Youkilis commits to Team USA, Sosa will work 4 millions of dollars
ESPN.com says that Kevin Youkilis is the newest of relatively few players to take up arms for Team USA in the upcoming 2009 World Baseball Classic. Boston teammate and AL MVP Dustin Pedroia was the last to commit, if I recall.
ESPN says that Youkilis, Pedroia, Derek Jeter, David Wright, Chipper Jones, John Lackey, Brian McCann and Grady Sizemore have also signed on, though you can expect at least one of those to drop out by the time the rosters are officially set.
Davey Johnson's going to have a hell of a time, really. The first WBC saw the Americans pretty well embarrassed, including a loss to Canada, and the word back in '06 was that the next time out, some of our proud American ballplayers might step up and compete for national pride or whatever it is they're competing for in the WBC. Instead, A-Rod took his purse-slapping and purple lips and old woman fetish to the Dominican team.
Also, if you were waiting, it's that time of year where Sammy Sosa wonders aloud why no one's knocking his door down.
"Those who saw me training know that I'm hitting the ball with the usual authority. I just hope to get the chance to prove that I'm still a threat," said Sosa at a charity event sponsored by his foundation.
I remember the olden days, when Mr. Sosa's English was so patchy he had to bring a translator to Washington with him. Baseball been berry berry goo to he. It's so reeeeaaaal.
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Unbiased Postseason Recap: Day Eight
It's freaking Brett Myers Mania.
Phillies 8, Dodgers 5 (Philadelphia leads series, 2-0)
As Good Ol' JR might say, Brett Myers batting or running is bowling shoe ugly. (Hey, it's Red River Rivalry day. And for kicks -- Texas, Oklahoma.)
Yeah, Myers went 4-for-58 with 3 RBI in the entire regular season, and he's 4-for-5 with 3 RBI this postseason, including 3-for-3 with all those RBI yesterday. The most amazing thing, though, is he almost fell over between second and third base at one point, and later conked himself in the back of the head on his backswing. Pretty hilarious, really. What can you do? The dude's in the zone.
At the plate, anyway. His pitching was not as impressive, as he went five innings with five earned on six hits, four walks and six strikeouts. The Phillies win either way, and Myers' 3 RBI wind up being the difference.
Manny Ramirez went deep again, and a long fly to center from Casey Blake threatened to rally the Dodgers back into a tie game late, but Shane Victorino went back to the wall and grabbed it out of the sky with a mildly leaping catch.
With the Dodgers burning through six pitchers in the game, their rotation is now set only so far as Hiroki Kuroda will start game three on Sunday.
This is a good photo:
Red Sox 2, Rays 0 (Boston leads series, 1-0)
Earlier on SportsCenter, Buster Olney said that Daisuke Matsuzaka was the biggest question mark for Boston in this postseason.
...really?
Mike Lowell being out, forcing Mark Kotsay into first base and Youkilis over to third, and Beckett being iffy, and hoping that J.D. Drew doesn't come up lame again -- but Daisuke Matsuzaka (18-3, 2.90 ERA) was the biggest question?
For reals, Buster?
(Note: Re-watching, Buster said "going into the ALCS" -- still, really? Matsuzaka and not Beckett?)
No matter, Daisuke threw a no-hitter into the seventh inning and put in a performance you might count as "brilliant" if you're someone that goes bananas over David Lynch films. He made no sense and he took forever, but in the end, pretty good.
Home field advantage is now gone, which is made too big a deal, probably. There are still three games left at Tampa Bay should it go seven, and three games in Boston. Big whoop. I don't go in for home field advantage so much at this stage, which might seem like the exact time to go in for it, but it just doesn't make or break anything, I don't think. These are all really good teams still playing.
The scoring came on a Jed Lowrie sac fly in the fifth and a Youkilis double in the eighth, securing the win. Jonathan Papelbon extended his postseason scoreless innings streak to 20 2/3.
Tough loss for the Rays, too. James Shields pitched a hell of a game and the bullpen shut it down as they have been doing, but they just didn't score. Can't win without a run.
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The 2008 All-American League East Team

Logos courtesy Chris Creamer's SportsLogos.net
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With the 2008 baseball season coming to a close (a thankful close, if you've watched the O's play this month), I thought it'd be fun to look back on the AL East, baseball's strongest division, and no longer simply a two-horse race.
It doesn't exactly represent what went down in the AL East this season, with Tampa Bay claiming the title (knock on wood) in their first-ever winning season and Boston never being seriously challenged for second place and the wild card. With New York crumbling under the average age of their roster (rivaling the age of the stadium they've closed), and Toronto being Toronto, somewhere in the middle, and a general nuisance at best. But an All-American League East team seemed like a decent idea. Hey, why not? The Sun Belt Conference names an all-conference team.
