Bringin’ the Noise: Eternal damnation

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Hell exists in many worldly incarnations. Dry counties, Celine Dion concerts and Costa Rican jungles filled with reality TV narcissists Spencer Pratt and Janice Dickinson instantly come to mind.

Different from the Noise’s perspective, Clay Buchholz’s(notes) version of eternal damnation is a rather tranquil location. A town so peaceful it was tabbed earlier this year as one of the “Best Places to Raise your Kids” by Business Week. But despite its delightful artist enclave, Industrial Revolution roots and general East Coast charm, Pawtucket, Rhode Island is a contemptuous city. Don’t let the smell of fresh-baked pastries from the Easy Bake Oven headquarters fool you.

For the 24-year-old, residency in Pawtucket represents oppression. Trapped in Triple-A, Buchholz has openly expressed some frustration about his current position, but, for the most part, has remained patient, biding his time for the inevitable hour-long drive up Interstate 95.

Frankly, he has every right to be upset.

Two short years ago, the then top prospect was on the fast-track to fantasy superstardom. In just his second major league appearance, he no-hit the Baltimore Orioles on September 1, becoming only the third pitcher since 1900 to accomplish the milestone in his first or second start. Unfortunately, his success was short-lived. The following season, the burdensome pressures of the spotlight sapped his control and confidence, noted in his reprehensible output – 76 IP, 6.75 ERA, 1.76 WHIP, 1.30 HR/9, 8.53 K/9, 4.86 BB/9, .366 BABIP.

Photo
Not exactly the Hart Foundation, the rotation tag-team of Dice-K and Buchholz sadly never materialized. But with the Japanese hurler headed for the cannery, the youngster’s chances of escaping Pawtucket purgatory have increased.
(Getty)
Now with his swagger regained and command honed, the hard-throwing Texan is better prepared to handle Boston’s bright lights this time around. In 74.2 farm innings, he’s posted a microscopic 1.93 ERA, 0.91 WHIP and 8.32 K/9. Though he’s been incredibly fortunate (.216 BABIP, 3.45 FIP), his 53.9 ground-ball percentage, 0.84 HR/9 and, most importantly, 2.65 BB/9 are clear signs of his marked mental growth. The assured starter agrees:

“It’s not nearly as bad as it was last year [when I was] thinking, ‘I can’t do this, I can’t do that.’ Now I’m thinking, my confidence is up, [I’m] throwing pitches with conviction and throwing the pitches I want to throw regardless of the result. I feel more ready now than I was at any point last year. If anything, I think given the spring training I had [in ’08 (1-2, 8.2 IP, 11 H, 9 ER)], starting in the minor leagues might have been the right thing for me at that point, but the success from [2007] kind of [prevented] that.”

Terry Francona has also noticed Buchholz’s major strides:

“Kid’s pitching his ass off. That’s part of what we tell these guys in spring training. ‘Do your job, if you can really help us, you’ll help us.’ It might not be on your timetable. That’s just the way the game is. I think Buck is maturing rapidly, and handling a situation that maybe he wouldn’t have been able to in the past.”

The deconstruction of Dice-K is one domino Buchholz needed to fall. But due to rampant speculation that Brad Penny(notes) is practically off the trading block and John Smoltz’s(notes) imminent return, the scorned youngster will painfully continue to wallow in Pawtucket until an injury arises or an unlikely deadline deal is made. In a way, his situation is strikingly similar to what Nelson Cruz(notes) experienced at Oklahoma City last year.

Though outshined buy a suddenly effective Scott Kazmir(notes) Monday, he clearly has nothing left to prove. It’s difficult to ascertain exactly when the 20-percent-owned Buchholz will get another chance, but based on his tremendous strikeout and wins potential, he’s a hurler worth wasting a bench spot on in deeper mixed leagues. The future ace definitely has the varied arsenal to be immediately successful – 91-97 mph fastball, 78-82 straight change, plus slider, knee-breaking curve. If his refined control carries over to the senior club, he could easily post numbers comparable to Wandy Rodriguez(notes) or Adam Wainwright(notes).

