The Scoop

By Dalton Del Don

Fantasy owners who went with a “last year’s bums” strategy and held their nose when drafting Alex Rios are certainly not complaining. After disappointing in Toronto last season, resulting in the Blue Jays giving away his contract to the White Sox, Rios was even worse in Chicago, posting a .199/.229/.301 line over 146 at-bats. But even when dreadful, he still managed 17 homers and 24 steals, remaining plenty useful in fantasy terms. There’s little doubt he’s playing over his head, but Rios is striking out far less frequently than usual, and his current .305 BABIP is actually well below his career mark (.323), so some huge regression isn’t necessarily in store. Ozzie Guillen loves to run, and since Rios has been caught during just three of his 17 SB attempts, a career-high in steals isn’t out of the question. He’s now hitting in a terrific hitter’s park and has recently been moved to the No. 3 spot in the lineup. He’s still just 29 years old, so a 30/30 season can’t be ruled out, and since he’s also fantastic defensively, that contract suddenly doesn’t look so bad.

If it weren’t for bad luck, Mark Prior wouldn’t have any luck at all.

Steve Phillips really outdid himself this week, first writing this piece about plebeians knowing nothing about what it takes to be a baseball GM, and in turn, further proved the point he set out specifically to reject. But that was nothing compared to when Phillips subsequently appeared on the Mike Francesa show and said he’d trade Stephen Strasburg for Roy Oswalt straight up if he were running the Nationals. Oswalt is quietly having a great season, but he’s owed $32 million over the next two years and might retire afterward. Strasburg, meanwhile, has a 0.99 ERA and a 0.71 WHIP with 54 strikeouts over 45.1 innings in Double and Triple-A as a 21-year-old. He’s not only more affordable (four-year deal worth $15.1 million), but he’s going to draw more fans to Washington than Oswalt ever could. Plus, I haven’t hyped him nearly enough recently (did you know Strasburg once visited the Virgin Islands, and since he left they have been called just The Islands? He makes the Dos Equis guy seem dull.) Only $16,000? Seems like a steal to me. For what it’s worth, Baseball America recently ranked Strasburg as the best at-the-time-of-the-draft prospect since 1989 (the year the writer joined BA), and Bryce Harper, who just went 6-for-6 with four homers and 10 RBI in a win Saturday that advanced his team to the NJCAA World Series final, came in at No. 15 on that list. Think the Nationals chose the right time to have the No. 1 pick in back-to-back drafts?

What Elvis Andrus did as a 20-year-old rookie last season suggested he’d eventually become a star, and his play so far as a sophomore has only confirmed that. Andrus is taking a bunch of walks (.402 OBP), giving him plenty of opportunities to use his speed (17 steals already), and while more power would be nice, he’s now hitting atop a strong Rangers’ lineup and in a highly favorable hitter’s park. Add in his terrific defense at shortstop, and Andrus is already one of the more valuable commodities in baseball – both in real life and in fantasy leagues.

Lastings Milledge is still just 25 years old, so he obviously can’t be written off, but at some point, he should be considered a bust until proven otherwise. Given regular at-bats with no pressure to perform in 2010, his current line sits at .264/.331/.338. He’s still searching for his first home run this season, and his career SB rate is an abysmal 66.6%. He’s also awful defensively. Milledge’s biggest criticism throughout his career has been his “character,” but right now, his on-field actions are far more concerning.

It’s tough to separate Buzz Bissinger from his insane appearance on “Costas Now,” but I liked his insight regarding the LeBron James situation. Speaking of which, how crazy is this Delonte West rumor? Is it wrong that I choose to believe it?