STARTING PITCHER: ROY HALLADAY, TORONTO
It would be impossible to argue anyone else in the division as a better starting pitcher in 2008 (or period, probably) than Roy Halladay. The closest comparison is Boston's Jon Lester -- not Beckett, not Kazmir, not Shields, not Wang, not Mussina. Jon Lester. Go figure.
Halladay is a Cy Young contender, at least relatively. Cliff Lee absolutely should win the award, and there's no question about that. But Halladay will get his share of Cy Young votes, and as good as he is year in and year out, he deserves it.
CATCHER: DIONER NAVARRO, TAMPA BAY
It's not so much that Navarro had some great season, but the cupboard is pretty bare for good catchers within the division. Ramon Hernandez needed a solid second half to even claw back into "below average" territory, and his defense is so atrocious that he'd have had to significantly out-hit Navarro anyway. Varitek stunk, Posada got hurt, the Jays had the underwhelming Gregg Zaun (nephew of Rick Dempsey, if you had never heard) and Rod Barajas splitting time. All in all, a putrid year for AL East catchers.
Navarro wins on being solid. He hit for a nice average, kept his OBP fairly strong, and managed to sneak his slugging over .400. He also made his first All-Star team. Way to go, dude! You win!
FIRST BASE: KEVIN YOUKILIS, BOSTON
An outstanding year for Youkilis, who sacrificed some walks and came away with a power bump, a risky move that paid off. Throw in the fact that he should win the Gold Glove hands down, and he's a runaway choice.
With David Ortiz hurting, Manny Ramirez traded, Mike Lowell regressing, and J.D. Drew doing his usual DL dance, it was Youkilis' power bat that carried the Boston lineup. Youkilis set career highs in doubles, homers, hits, average, slugging percentage, and sacrificed no on-base percentage thanks to the spike in his contact numbers. In a year where things could have gone very wrong for Boston, Youkilis was one of the guys that put the team on his back and carried them into the postseason.
SECOND BASE: DUSTIN PEDROIA, BOSTON
All apologies to those of you that hate Pedroia, and an honorable mention to the admirable Brian Roberts, but let's not kid ourselves. Pedroia's a better player, and he had the much better year.
Pedroia isn't just some annoying "lil' sparkplug" middle infielder that slaps the ball around and plays overrated defense and "does the little things." Dude contended for a batting title, hit over 50 doubles, and came close to 20 homers. He was also near-perfect on stolen base attempts.
He is a hell of a good baseball player, and a guy anyone would love to have on their team. C'mon. Admit it.
THIRD BASE: ALEX RODRIGUEZ, NEW YORK
The Yankees screw around all year, never get white-hot to overcome their here-and-there crappiness, and the player that gets booed is Alex Rodriguez.
See, usually I'd go, "What is wrong with you people?"
But I was giving this a good, solid think the other day, and the thing I do ignore when this topic enters my mind is that A-Rod is, well, kind of a d-bag, y'know? Slapping purses on the way to first base, announcing his free agency while baseball's focus should be on the playoffs, then wasting everyone's time by just staying in New York anyway with a sweetheart deal designed to get him a monument and some Ted Williams-style "later in life, we realized..." type of admiration from Yankee fans in the future.
So maybe booing this dork just speaks well of the taste of Yankee fans. Not everyone is meant to be liked. And by the way, this position wasn't close either. Never is with this dude around.
SHORTSTOP: DEREK JETER, NEW YORK
Congratulations, Derek! You're still the best shortstop in the division!
Like Navarro, this is more that no one else was worth a crap than it is some spectacular season from Jeter. It's been Jeter's worst season since 1997, when he was in his second full year. It's also the first time in his career that he's missing the playoffs, so I'm sure he'd categorize this as the worst, bar none.
His batting average dip isn't the real problem -- it's power and patience. Jeter's OBP and SLG slides (.388/.452 in 2007, and .417/.483 in 2006) are very real, and should be a huge concern for the Yankees. He also still stinks in the field. When the competition is the likes of David Eckstein, Julio Lugo, Jason Bartlett and the Unholy Union of Baltimore Shortstops, though, Jeter looks like Honus Wagner.
OUTFIELD: NICK MARKAKIS, BALTIMORE
This is no jive, no bias, and no favoritism: Nick Markakis is the best outfielder in the American League East.
He does it all, frankly. Hits for average, has fine power, gets on base like a demon all of a sudden, cannon arm, great glove. He trumps them all, though a full season of Bay or Ramirez would have beaten him, and a full season of Drew may have, too. Still, we take what we can get here in Birdland. Nick Markakis! Best outfielder in the division! Suck it!