But buyers beware.

Over his past three starts, the Snellian side of Buchholz has resurfaced. He’s surrendered 10 walks in 11.2 innings. If an overanxious Jimmy Fallon-type exists in your league: carpe diem. As we’ve learned with Matt Wieters(notes), the hype machine’s seducing qualities can entice many to overpay. This week he was shipped straight up for J.J. Hardy(notes), Hank Blalock(notes) and George Sherrill(notes) in one-for-one Y! Plus league deals.

The upside is there, but until a promotion is levied, the talented righty will continue to believe 401, not 666, is the Devil’s true area code.

Fearless Forecast (with Boston): 11 GS, 68.2 IP, 5 W, 4.34 ERA, 1.31 WHIP, 62 K

Here are this week’s flames, lames and stars of video games:

Fantasy Flames
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Geovany Soto(notes) CHC C 779 92
Market Value: Strong Buy (all leagues)
Lowdown: Almost in the same baneful category as Russell Martin(notes), Soto has been a perpetual thorn in the side of his keepers. But it finally appears he’s starting to turn lemons into lemonade. According to insiders, his bothersome shoulder, which he’s nursed since spring training, is finally at full strength. Analyzing his underlying contributions since June 1, he’s flashed a keener eye (12.7 BB%) and is driving the ball with more vigor, indicative in his 23.8 HR/FB percentage. The backstop’s .255 BA this month is mediocre, but on film the quality of his at-bats have increased. The buy-low window is still cracked, but it won’t be much longer. Anticipate a banner July. In one-for-one Yahoo! Plus league deals this week, Soto was dealt for Luke Scott(notes), Matt Capps(notes) and Tommy Hanson(notes).
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 285 at-bats, .287 BA, 14 HR, 55 RBI, 39 R, 1 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Scott Rolen(notes) TOR 3B 126 65
Market Value: Moderate Buy (12-team mixed), Moderate Sell (AL-only, deep mixed)
Lowdown: Scorching hot over the past two weeks, the Bronze Aged corner infielder has officially entered Dushku territory. Emulating the Splendid Splinter, the Jays three-bagger has accumulated a .397 BA, including 10 multi-hit games, two homers, eight RBIs and 15 runs since June 1. Per Baseball Monster, that output ranks seventh among third basemen for that span. Overall, the former ROY’s ascending contact rates (89.1 CT%) and decreasing strikeouts are major pluses. However, his unsustainable 30.4 line-drive rate and brittle past suggest now’s the time to sell in deeper formats. Based on his persistent lower back issues, the turf at Rogers Centre will eventually take its toll. Rolen recently admitted his joints have taken a pounding playing on the artificial surface. He’s an excellent short-term BA resource in shallow mixed leagues, but the injury imp is bound to strike.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 216 at-bats, .280 BA, 5 HR, 26 RBI, 31 R, 2 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Colby Rasmus(notes) STL OF 254 28
Market Value: Strong Buy (12-team mixed, NL-only)
Lowdown: The former ’05 first rounder is arguably one of fantasy’s most underappreciated commodities. Establishing a fairly consistent rhythm at the dish this month, the bushy-haired outfielder has stroked a .338 BA with two homers, nine RBIs and 10 runs in 71 at-bats. Attempting to inflict “damage” in each at-bat, he’s earned the respect of veteran-loving manager Tony LaRussa. The skipper’s growing confidence in him has vaulted the rookie into the two spot, a position he’ll consistently appear in against righties. The 22-year-old’s aggressive mentality (5.4 BB%, 19.9 K%) will lead to more bust periods, but when penciled in ahead of Albert Pujols(notes), he should be inserted into your starting lineup. Tapping into his mammoth potential, the NL ROY frontrunner could go on the warpath over the second half.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 252 at-bats, .276 BA, 10 HR, 31 RBI, 38 R, 5 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Jose Guillen(notes) KC OF 462 24
Market Value: Moderate Buy (14-team mixed), Watch (NL-only)
Lowdown: Trade winds have begun to circulate around the KC’s firebrand. Scouted this past week by the Atlanta Braves, Guillen could soon be headed to the Dirty South in exchange for perpetual failure Jeff Francouer. He would unquestionably provide an offensive spark, but many Bravos backers are not supportive of the move due to Guillen’s burdensome contract and rather irritable personality. Still, a return to the NL would be an early Christmas in July present for “only” players. This year, he’s performed respectably, drawing more free passes (’08 BB%: 3.7, ’09: 9.4) and harder contact (’08 GB/FB: 1.35, ’09: 1.16). On pace for 17 homers and 75 RBIs, his power numbers would improve slightly if shipped to Atlanta. The McLouth-Escobar-Chipper-McCann combination is far more nourishing than what currently sits atop KC’s lineup.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 295 at-bats, .274 BA, 12 HR, 51 RBI, 38 R, 1 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Luis Valbuena(notes) CLE 2B, SS 847 7