David Ortiz is becoming one tough player to gauge. He entered June 6 last season with just one home run on the year. He then proceeded to hit more homers than any other player in baseball from then on. This year he ended April with just one homer and a disgusting .143/.238/.286 slash line. I kept his carcass in my Yahoo! Friends & Family league as my corner infielder for some reason nevertheless, but even the most optimistic Ortiz fan couldn’t have predicted his OPS rising nearly 375 points over the next 19 games. During May, Big Papi has hit nine homers with 23 RBI. He’s still striking out in nearly one third of his at-bats, and he’s worthless against left-handers, but this is another reminder not to write obituaries about players 34 years old. And with his current line at Fenway being so poor (.213/.258/.410), there’s room for even more optimism considering he’s yet to take advantage of a favorable home park for hitter’s. It’s easy to say this now, but random scouting reports like “can’t turn on a fastball…he’s lost his bat speed” are just so anecdotal it’s not worth paying attention to the next time an older player is slumping and that’s the reasoning why.

I recorded a podcast Wednesday, and this was the result.

Over his last four starts, Mat Latos has posted a 0.93 ERA and a decent 0.55 WHIP, with a 25:3 K:BB ratio for good measure. Some poor guy in my home league, let’s call him “Corey,” dropped Latos right before this stretch (I happened to snatch him up), so not only did he miss out on this historical stretch, he also had to deal with Latos’ 5.47 ERA over his first 26.1 innings of the season. This guy might as well quit fantasy baseball, as far as I’m concerned. Anyway, back on topic, in truth, Latos’ dominant four-start span has come against a schedule that’s about as easy as it gets (@Hou, @SF, SF, @Sea), and he’s been pretty lucky so far this year (.240 BABIP, 79.7 LOB%). Still, his control has been great (1.95 BB/9), and he’s really improved his groundball rate, and his current xFIP (3.80) is hardly bad. Latos’ fastball and slider are both plus pitches, and his changeup is quickly developing into one as well. Latos is 22 years old and will experience ups and downs like most young pitchers, but with Petco Park, the NL West and a defense that has performed as well as any team in baseball so far all working to his advantage, he’s more of a “hold” than a “sell-high.” Oh, and definitely don’t drop him. That would be bad.

Max Scherzer has a 17:2 K:BB ratio over 15.0 innings since getting sent down to Triple-A. He needs to be stashed in all but the shallowest leagues.

Brandon Morrow’s 11.7 K/9 rate leads major league baseball by a wide margin. He somehow has a 6.66 ERA and 1.70 WHIP despite this. It’s partially his own fault (his 5.76 BB/9 is third worst in MLB) but also due to some awful luck (his .399 BABIP is second highest in baseball). He entered Wednesday’s start with a fine 3.86 xFIP, so Morrow definitely belongs on the fantasy radar – remember, he was a top-five pick back in 2006 (when Seattle chose him over local product Tim Lincecum). The stuff is clearly there – his average fastball velocity is 93.7 mph and his slider is 87.5 mph – so if he can make even a modest improvement in control and have the luck factor regress, there’s major potential here, although pitching in the AL East sure is difficult.

During a 1-0 game in the ninth inning Saturday, Edgar Renteria “stole” second base with two outs, only the ruling was “fielder’s indifference.” Really, the A’s didn’t care that the tying run moved from first base to second? One of the more curious rulings I’ve ever seen.

Thoughts on the “Lost” finale? I actually loved the final season and most of the last episode, but to me, the conclusion was beyond disappointing. It actually made me kind of mad.

I have no clue what to make of Jose Bautista. As someone approaching 30 years old with a career line of .239/.332/.416, he clearly looks like an obvious “sell-high” call, especially when you consider his unsustainable 22.1% HR/FB rate (career mark is 11.6%). But what makes his case more interesting is the fact Bautista hit 10 homers over the final 30 games last season. In fact, since early September, he leads major league baseball in homers by a wide margin. One could point to his low BABIP (.226) as a sign his BA will shoot up, but really, that’s more of a reflection of how many of his balls in play are leaving the fence. Shopping him still feels like the right move, but in reality, with his track record, my guess is Bautista remains a tough sell, so might as well ride him out and see how this crazy story concludes.


