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Kevin Slowey

Believe It Or Not

by Hans on April 16, 2009

“April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain.” Who would have thought T.S. Eliot was writing about baseball, eh?

But April is most certainly cruel for fantasy baseball fans as we don’t know what to believe. Should we view these unexpected lilacs through the critical lens of our recent memory? Should we view these dull roots with the desire that spring rain can offer? Or are we to look at the last 2 weeks as signs of things we missed?

A number of things are certainly difficult to believe.

Adam Dunn is hitting .375
As of this morning, this .247 career hitter had started the year 9 for 25. What’s more, he had 11 walks to only 6 strikeouts. I’m going to go with common sense here and assume he doesn’t finish the season with a .300+ batting average. But he seems to be paying off handsomely for the hard luck Nationals, offering them the solid offensive presence in a lineup still trying to find itself.

A New Big Papi
Nelson Cruz leading the Majors in HR’s is actually more believable. This Dominican Papi, a 28 year old masher for Texas, already has 5 long balls. No, his pace for 90 HR’s on the season won’t last. But he swings a big stick in the middle of a potent Rangers lineup and plays half of his games in homer heaven. If it’s a history of power you want, Cruz hit 44 home runs between the minors and majors last year. Take my word for it. This slugger is for real.

Broken Wang
Chien Meng Wang has let up as many earned runs (15) as C.C. Sabathia (7), A.J. Burnett (4), and Andy Pettitte (4) have combined. His ERA (29.38) and WHIP (4.50) are just cartoonish and to make matters worse, he has yet to make it out of the 4th inning. So far, he has had the same issues as fellow sinkerballer Fausto Carmona. Wang hasn’t been throwing for strikes and those that he does throw are not down in the strike zone. The result, hitters take many more pitches and crush the big fat gopher balls that do make it across the plate. He will keep working on refining his stuff and eventually Wang will return to his groundball happy form. Keep an eye on him should a nervous owner get stupid and dump him for Carl Pavano.

Hit Parade
Cliff Lee and Kevin Slowey place first and second in the league for hits allowed. Lee is coming off of a Cy Young season and Slowey had the makings of one leading up to this year. I’m not sold on Lee as he showed violent swings in his control from year to year. But keep your eye on Slowey. For all of those people who drafted him for a super low WHIP, there’s got to be someone ready to bail before the month is out.

I always like to suggest to fantasy owners that they do one very important thing in the month of April. Nothing. April IS the cruelest month. Sluggers start slowly just as duds start hot. If you pick up a bright star this month, just make sure it doesn’t come with a huge cost.

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2009 Breakouts & Busts

by Hans on March 30, 2009

Every year, as warmer weather melts the remaining sheets of snow revealing dirt and faded grass, we look down and wonder what will return. Will the seeds of last year’s flowers, which came out of nowhere to grow strong in the summer sun, return even taller and brighter? Or will they arrive unspectacularly, outshined by some new sprout?  For the constant gardeners of fantasy baseball, spring is a time to look to those patches of dirt and grass for signs of things to come.

In previous articles, we’ve covered Kevin Slowey and Ryan Zimmerman.  So considering them as freebies, the following 9 pairs of players should either exceed or fail to meet expectations this coming season.

2009 Breakout Catcher Chris Iannetta

This Mile High slugger put up some sick numbers in the minors in 2006, posting a 1.040 and .950 OPS in AA and AAA, respectively.  Suffice it to say, he started 2007 with high expectations.  But when he batted .218 and struck out nearly 30% of the time, Colorado decided that they needed to sign Yorvit Torrealba to a 2 year deal through 2009.  But Iannetta started 2008 with a bang, delivering a 1.000 OPS in April and convincing the Rockies that he deserved to be the starter.  By the end of the year, his .504 slugging percentage finished behind only Brian McCann among catchers with 300+ at bats.  Iannetta’s strong in two areas - patience and power.  And the former typically comes to the aid of the latter as a hitter hits his prime.  His walk rate (14.4%) was already tops among catchers with his Isolated Power (.240) trailing only Kelly Shoppach.  To put that in perspective, the patient and powerful Mark Teixiera put up a 14.5% walk rate and a .244 ISO last year.  At 26 years old, this Coors field backstop should take another step forward ending the season as high as the top 5.

2009 Bust Catcher Jorge Posada

Pop quiz.  Which 37 year old catcher coming off of surgery on his throwing shoulder and expecting to sit every once in a while (DH is blocked by Hideki Matsui and 1B blocked by Mark Teixiera) is currently being drafted as the 9th best catcher in ESPN fantasy leagues?  It’s not that I don’t think Posada’s a great bat.   He spent the final year of his last contract, 2007, putting up a .338 average with 20 HR’s, 91 Runs, and 90 RBI’s.   But that was 2 years ago.  That was before shoulder surgery.  He didn’t catch a Spring Training game until March 15th and the Yankees have said their hope is for Posada to play in 120 games.  But if his shoulder isn’t strong enough to consistently throw out runners, will they move Matsui or Teixiera to keep Posada’s bat in the lineup?  If you are drafting a top 10 catcher, you should look for someone who can give you at least 400 at bats without the injury risk Posada brings to the table.

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The Little Things

March 2, 2009

Last offseason, the Tigers tried to upgrade their team with a massive blockbuster trade, sending Andrew Miller, Cameron Maybin, and half a team’s worth of low-to-mid tier prospects for 24-year-old slugger Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis. They followed this acquisition by signing Cabrera to an eight year, $153.3 million contract and Willis to a [...]

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Kevin Slowey - A 2009 Breakout Candidate

January 22, 2009

To quote quite possibly the greatest baseball movie ever made, Bull Durham, “This is a very simple game. You throw the ball. You hit the ball. You catch the ball. You got it?”
Kevin Slowey - A 2009 Breakout Pitcher?
For all of the wisdom that pitching coaches try to impart on their young gunslingers, the keys [...]

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