Market Value: Moderate MI Stopgap Buy (14-team mixed, AL-only)
Lowdown: Filling in for injured starter Asdrubal Cabrera(notes), Valbuena has been muy bueno. Ripping NL pitching in interleague play, the versatile infielder has hammered out five multi-hit games, clubbed three homers and driven in seven in his past seven games. His mediocre minor league track record suggests his recent surge is somewhat fluky, but Baseball America scouts have spoken highly of his line-drive stroke and ability to place consistent wood on the baseball. He can be pull happy and overly aggressive at times, evident in his 30.7 strikeout percentage, but his improved comfort at the dish has drawn praise from Eric Wedge. Obviously, because of his immaturity, consistency won’t be the norm, but his 10-15 homer upside is intriguing for deep leaguers. However, once Cabrera is activated, possibly by Sunday, look for Valbuena to slip back into a super-utility role.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 204 at-bats, .262 BA, 5 HR, 22 RBI, 27 R, 4 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Brandon Morrow(notes) SEA SP, RP 873 50
Market Value: Moderate Buy (12-team mixed, AL-only)
Lowdown: Defecting from the bullpen two weeks ago, Morrow’s transition back into the rotation has gone at a snail’s pace. Slowly building up arm strength, he’s pitched a whopping 9.1 innings since June 9. Though his five walks over that span is very unsettling, his 10.88 K/9 certainly isn’t. The rocket launcher’s mid-90s fastball is nostril-singeing, but he must add more polish to his secondary pitches, especially his change and slider, to be effective. Similar to how Arizona tutored Max Scherzer(notes) last season, the Mariners will continue to push him to become a more rounded pitcher. Erik Bedard(notes) is expected to be activated sometime next week, which means the rotation will need to be reshuffled. Based on Jason Vargas’(notes) and Garrett Olsen’s forgettable recent efforts, its likely Morrow will stick in the rotation. Because of his 0.74 GB/FB and high walks propensity, owners who invest in the youngster should expect turbulent times, but his attractive power arm will occasionally yield sparkling totals.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 95.2 IP, 6 W, 4.06 ERA, 1.34 WHIP, 93 K
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Kevin Correia(notes) SD SP 712 23
Market Value: Moderate Buy (14-team mixed, NL-only)
Lowdown: With Jake Peavy(notes) disabled, Correia has become San Diego’s surprise “ace.” Prior to his sudden reversal of fortune, the former mediocre Giants prospect posted numbers equivalent to a foul-tasting fish taco. In nine starts over April/May, he emerged victorious just once and totaled a wretched 5.23 ERA and 1.49 WHIP. Since then, he’s slugged back Patron shots from Peavy’s cup, compiling a 2.90 ERA, 0.90 WHIP and 3-2 mark in five appearances. Bud Black said earlier this week, Correia’s ability to “fill the strike zone with good pitches” is the reason for the surge. Because he’s surrendered few walks (1.45 BB/9 in June) and coaxed ample weak contact (1.55 GB/FB), Black’s observations are spot on. With his confidence soaring, he could continue to shock the world, especially pitching in Petco. But it’s imperative his command remains consistent. Roll the dice, deep leaguers.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 94 IP, 5 W, 4.21 ERA, 1.30 WHIP, 71 K
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Alfredo Figaro(notes) DET SP 450 4
Market Value: Moderate Buy (14-team mixed), Strong Buy (AL-only)
Lowdown: The D-Train’s mental derailment has given rise to Detroit’s latest pitching project. Evoking the baseball spirit of Jose Lima(notes), the animated righty tossed five quality innings in his MLB debut against Milwaukee on June 20th. Earning the win, he allowed two runs and notched an eye-opening 7:2 K:BB split. Equipped with a blistering 93-98 mph fastball, effective change, curve and slider, Figaro has the varied arsenal and control (2.25 BB/9 at Double-A) to be successful at the big league level. However, based on his 1.06 HR/9 in the minors this year, he’s vulnerable to catching gopheritis. Still, due to his quality strikeout totals down on the farm (7.81 K/9) and favorable offensive support, he’s deep league acquirable.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 92 IP, 7 W, 4.66 ERA, 1.38 WHIP, 72 K

