautiful but dangerous.  The mountain range consists of jagged ridges, and bottomless canyons where after a rainfall water will build up and run swiftly down the sheer canyons.

 In the mountains you will find the White Tank Mountain Regional Park, an area where many like to visit and hike.   Many of the areas in this park are undeveloped wilderness with many indigenous species roaming around the desert grounds.  Some of the critters you might see while visiting the park are mule deer, coyotes, javelina, small rodents, and on rare occasions, mountain lions.  Some of the birds found in the park are roadrunners and cactus wren, which is the Arizona state bird.  Since the park is in the desert, many reptiles can be found wandering the area as well.   You can take a guided tour and learn all about the animals and plants found in this natural desert preserve.

One of the main reasons I want to visit the mountain range is the numerous petroglyphs found scattered around the mountains and may predate the Hohokam people.  Approximately 11 archaeological sites were recognized along with 7 Hohokam villages.  There are various trails leading to these sites and villages dispersed and marked for your interests.  You can take as many pictures of the sites and petroglyphs, but all they ask is that you don’t touch them.

The mountains also have stories of paranormal activity.  There have been several UFO sightings over the mountain range, but since the White Tanks are located near Luke Air Force Base, many have been dismissed as being something military.  Some people believe that what they saw was not manmade, but something unexplainable.   Along with the UFO sightings, people have reported ghostly figures and other strange phenomena while hiking the mountains.

The Rotation Continues to be Cashman's Downfall

March 2011
While we spend a lot of attention debating the merits of retreads like Garcias and Colon the real issue is the inability of Brain Cashman to build a complete starting 5. I know there was some excitement last year over adding Vasquez to an already good rotation but we know how that turned out. The Vasquez move was widely applauded but a GM must be scored on his results NOT how a move appeared to the public and MSM at the time.

Take a look at some of the staffs the Yankees have had since 2005. I have put any player with an ERA+ of over 100 in bold and listed all starters with 10 or more starts;

2005 Yankees - Johnson, Mussina, Wang, Pavano, Brown, Wright, Chacon, Leiter, Small (9 starts)
Post the series we never speak of the Yankees "loaded up" by signing Pavano and Wright. This works out so well they needed a player off the trash heap(Chacon) and a player from the independent league(Small) to catch fire for them to make the playoffs.

2006 Yankees - Wang, Johnson, Mussina, Wright, Chacon, Lidle (9 Starts)
Jaret Wright actually proved useful this year but unfortunately the 42 year old Johnson was less then useful. Who could have seen that coming? Chacon and Small both had era's north of 7 and picked up Lidle at the deadline in an attempt to have someone useful at the tail end of the rotation.

2007 Yankees - Pettitte, Wang, Mussina, Clemens, Hughes, Igawa
This year was two bad decisions maybe three. Clemens was brought back (OH MY GOD HE IS IN GEORGE'S BOX!), the great Igawa was signed and Hughes was rushed into the rotation at age 21.

2008 Yankees - Mussina, Pettitte, Rasner, Wang, Ponson, Joba
The Yankees took a chance with some youth and it didn't work out in the short term. Joba got hurt after pitching well, Kennedy was horrible and Hughes was horrible and injured.

2009 Yankees - Sabathia, Burnett, Pettitte, Joba
Three deep with a decent number 4. The 5th starter spot was split between Mitre, Wang, Hughes and Gaudin. The real difference in 2009 was the top three were legit.

2010 Yankees - Sabathia, Burnett, Hughes, Vasquez, Pettitte
Three good starters and two bad starters. This was enough to get the Yankees to the ALCS.

So since 2009 the rotation has produced a good staff once, in 2009. We had aging stars who could no longer get it done(Clemens, Brown, Johnson), some bad signings(Pavano, Igawa, Wright), a player who had nothing on any of his pitches (Vasquez), and a lot of mediocre veterans(Rasner, Ponson, Small, Chacon, Leiter, Lidle). These results are simply not good enough for a championship caliber team. Cashman can excuse away one or two years of mistakes but the fact of the matter is the rotation has been and remains an issue.

The Yankees inability to build a rotation has been an issue since 2005 and with the likes of Colon, Garcia and Millwood lining up for significant starts in 2011 it appears it will continue to be an issue.

Nova the Next Wang?

March 2011
Ivan Nova forced his way into the Number 4 spot of the Yankee rotation by doing his best Chien-Ming Wang impressive this spring. Which got me thinking - How similar are Nova and Wang at this point of their career?

First both players have gone basically unnoticed by Baseball America. Want cracked the Yankee top ten once in 2005. Nova on the other hand has never cracked the Yankee top ten. Wang struggled in AA but blossomed at bit at AAA
AA - 4.36 era, 1.355 WHIP, 9.9 h/9, 6.8 k/9
AAA - 2.58 era, 1.088 whip, 8.0 h/9, 6.5 k/9
Looks like Wang figured out the power of the GB in AAA.