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29 responses to “The Scoop”

  1. Walt Weiss Avatar
    Walt Weiss

    Lastings Milledge can do it all. I remember seeing him when he played AAA for the New Orleans Zephyrs. True talent. If he’s not putting up the numbers, you can blame the organization for that.

  2. Dreamweapon Avatar
    Dreamweapon

    As an owner (in the Rotoscoop league, no less), there is just no point in even trying to trade Bautista as, even in fairly deep leagues, the overwhelming majority of fantasy players are simply far too conservative and frightened to give anything of actual substance for him. You can’t even deal him for guys with career .240 averages. Maybe you could get a decent middle reliever–but then again, there are serviceable set-up guys available on most free agent heaps anyway, so what is the point? In a year where many 3b are outright crapping the bed (Ramirez, Figgins, etc.), the fact he slots in there makes him even more valuable, at least to me. He cost his people nothing to acquire, so they lose nothing even if he reverts back to obscurity and loses his job to clowns like Encarnacion and Lewis. Maybe he goes for 30+ and has a career year–guys do it every season (e.g., wasn’t Barlett a top-5 SS last year, despite a complete lack of pedigree or record)–and maybe he collapses outright and loses his job, but the upside is obviously substantial and the downside is close to non-existent. Given the likely returns, I’d way rather keep riding the guy as long as I can.

    I’m sure it won’t make me popular, but I thought the ‘Lost’ finale was a saccharine load of suck. Remember back when the creators were banging on about how everything on the island had a “scientific” explanation as opposed to New Age-y mystical poppycock? Ahhhhahahahahahahaha. I’ll have to go back and consult my copy of the ‘Principia’ on the physics of magic light and the corks that make it happen. Desmond’s “value” was completely fictional since Jack was “supposed” to die anyway, and in fact did so, performing exactly the same function–as a result they never even needed the purportedly pivotal player anyway and everything Desmond did in that timeline, certainly for this season, was fundamentally pointless. And it can’t have been because the six inch deep pool in which said cork resided was filled with electrified water–I’m pretty sure there are rubber boots that tall, and even if they didn’t have any, they could’ve simply rigged a frame over the pool with bamboo. The Chinese build freakin’ skyscrapers with bamboo scaffolding (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:BambooConstructionHongKong.jpg), I’m pretty sure it’s up to the task of holding the weight of one man while he removes a magic cork. And we know it was there, courtesy of Jacob’s promise that the cave would be found just past the “bamboo forest”. And why the hell was he (Desmond) just laying down there like a baby while the world was supposed coming to an end? They tried to make it seem like lava (or maybe “evil”, this being Lost) seeped out of the fissure after the cork was removed, but there was nothing there when Jack went down. He was strong enough to hold onto a rope and be hauled up a cliff face, but not strong enough to move the magic cork three or four feet back to the place he’d just removed it from? And what the hell was the point of the earlier story with Kaneda from ‘Sunshine’ and Sol Starr from ‘Deadwood’? Why were those people there? Nothing was properly explained, everything seems like balderdash (why didn’t Jacob inherit the full powers of his magical, village-destroying mother? Why couldn’t he simply transfer her magic spell so that Smokey couldn’t harm his successor, either?). And I loved them bringing back the relationship between the supposed Republican Guard torturer and the shallow, spoiled Valley Girl, because that was _so_ believable. I’m left with a sour taste from the entire show and basically feel like everything after the first season has been a giant waste of my time. Thankfully for DVR I never had to make an effort to watch the program, or I’d be a hundred times angrier, but to me, this was a big budget production with a ton of advantages over most shows, which nevertheless managed to squander most of them and make itself into a self-parody. Most of the characters were _not_ likable, apart from Hurley, the story was weak, with numerous appeals to mystical crap and endless demands that viewers simply take things on faith, and even the method of storytelling, with the stupid flashbacks, was fairly condescending, esp. in an era where shows like ‘The Wire’, ‘Deadwood’ and ‘Breaking Bad’ have demonstrated that an audience can be smart enough to keep up with events without a constant dose of expositional hand-holding.