Fantasy Lames
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Alex Rodriguez(notes) NYY 3B 565 98
Market Value: Moderate Sell (all leagues)
Lowdown: This year, baseball’s biggest “Rod” might be more overrated than the average looks of a certain Hollywood starlet he’s allegedly canoodling. If the K-Hud rumors are true, Matthew McConaughey will surely demand a shirtless flex-off. Drowning in a 5-for-45 slump, A-Rod’s BA has plummeted over 40 points since June 8. Admittedly tired, he’s clearly been pressing at the dish. More disturbing, his lackluster 1.20 GB/FB shows he’s uncharacteristically frightened more ground vermin than bleacher seat patrons this season. Now expected to rest his weary hip once a week through the break, A-Rod hopes the occasional reprieve will help him regain his lost mojo. Still, the dynamite returns we all expected probably won’t materialize. Considering the marquee names he’s attracted in one-for-one deals this week – Grady Sizemore(notes), Chase Utley(notes) and Justin Verlander(notes) – he’s a brand name who should be shopped.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 275 at-bats, .274 BA, 17 HR, 54 RBI, 53 R, 6 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Magglio Ordonez(notes) DET OF 554 82
Market Value: Moderate BA Buy (14-team mixed, AL-only)
Lowdown: The former Rambo-haired outfielder has run out of ammo. Given a mental vacation by Jim Leyland last week, the now clean-cut Ordonez was reinserted into the lineup Tuesday. Hitting seventh, he provided loyal owners with little substance (0-2, BB). The $64,000 question still remains: Is Magglio toast? Many faithful Tigers fans want him to permanently disappear. Money-sucking vacuum Devoted agent, Scott Boras, and a small fantasy contingency believe otherwise. It’s amazing how quickly a consistency king like Ordonez can whither away to nothing virtually overnight. Maybe Jose Canseco’s artificial muscle accusations were correct. In hindsight, Maggs probably should have fronted the cash for Jose’s sure-fired Oscar-contending Kung Fu film after all. Still, if he can reverse the turf-pounding GB/FB trend (2.29), the remainder of his peripherals supports a BA comeback. However, the power is long gone.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 295 at-bats, .301 BA, 8 HR, 48 RBI, 42 R, 1 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Chipper Jones(notes) ATL 3B 154 98
Market Value: Hold (all leagues)
Lowdown: Arguably one of the greatest baseball card cover athletes of all-time, Larry Wayne has lost some of his gloss. Mired in a 9-for-49 crash – his worst since 2005 – the multi-time All-Star has sliced 30-plus points off his batting average. Additionally, he’s failed to homer and has just one run batted in during the swoon. Lining off several catchable shots, Jones and Bobby Cox blame the downturn on unfortunate luck. Based on his healthy 19.1 line-drive rate this month, they’re assertion is right. When not disabled, he should be a steady producer. But based on his bland 18-74-76 pace, the 37-year-old’s skills might finally be deteriorating. His declining ISO suggests exactly that. He’ll eventually recover, but don’t bank on a final BA north of .315.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 245 at-bats, .312 BA, 10 HR, 45 RBI, 43 R, 1 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Dan Uggla(notes) FLA 2B 160 96
Market Value: Moderate Buy (all leagues)
Lowdown: A blood-sucking batting average leech, Uggla is a category killer. Though sporting his best monthly average of the season (.257), he is still one donut-ridden week away from holding hands again with Mr. Mendoza. But despite his hideous outward appearance, there are noticeable positives brewing underneath his superficial numbers. This month he’s dramatically cut down on the Ks (18.9 K%), spiking his walks percentage (14.9) in the process. He’s also making harder contact, indicative in his 20.0 line-drive rate. Finally, and most importantly, he’s consistently laid bat on ball on outside pitches, a trait he’s rarely exuded historically. Of course he’ll continue to be fly-ball centric, but his current .223 BA may actually climb in the coming weeks, assuming his June trends persist. Shipped this week for Aaron Harang(notes), Freddy Sanchez(notes) and Clayton Kershaw(notes) in one-for-one Plus league transactions, Uggla is a two-bagger to deal for while his value is slightly discounted.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 310 at-bats, .261 BA, 17 HR, 51 RBI, 57 R, 3 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Mike Cameron(notes) MIL OF 170 59