OUTFIELD: BOBBY ABREU, NEW YORK
OK, so Abreu has lost a couple steps and he's always been a lousy right fielder. He's still a valuable player. Like the next fella that'll make the team, the asterisk exists. With Manny or Bay in a full season or Drew not getting hurt, there's a good chance they don't make this team. They probably don't, in fact.
Injuries, man.
OUTFIELD: JOHNNY DAMON, NEW YORK
Here we are. 2008, and Johnny Damon is making the All-AL East team. You know what? I can't take it. I can't stomach it. Terrible. The worst.
But he did have a nice season and did about all you could expect and probably then some.
DESIGNATED HITTER: AUBREY HUFF, BALTIMORE
Aubrey Huff, man. Who'da thunk it prior to this season? Aging, fading, plus, let's be serious, an Oriole. Aging, fading Orioles don't generally put up huge seasons when no one's expecting it.
This would have been a unanimous vote for David Ortiz in the preseason, but even without his injuries I'm not sure he beats Huff out. Aubrey was really good this year, and even won over the Baltimore fans he so righteously angered in the offseason.
CLOSER: MARIANO RIVERA, NEW YORK
Are you kidding me? This guy could probably close and close like an All-Star until he's 50 if feels like it. He shows no signs of wear and tear and no signs of slowing down. As good as Jonathan Papelbon was in 2008, he wasn't on Rivera's planet.
What does this guy eat?
RELIEF PITCHER: J.P. HOWELL, TAMPA BAY
I thought there needed to be a position for the guys who bridge the gap between the starters and the closers, and J.P. Howell has done that better than anyone in the divison, throwing neary 100 innings and dominating. The handful of times I got to see him this year, he reminded me of B.J. Ryan except smaller -- a lefty that can flat-out smoke the hitter and get it done daily.
I'm sure someone has some qualms, so let's hear 'em.
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Gameday Thread: 2008 All-Star Game
8:05 on FOX, y'all. Let's take this stupid, pointless day as a chance to talk a lot of B.S. about players that have no real bearing on our team. Rock and roll, hoochie koo.
| Today's Starting Pitchers | GS | IP | ERA | WHIP | BAA | HR | BB | K | W-L | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Ben Sheets - RH - Brewers | 18 | 123.0 | 2.85 | 1.11 | .235 | 13 | 28 | 108 | 10-3 |
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Cliff Lee - LH - Indians | 18 | 124.2 | 2.31 | 1.03 | .234 | 5 | 20 | 106 | 12-2 |
![]() | National League | AB | AVG | OBP | HR | RBI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hanley Ramirez - SS - Marlins | 373 | .311 | .391 | 23 | 45 |
| 2 | Chase Utley - 2B - Phillies | 364 | .291 | .372 | 25 | 69 |
| 3 | Lance Berkman - 1B - Astros | 334 | .347 | .443 | 22 | 73 |
| 4 | Albert Pujols - DH - Cardinals | 286 | .350 | .466 | 18 | 50 |
| 5 | Chipper Jones - 3B - Braves | 298 | .376 | .472 | 18 | 51 |
| 6 | Matt Holliday - RF - Rockies | 309 | .337 | .421 | 14 | 51 |
| 7 | Ryan Braun - LF - Brewers | 377 | .286 | .324 | 23 | 66 |
| 8 | Kosuke Fukudome - CF - Cubs | 326 | .279 | .383 | 7 | 36 |
| 9 | Geovany Soto - C - Cubs | 316 | .288 | .369 | 16 | 56 |
![]() | American League | AB | AVG | OBP | HR | RBI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ichiro - RF - Mariners | 391 | .304 | .366 | 3 | 21 |
| 2 | Derek Jeter - SS - Yankees | 352 | .284 | .345 | 5 | 42 |
| 3 | Josh Hamilton - CF - Rangers | 377 | .310 | .367 | 21 | 95 |
| 4 | Alex Rodriguez - 3B - Yankees | 279 | .312 | .392 | 19 | 53 |
| 5 | Manny Ramirez - LF - Red Sox | 328 | .293 | .389 | 18 | 60 |
| 6 | Milton Bradley - DH - Rangers | 269 | .316 | .440 | 19 | 57 |
| 7 | Kevin Youkilis - 1B - Red Sox | 328 | .314 | .381 | 15 | 63 |
| 8 | Joe Mauer - C - Twins | 301 | .322 | .418 | 5 | 41 |
| 9 | Dustin Pedroia - 2B - Red Sox | 395 | .314 | .357 | 9 | 47 |
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