    Ok, enough of that!

  3. Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover Avatar
    Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover

    Well sure, DW, you’d rather keep riding Bautista — if you can’t flip him for Billingsley! 🙂 “I still believe in you, Figgy!”

    And the hatred for Lost’s finale is pretty widespread. And even more well-earned than the disdain for the Sopranos and Galactica’s endings…

  4. Donald Trump Avatar
    Donald Trump

    i dropped latos right before his epic run as well. I had him for $1 nexst year if I didn’t drop him. I hope that doesn’t mean I should quit fantasy baseball, the kid was only throwing 85 pithes per start, they were really babying him at the time, and in a head-to-head league, a rookie that throws 85 pitches is worthless. I guess I was wrong on many counts.

  5. Keith Avatar
    Keith

    The final moments of lost carried a bit of emotional heft, and I liked the final scene/image….but as to what actually happened? The more I think about it, the less I like it. It basically negates everything that happened after the first season. Did they get off the island? Live or die? Drink magic water to make them immortal? Doesn’t matter! Everyone ends up in the willed-into-existence (???) church which is outside of time and space? Was that a result of the nuke they set off, or was it independent of that? Did any of the final season matter at all?? Anyway, not pleased…not pleased at all.

  6. Corey Avatar
    Corey

    That guy sounds like a real asshole.

  7. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    DW, I find it incongruent that you need so many irrelevant, yet interpretive questions answered but disdain expositional handholding.

    I guess I’m in the minority here, but I view the series/finale from a much different perspective. Forget the religious imagery; I believe that was shown simply to convey the afterlife from a non-denominational, or rather inclusionary perspective.

    The Desmond thing was perplexing, but the dude shocked his body like never before and had some R&R until Jack arrived. Just go w/ it…besides, Jack needed to merk fLocke before the plug re-entered the magical butthole, and a second attempt into the field might have tapped Des out for good, hence Jack took it for the team. Just my opinion.

    Why didn’t Jacob transfer properties ala his adoptive mother? I’ll assume it’s because he made his own rules. In ‘Across the Sea,’ young MiB tells Jacob “when it’s your turn to make a game, you can make the rules. Maaaaybe Jacob’s omission of this specific rule was his lone sign of regret for turning his bro into a demon. However, it’s more likely that everyone, including the protector, is fair game once the light is extinguished.
    Although I don’t think you brought this up, do want an answer for the polar bear? I have a theory…being that the show literally and figuratively delves into matters of polarity, chances are that Dharma tested the bears to see if they could handle electro-magnetic energy. They were the “Desmond” of their experiment. Why polar bears? I dunno… maybe because N/S poles can fuck up a compass bearing and the Earth has similiar properties on each axis. Plus, they are fucking huge. Shock ’em and see how long they can last. Afterall, the bear cages on hydra island did contain some shocking instruments (sidenote: I bet Kate had a huuuge bush when Sawyer boned her there. Just sayin’…they’d been on that island for awhile and I don’t think she was concerned with maintaining a neat landing strip, but I digress).

    In terms of Desmond’s value, he was the catalyst for relaying the consciousness of “purgatory” to the remaining members of the island (although Sawyer was left out in this regard). He proved in previous seasons (too lazy to research) that his memories transcend space+time. Yes, he wasn’t needed for the replacement of the cork, but he was needed to remove it. Desmond for the assist. The afterlife couldn’t exist if the job wasn’t finished by Jack, which Kate and Desmond couldn’t understand when they urged Jack to with them during their respective moments of escape.

    Finally, do you seriously believe any writer could scientifically explain the shit going on in this series? Did you really take each podcast/interview at face value? The creators of this series went out on a pretty far limb, and I applaud them for it. Yes, the ending was predictable, but apparently the means to the end are open to interpretation. They tried to juggle fate/free-will/science/faith as much as possible. In the end, there was plenty of dogma, but their journey balanced all four of the aforementioned components pretty well. You are entitled to your opinion, obviously, but these struggles that I speak of were constant elements to the series, which they are in life.