Market Value: Moderate HR/RBI/R Buy (all leagues)
Lowdown: While serving a one-game suspension Saturday, the slumping Cameron watched his team clash with the Tigers from a local establishment, not the dugout. Glancing at his current 9-for-62 nose-dive, we can only hope he consumed enough Jager shots to kill off the BA bacteria pumping through his veins. After a torrid April and sound May, Cameron, a career .250 hitter, was bound to cool off. His unappealing strikeout total (28.6 K%) and fly-ball skewed GB/FB rate (0.88) were clear harbingers. Now that he’s regressed to the mean, it could be an excellent opportunity to buy. At 36, he’s not swiping bases with the zeal he once showcased, but his unheralded contributions in homers, runs and RBIs shouldn’t be overlooked. On pace for a 27-76-71-6 campaign, he’s just as valuable as Ryan Ludwick(notes). Acquired this week for Huston Street(notes), Ervin Santana(notes) and Magglio Ordonez in one-for-one Plus league moves, Cameron is a serviceable fourth outfielder for owners who can stomach his porous average.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 280 at-bats, .251 BA, 14 HR, 44 RBI, 45 R, 8 SB
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
John Lackey(notes) LAA SP 1051 96
Market Value: Strong Buy (all leagues)
Lowdown: Mangers who are true lackeys for Lackey must be disappointed. Through his first eight starts, he’s totaled an abhorrent 5.83 ERA and 1.58 WHIP. More concerning, his K/9 has decreased from 7.16 last season to 6.41 this year. On a positive note, he’s scaled back on the amount of curveballs thrown, instead featuring his slider more prominently. This altered approach has induced more ground balls, indicative in his 1.50 GB/FB ratio. The righty hasn’t befriended Lady Luck this year (.360 BABIP), but looking at his 4.42 FIP, better days are ahead. He’s commanded a hefty price tag in recent one-for-one deals – Adam Jones(notes), Chris Carpenter(notes) and Nick Markakis(notes) – but for owners searching for a dependable starter, he’s definitely a worthwhile purchase.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 102 IP, 7 W, 3.56 ERA, 1.24 WHIP, 84 K
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
David Price(notes) TB SP, RP 739 93
Market Value: Strong Sell (all leagues)
Lowdown: For last year’s ALCS hero, the monster expectations placed on him have been hard to shoulder. Since being recalled, his command has come unglued. In his first 30.1 innings, he’s notched a repulsive 5.98 BB/9. Adding insult to injury, he’s also conceded an unhealthy amount of long balls (1.79 HR/9). As discussed in a MVN post this week, most of his problems can be pinned on poor slider control and location. Not biting like it should, the pitch has been too exposed over the plate, allowing opponents to make crushing contact (24.7 LD%). The strikeouts are there (9.79 K/9), but until his secondary stuff is harnessed, more demoralizing ERA efforts should be expected. Eventually, as noted by Joe Maddon this week, the youngster will make the necessary adjustments, but it’s safe to assume Price’s road to greatness is still long. Because typical owners slap the wallet for overly-hyped prospects, he’s still attracting noteworthy names via trade. In one-for-one Plus league deals this week, he netted Andrew McCutchen(notes), Johnny Damon(notes) and Michael Young(notes).
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 94 IP, 5 W, 4.46 ERA, 1.42 WHIP, 95 K
PLAYERTEAMPOSY!RKY!%
Chris Volstad(notes) FLA SP, RP 893 67
Market Value: Moderate Buy (14-team mixed, NL-only)
Lowdown: Lately, Florida’s Tower of Terror has frightened his owners, not the opposition. Victimized by the Law of Averages, Volstad’s fortunate early season BABIP finally caught up to him. But now that he’s reached the statistical plateau, he could be a bargain of sorts. After posting back-to-back horrendous outings earlier this month against the Cardinals and Red Sox (14 ER in 9.1 IP), he worked diligently in side sessions in an attempt to rediscover command of his sinker. Coaxing 10 ground-ball outs in six quality innings against the Yankees June 21 (W, 3 ER, 5 HA, 4:1 K:BB), it appears his hard work paid off. Homers have been a bugaboo for Volstad all year (1.41 HR/9), but if he can continue to attract soft contact (1.51 GB/FB) and limit the free passes (2.62 BB/9), an ERA just above 4.00 is achievable.
Fearless Forecast (Rest of season): 85 IP, 6 W, 4.15 ERA, 1.30 WHIP, 63 K