Nova on the other hand excelled in AA (2.36era in '09) and struggled in his first pass at AAA (5.10 era , 1.4 whip, and 5.8 k/9). However, much like Wang something clicked eventually for Nova as last year he lowered his hit rate (8.4 h/9) raised his k rate (7.1 k/9) and lowered his walk rate almost a full batter per 9 to 3.0 bb/9. More clicked for Nova then just realizing the power of a good sinker as is clear by his jump in k rate but the early struggles followed by success sounds just like what happened to Wang.
Now the main difference between Wang and Nova is the walk rate of Wang was much lower in the minors (2.0 bb/9). However, I do think that Nova has similar skills, followed a similar path, and even has a similar build to Wang. So maybe Nova can be the new version of Wang which for a team like the Yankees is extremely valueable.

Molina over Montero?

March 2011
News came down yesterday that Gustavo Molina would most likely break camp as the Yankee starting catcher. There is no reason for a player with a career .643 OPS in the minors to be on the roster of the Yankees. Cervelli is going to be back in about a month so why not just break camp with Montero or Romine and let them experience New York? Worse case they sit and/or struglle in which case they go down in May m issing only 3 weeks of games. Best case you have your catcher of the future.

Yankees always seem to pick the guarnteed mediocrity of a veteran over the potential payoff of a prospect.

Yeah, That's The Ticket!

March 2011
Start saving now. A ticket for Opening Day at Fenway will set you back—on average—almost $250.00. That's the highest in baseball. That doesn't count a greasy new Fenway Frank or two, endless watered-down beers, and that cool Liverpool jersey you've had your eyes on. Oh, forgot about $35 parking. I'm thinking a grand total of $2,000 for a family of four—all to see a game that will probably be played in 20 degree wind chills and light sleet. Have fun!

Gene Simmons Has Nothing on This Fella

March 2011





Have a great weekend everyone.  There will be more wildlife pictures to come.

And the Winner Is...

March 2011


CONGRATS!!!

2011 Starting Pitcher Sleepers

March 2011
(In my continued effort to bring additional voices and perspectives to COSFBA, this article is being brought to you by guest writer KJ Hanna. KJ was one of the first people I connected with on Twitter and actually lives in the same part of Brooklyn, NY where I grew up. He's had his fantasy baseball work featured on both FantasyBaseball101.com and BigTroph.com. I hope you find as much value in his contribution to this site as I do.)

Ahh, the dreaded word ALL fantasy experts and drafters love and hate…SLEEPER.  Another word equally as poisonous… BOUNCEBACK. The great thing about the fantastic sport of baseball is there will always be players who fall into one or both of these categories. Luckily for you, the owner, we have already crunched the numbers and taken out most of the guess work.

You’ve all heard this already but, starting pitching is deep this year and you shouldn’t reach early for a SP early. That is, unless your league’s scoring settings heavily rewards SPs or you’re in a keeper/dynasty league. That being said, it’s in my opinion that you make your move in the middle to late rounds for pitchers and these are a few you should target.

The objective to identifying a sleeper starting pitcher is to determine which players have the upside to outperform their current draft position and provide your fantasy team with an advantage over the rest of your league at a low cost/draft pick.

AL SP Sleepers

Jeremy Hellickson – Tampa Bay Rays
Hellickson, the Rays stud prospect du jour got a huge boost once Matt Garza was traded to the Cubs in the offseason. He now has the chance to build upon his impressive numbers when called up in 2010, 3.47 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, 33 strikeouts and eight walks in 31 1/3 innings.

Notably revered to be more of a control pitcher, Hellickson is deceiving in his assortment of pitches and has the potential to become an ace, however, expect peaks and valleys, especially as he gets more acquainted with the AL East mashers.

Beyond the occasional long ball and a few rookie hiccups, the only negative I can see with “Hell Boy” is that the Rays may shut him down early, limiting his innings. In that case, all formats should feel confident in grabing him in mid-late rds and sell high come July (except in Keeper/Dynasty leagues).

Max Scherzer – Detroit Tigers
I know, most of you are thinking, "Scherzer, a sleeper?". That’s right readers! After an awful start to 2010 (7.29 ERA in April and half of May) and a minor league demotion, Scherzer came back to the majors with a blazing fastball and an appetite for strikeouts.

In Scherzer’s return to the majors, he posted a 2.46 ERA, 1.13 WHIP and 158 strikeouts and FINALLY showed his potential and quieted the “bust” whispers. Scherzer has the talent to become an elite fantasy starter and should be on everyone’s radar in all league formats in mid rounds on draft day. Draft with confidence.