    Ultimately, “Lost” was about lonely people/souls with little to cherish in their lives, so they had to build something in order to venture into the afterlife. When Richard/Jacob warned others about MiB leaving the island, they never mentioned that he would destroy the world. They simply said that everyone they loved would be gone, aka no afterlife for you or them.

    One more thing…I’ve yet to hear or read anything about the Egyptian creationism/imagery that we saw in Lost. Nothing about the flip-cards in the hatch-countdown or Jacob’s statue-wall that clearly shows the staff, bird, and hook depicted in Osiris (former Egytian King/Judge of the dead) imagery. Apparently, some of you needed some hand holding with this one. Ask DDD, I had this pegged from its first glimpse, and this was only reinforced when Hurley gave Dogen a guitar containing an “Ankh.” In Jacob’s case, the writing was literally on the wall…
    check this out re: Sobek, aka the big Crocodile Statue. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobek

    Sobek’s ambiguous nature led some Egyptians to believe that he was a repairer of evil that had been done, rather than a force for good in itself, for example, going to Duat to restore damage done to the dead as a result of their form of death. He was also said to call on suitable gods and goddesses required for protecting people in situation, effectively having a more distant role, nudging things along, rather than taking an active part. In this way, he was seen as a more primal god, eventually becoming regarded as an avatar of the primal god Amun, who at that time was considered the chief god. When his identity finally merged, Amun had become merged himself with Ra to become Amun-Ra, so Sobek, as an avatar of Amun-Ra, was known as Sobek-Ra.
    In Egyptian art, Sobek was depicted as an ordinary crocodile, or as a man with the head of a crocodile. When considered a patron of the pharaoh’s army, he was shown with the symbol of royal authority – the uraeus. He was also shown with an ankh, representing his ability to undo evil and so cure ills. Once he had become Sobek-Ra, he was also shown with a sun-disc over his head, as Ra was a sun god.
    In other myths, which appeared extremely late in ancient Egyptian history, Sobek was credited for catching the Four sons of Horus in a net as they emerged from the waters of the Nile in a lotus blossom. This motif derives from the birth of Ra in the Ogdoad cosmogony, and the fact that as a crocodile, Sobek is the best suited to collecting items upon the Nile.

    ^^^^^ If that doesn’t describe Jacob, I don’t know what else to tell you. Here is some Osiris stuff re: hatch images plus creationsim, MiB and afterlife. In particular, scroll down to the chart of Mesopotamian vs Egyptian philosophy.

    http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.wlym.com/~spanish/articulos/Grecia,%2520hija%2520de%2520Egipto%2520II%2520Parte_archivos/OsirisIsisHorus.jpg&imgrefurl=https://mythprojects.wikispaces.com/Neighbors%2Bof%2Bthe%2BUnknown%2BWorld&usg=__1lJOFRBfXsGxbXmhkeIsL1dkwh0=&h=250&w=350&sz=26&hl=en&start=21&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=Y75bNuIBwp4ZFM:&tbnh=86&tbnw=120&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dosiris%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26ndsp%3D21%26tbs%3Disch:1

    http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://historylink101.net/images/osiris_dead_man.jpg&imgrefurl=http://historylink101.net/egypt_1/religion_mummification_history.htm&usg=__GMVVMUD_1-x06Ok4K0IzV3QS1bM=&h=216&w=324&sz=19&hl=en&start=49&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=G2cUO9MMb4-y3M:&tbnh=79&tbnw=118&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dosiris%26start%3D42%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26ndsp%3D21%26tbs%3Disch:1

    http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://seshdotcom.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/osiris.jpg&imgrefurl=http://seshdotcom.wordpress.com/2009/01/01/&usg=__XYXAk_A86l0ufTzR0TGC3tzJiiQ=&h=306&w=320&sz=37&hl=en&start=1&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=AToIa4QlvR4xaM:&tbnh=113&tbnw=118&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dosiris%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26ndsp%3D21%26tbs%3Disch:1

    If you are still reading this and checking the links, you’ll realize that Cuse and what’s his butt where giving subtle hints that required very little legwork to realize what was going down. They didn’t hold your hand, but they did lead the horse to water. I guess you didn’t drink it, thus you are disappointed with the theological ending.