CRUZ COUNTER
To remind colleagues Jeff Passan and Mark Pesavento of the $50 donation they’ll be contributing to the Noise’s import beer fund, Nelson Cruz’s long-ball tally will be noted each week. Remember, the original bet was over/under 25 homers.

Caribbean Cruz connections since last week: 0
Season total: 18
Moonshots to the money: 8
Pace: 42

Brad "The Big Noise" Evans has obsessed about his fantasy teams since the days when Jeff George had value. Yahoo! Sports fantasy’s resident baseball, football and bracketology expert, Brad also lends advice on the two-time Emmy-nominated webcast "Fantasy Football Live" each NFL Sunday. Send Brad a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
Updated Jun 25, 2:25 pm EDT
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81 Comments

  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Matthew B Sun Jun 28, 2009 05:47 pm PDT Report Abuse
    hate to be a dick, but,

    Noise: "if another owner offered me Sizemore, Utley or Verlander, I would seize the moment. It's not being overly hasty but rather opportunistic."

    thats basically telling people to trade 1st round pick A-rod for Verlander,(check his career 1st/2nd half splits), and by years end that one will look like a laugher when A-Rod has a .285+BA, 30-35 HR, 100 RBI/Runs and 12-18 SB....he is going to catch fire soon, i don't even own him, i'm not being biased
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    BrettJ Sun Jun 28, 2009 03:42 pm PDT Report Abuse
    #77, i dont think he was encouraging heads to trade A-Rod for Verlander as he was just mentioning players that were swapped for A-Rod in one for one deals but i get your point. Like i said in my prior post, anyone willing to give up on A-Rod this early cause he had a 3 week slump and coming off an injury earlier is just dumb unless you're getting a Puhols, Han-Ram, Lincecum, etc type of elite player back. Whoever was on the receiving end of that Sizemore trade is a moron. A-Rod is locked back in and if you need any proof of that then watch, as i did, his opposite field bomb into the bullpen at Citi Field last night. First player to bullpen a HR in that huge unhomer friendly park.
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    Matthew B Sun Jun 28, 2009 03:36 pm PDT Report Abuse
    here's who i see as buy-lows: josh hamilton, matt holliday, dustin pedroia, matt wieters, jose lopez, placido palonco, travis hafner.....i see all these guys outproducing what theyve done so far from hear on out....id try to buy low on SPs oswalt, kazmir, harden (gamble but hes never gonna be cheaper) and if still possible j shields, beckett and nolasco
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    Matthew B Sun Jun 28, 2009 03:27 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Noise.....encouraging people to trade a rod for verlander does not look good on you....verlander is notorious for his 2nd half slides and basically what i'm seeing is a fantasy expert saying trade a 1st round pick for a 5th rounder.....that is if verlander keeps it together enough to be picked there next year. 3B is arguably one of the 3 thinnest positions now, swapping him for utley is fine, but OF/SP are far too deep.....and youre saying its tough to every buy low on a rod, but if justin verlander is being mentioned as a good 1 for 1 swap i dont' think theres ever been a better time to buy low