Edwin Jackson – Chicago White Sox
EJax is an enigma. Is he an Ace or a tease? After moving to the AL, Jackson put together some fantastic strikeout and walk numbers which was a great sign of things to hopefully come. Jackson’s K/9 with the Dbacks was 6.98, with the White Sox 9.24! Not only did his K/BB improve but his fastball launched from 94 MPH to 95.3 MPH AND he lowered his overall ERA by almost 2 runs!

Jax is going late enough to take a risk/reward approach with him. His skills are pointing the way to a very productive season with plenty of run support from a stacked White Sox lineup. Grab him in the late rounds and reap the benefits in all league formats.


DEEP SLEEPER: Carlos Carrasco – Cleveland Indians
Carrasco is Spanish for “Peppered Strikezone” because that is what CC-lite does; unfortunately sometimes it results in the long ball, which can become a deterring factor in his fantasy value. One of the prospect players in the Cliff Lee deal, Carrasco, 23, could be in for a quality first full professional season.

He possesses solid upside after his 2-2 3.83 ERA, 38 K/14 BB ratio in 44.2 inngs in 2010. This kid is young and needs to find some maturity on the mound (as shown by his Spring Training numbers) but fantasy owners should consider him a quality matchup fantasy option in late rounds of deeper mixed leagues and AL-only formats.

NL SP Sleepers

Javier Vazquez – Florida Marlins
Vazquez is an established veteran pitcher who has had some very good and not so good (’04 & ’10 ironically both w/the Yankees) years. Yes, he’s 34 and yes his velocity fell predominantly last season, however, he has regained some of that lost speed this spring.

What makes Vazy a sleeper in 2011? 1. His move back to the NL East and into a pitchers ballpark. 2. He’s only 2 seasons removed from a 15 win, 2.87 ERA, 1.03 WHIP and 238 K year with the Braves. 3. His current drafting position is between 175-194 in most drafts.

Fantasy owners should look to snag this vet in late rounds for Roto and H2H leagues and mid-late rounds for NL only leagues for a low-risk, high-reward investment in 2011.

Jhoulys Chacin – Colorado Rockies
One of my top targets for sleepers in 2011, this 22-yr old looked incredible in 2010 logging a 3.28 ERA, 1.27 WHIP and 138 strikeouts in 137 1/3 innings and giving up ONLY 10 home runs last season.

Chacin should miss tons of bats and cause groundballs aplenty with his low-90's fastball and filthy off speed pitches. Chacin is poised to steal the #2 spot away from Jorge de la Rosa this season and could become a legitimate real life and fantasy ace in 2011 and beyond.

Owners, grab Chacin if he falls to you in mid-late rds in all fantasy formats, especially in keeper, dynasty and NL Only leagues as he is a special breed and will bring you weekly gold.

Jordan Zimmermann - Washington Nationals
Since coming back from Tommy John surgery last season, Zimm hasn’t logged in many innings to turn heads, however, with his mid-90’s fastball and jelly leg slider, he is poised to finally show the MLB and his owners why he should be considered a valuable starting pitcher.

Though I expect strong results when on the hill, he has not pitched more than 100 innings in a season since 2008 and I don’t expect the Nats to give him more than 150-160. Zimmerman MUST be considered an injury risk by all owners and is truly the definition of a risk/reward pick, however his potential for late roundd drafting returns is exponential.

Currently going anywhere from 180-192, Zimm should be scooped up and considered a viable mid-level fantasy starter in Mixed, Roto and H2H leagues with a larger upside in NL Only and Keeper leagues.

DEEP SLEEPER: Homer Bailey – Cincinnati Reds
Can 2011 finally be the year of the Homer? Bailey, that is. I’m a believer and you should be too.

Last season, Bailey logged 109 innings, posted his highest strikeout rate to date and improved his control to drop his ’09 totals in BBs and Runs allowed. Not to mention that after his demotion to the minors in May, he came back strong posting 3.55 ERA, 9.10 K/9 and 2.93 BB/9 in 58 1/3 innings from Aug 15 on.

The addition of a splitter to his arsenal has helped his fastball’s effectiveness and keeps batters off balance more than in years past. This ultimately will help his K/9 and BB/9 numbers.

Is he a staff ace, nope, but as a No. 3/4 starter he has lower-tier fantasy starter written all over him. Upside is he gives you depth in your rotation; the downside is it may take him a month or so to get it rolling.

Bailey is being drafted between 260-330 in most drafts, so there isn’t urgency from owners at this time. NL Only owners draft him late rounds, Mixed, Roto and H2H leagues draft in very late rounds especially if you have a deep bench.
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