  8. The Jewru Avatar
    The Jewru

    Baustista is a borderline major leaguer. He is cheating, made a deal with the devil or both. If he hit .190 with 7 homers from this point forward would you be shocked?

    Nick I will give you Pennington for him.

  9. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    Not to beat a dead horse, but my second link, might need some hand-holding. The Mesopotamians viewed the Tigris-Euprhates as a feared river of life, that could flood their civilization (hmmm, like sinking the island) while the Egyptians viewed their Nile as a means to enter a GOLDEN AGE (no kidding?).

  10. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor
  11. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    In closing, “Lost” is an adapted screenplay based upon Egytpian creationism and afterlife. I’m done.

  12. Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover Avatar
    Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover

    Ty Wigginton — worthy trade target?

  13. Alvin Robertson Avatar
    Alvin Robertson

    Fred Lewis??

  14. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Walt Weiss – I like the idea of passing the blame from Milledge to the Pirates. Well played.

  15. Alvin Robertson Avatar
    Alvin Robertson

    I thought he was doing well since the trade. I read the recaps and box scores and I see him getting clutch hit after clutch hit often hitting towards the top of a potent Jays lineup. Brian S has made a lot of shitty moves but why would he trade any bat unless the guy has one foot in the grave? He sure likes to sign those types! I know Lewis was doing quite well but i was surprised to learn he leads the AL in doubles since moving over with 19 doubles in 40 games. Sabes needs to get crucified for this move more than he has, I have not have one word to this effect from anyone. Have you een Bradens 209 tat?

  16. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Dreamweapon – I’m less down on the overall “Lost” experience than you, but I generally agree with your final conclusion (and the Sayid/Shannon thing was beyond ridiculous. Nadia was a big waste of time?)

  17. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Stevie – I kind of liked “The Sopranos” finale.

  18. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Donald – Don’t beat yourself up. Again, Latos’ schedule has been as easy as it gets since then (although in the future, this may be a lesson in looking at schedules before dropping SPs, but that is some work).

  19. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Keith – It sounds like we all agree (well, expect for Jim Lahey).

  20. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Corey – He’s not an asshole, but he’ll be regretting the day he dropped Latos till his death.

  21. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Jim Lahey – Appreciate all those comments. One thing is for certain – “Lost” succeeded in creating a bunch of conversation, which in my opinion, is a great thing, regardless of what side you’re on.

  22. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Stevie Ya Yo – Sorry for my slow response, but I see he was a worthy target for you in the Scoop league.

  23. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Alvin Robertson – Don’t get me started. He’s probably a more valuable player than even a healthy Mark DeRosa, yet was given away. Meanwhile, DeRosa was given a far more expensive contract (for multiple years) WHILE HE HAD A MESSED UP WRIST. I’m not sure I’ve made this known on my site, but I don’t think Brian Sabean is a very good GM. Yes, this was a terrible move – Lewis is a much better defensive player too.

  24.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    it’s official — High Violet is as good if not better than Boxer. Not one less-than-stellar tune on the entire album. And it is an album, a great listen from first some to last.

    How has it stood up so far for you?

  25. i am Jack's fantasy baseball team Avatar
    i am Jack’s fantasy baseball team

    me above

  26. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Stood up so well, I’m now forcing myself not to listen to it for a few days. Worried about overkill I’ve listened so much. Agreed on all accounts that you said. Saw them in concert last week – amazing show.

  27. Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover Avatar
    Stevie Yay-Yo, Pro from Dover

    DDD — desperate times call for desperate measures. Like adding Ty Wiggs at the expense of a guy you don’t trust to maintain a WHIP below 1.33.

  28. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    I hear ya Stevie.

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