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    BrettJ Sat Jun 27, 2009 09:54 pm PDT Report Abuse
    A-Rod is gonna have his usual 30/100/100 year and most likely wont end up hitting .300 but id say between .270 and .280. I only wish i had a sucker in my league that was willing to trade him for Sizemore. Not that i own him but that was a hideous trade for whoever received Sizemore. Watching the Yankee game tonite the announcer said hes had 9 RBI's in his last 4 games whereas it took him 22 games to reach 9 RBI's prior to the last 4. Hes just getting started and i wont be shocked if he feasts on Livan tomorrow night. Im not going to reach and say hes back for good after 4 games but hes definately finding his groove back and he made a couple nice diving plays on balls hit by Wright which means his injury looks to be better. Sorry Evans but he's definately a buy IMO.
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    Mudville One Sat Jun 27, 2009 06:30 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Plenty of people don't like Alex Rodriquez but pathetic criticisms of people just because they hang out with him is just plain lame. When giving advice in a column like this you shouldn't let your personal prejudices destroy your judgment and objectivity - and if you really think A-Rod is a "Moderate Sell' then you've been oblivious for the last 10 years. I just hope that the guys who own Rodriquez in the leagues that I am in are dumb enough to listen to you and trade him to me. (So far they haven't been.)
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    BrettJ Sat Jun 27, 2009 03:30 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Ive posted this question in other blogs but figure the more the more advice i get so here we go. Do you think i should shop around Aramis Ramirez as i have Branyan at 3B and hes having an insane year or should i shop Branyan around and hope Ramirez comes back to his usual form???Branyan's 1B eligible but i already have Pena for me playing first and have no open room in my utility spot (got Hunter, Justin Upton, Damon, Braun and Hamilton on the D/L so have no clue what im going to do with him when he gets back cause who am i going to sit???) I play in a 12 team head to head league. Any advice would be helpful. Thanks.
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    kevin p Sat Jun 27, 2009 02:18 pm PDT Report Abuse
    I would recomend picking up Fernando NIEVE (NYM) hes 3-0 and pitches at the Brewers on June 29th for PRICE
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    canada Sat Jun 27, 2009 12:22 pm PDT Report Abuse
    So do I drop Ianetta for Soto?
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    JD Fri Jun 26, 2009 10:05 pm PDT Report Abuse
    you think I should try to deal Price for Liriano? who do you think will have the better fantasy numbers throughout the rest of the year?
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    adam Fri Jun 26, 2009 09:34 pm PDT Report Abuse
    "though outshined buy a suddenly effective"

    ha ha, spell check is an aid, not a crutch
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    Yahoo! Sports Staff BigNoise Fri Jun 26, 2009 06:42 pm PDT
    Mike: Like Guinness, my humor is an acquired taste. Some people enjoy it. Others find it revolting. But you must have mistaken me for someone else in regards to Price. He was labeled a "moderate sell" in the space above a few weeks ago (see the link below). I love his long-term upside, but he's clearly a work in progress. Oh, and yes, I'm fantasy's version of a monkey wrench. http://sports.yahoo.com/fantasy/mlb/news?slug=be-noise043009&start_row=26
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    Mike Fri Jun 26, 2009 05:55 pm PDT Report Abuse
    "Noise" - You flip flop on players SO much! First you say that Price is going to kill it and everyone should go out and get him, now you say sell. You're a tool and you're jokes/puns/analogies are NOT FUNNY!
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    Mike Fri Jun 26, 2009 05:55 pm PDT Report Abuse
    "Noise" - You flip flop on players SO much! First you say that Price is going to kill it and everyone should go out and get him, now you say sell. You're a tool and you're jokes/puns/analogies are NOT FUNNY!
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    Yahoo! Sports Staff BigNoise Fri Jun 26, 2009 03:01 pm PDT
    M: I must have been channeling Kevin Nealon's old SNL character. That's a classic Freudian slip. Absolutely "buy" on Kazmir.
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    M Fri Jun 26, 2009 02:29 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Here's the latest Noise subliminal message: "buy a suddenly effective Scott Kazmir." Are you saying "buy" Scott Kazmir Noise?
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    Yahoo! Sports Staff BigNoise Fri Jun 26, 2009 01:58 pm PDT
    Juma: Please tell me you're legally blind. There's a response to Nick's A-Rod rant in the very next post. And thanks for identifying you're in a very challenging 6-team league. Most of the guys in the Flames section, who deserve to be listed there based on recent performance, are not doing backstrokes in the free agent pool in competitive formats.
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    Juma Fri Jun 26, 2009 01:44 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Hey BigNoise...I think you should respond to post #55 (owned). There is nothing hot about any of the flames you have.
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    Judge Homer Fri Jun 26, 2009 11:57 am PDT Report Abuse
    I just sold A-Rod forJason Bay but it wasn't easy. I had to throw in Washington pitcher Zimmermann to make the deal go down. I love Invader Zim's K-9 but he plays for the Nats and they are not going to win a whole lot of games for him. Making him spendable.
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    P Fri Jun 26, 2009 10:54 am PDT Report Abuse
    i'm selling Nelson Cruz. he june numbers suggest he will once again entice and then deflate.
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    Bernie S Fri Jun 26, 2009 10:42 am PDT Report Abuse
    34. Posted by Steve G :
    I used to like the moderate buy or strong sell advice, but "moderate MI stopgap buy"? Has the noise been replaced with safe statements? "Moderate R/HR/RBI buy?" What's the difference between that and a power buy? Last time I checked any guy with an HR also gets a R and an RBI.

    I agree 2000%
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    Blaine M Fri Jun 26, 2009 10:33 am PDT Report Abuse
    It's almost over for Maggs, but I will definitely take the over on those numbers. You don't go from one of the most productive/consistent hitters in the game to a guy who puts up numbers like that. As long as there isn't an injury he's hiding he'll easily surpass that with an inspired second half.
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    Mike Fri Jun 26, 2009 09:26 am PDT Report Abuse
    Historical performance may not guarantee future success, but it is a strong indicator of future returns. Fantasy baseball relies on this, it is the way we know that Adam Dunn will hit 40 HR and bat .240-.250. Alex will exceed your projections and leave you looking for Billy Butler-sized excuses by the end of the season.
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    joe mama Fri Jun 26, 2009 08:26 am PDT Report Abuse
    didn't mags get 2 hits in his first game back?

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