Tag: Oakland Athletics

MLB: 10 Things the Oakland Athletics Should Focus on in 2011

In 2010, the Oakland Athletics took strides in the right direction, posting an 81-81 record to snap a streak of three consecutive losing seasons.  Though Oakland’s pitching kept them competitive, lack of offensive production counteracted a solid rotation and kept the A’s out of the playoffs for the fourth year in a row.

Though the A’s have potential to continue their progression, the American League West is a competitive division, highlighted by the recent resurgence of the Texas Rangers.  But with perennial powerhouses crowding the AL East, the A’s only route to the postseason may be a division crown.  If Oakland can focus on these 10 things, there may be a World Series parade in Northern California for the second consecutive year, only this time for the A’s.

Begin Slideshow


Fantasy Baseball 2011 Projection: Will Brett Anderson Fully Break Out?

Brett Anderson had a bit of a coming-out party in 2010, though injuries didn’t allow him to fully put his talents on display. You can see by his numbers what could be possible:

Seven Wins
112.1 Innings
2.80 ERA
1.19 WHIP
75 Strikeouts (6.01 K/9)
22 Walks (1.76 BB/9)
.294 BABIP

It was problems with his elbow that caused him to miss significant time, but it is extremely hard to argue with the results. The most impressive number is probably his control, and that is something that is extremely realistic. In his rookie year, he posted a BB/9 of 2.31 (over 175.1 innings). Over his minor-league career, he’s at 1.88 over 244.2 innings.

Obviously, there is fear of a slight regression, but it certainly isn’t a big one. He has elite control, and that goes a long way toward helping Anderson post impressive WHIPs.

The next impressive feat is his ground-ball rate, which was at 54.6 percent after posting a 50.9 percent mark in his rookie campaign.

So he has great control and is a ground-ball pitcher who calls a pitcher’s park home. How much more do we need to know?

In fact, things get even more impressive. While he struggled with the strikeouts, the injury may have had an impact on that. In his rookie season, he posted a 7.70 K/9, and over his minor-league career he was at 9.60. The fact is there is a good chance he improves here, giving him the perfect trio of skills.

Yes, you can argue that he was slightly lucky with a 75.4 percent strand rate, but improved strikeouts are going to help to offset any regression there. The fact of the matter is Anderson brings the potential to excel in three key aspects of pitching, making him a pitcher we should all target on draft day.

Granted, pitching for the A’s may not give him a tremendous number of opportunities for wins. However, with the bullpen they have assembled (assuming the scare for Andrew Bailey is in fact nothing serious, as they are currently saying), he just needs to get them to the sixth inning with the lead and there is a great chance for victory.

You should have Bailey locking down the ninth. Before him, you have key free-agent imports Brian Fuentes and Grant Balfour. Let’s not forget about names like Michael Wuertz, Craig Breslow and others. Oakland’s bullpen has the potential to be one of the best, if not the best in the business. That turns the game from a nine-inning affair into a six-inning one.

My projection for Anderson in 2011:

180.0 IP, 14 W, 3.15 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, 150 K (7.50 K/9), 40 BB (2.00 BB/9)

According to Mock Draft Central, Anderson currently has an ADP of 147.93. That’s the 15th round, making him a tremendous value. It’s hard to call him a sleeper, because we all know his name, but he is more than worth grabbing.

What are your thoughts on Anderson? How good do you think he can be? Is he a player you are targeting?

**** Make sure to order your copy of the Rotoprofessor 2011 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, selling for just $5, by clicking here. ****

Make sure to check out some of our 2011 projections:

THIS ARTICLE IS ALSO FEATURED ON WWW.ROTOPROFESSOR.COM.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB: 5 Questions the Oakland A’s Need to Answer in Spring Training

It sounds weird, but there is an air of finality about the start of the Oakland A’s 2011 season.

The franchise is now in its third edition of the Billy Beane spin cycle (draft, develop, trade, repeat), and neither the GM nor the fans can bear another trip down rebuild road.

If 2011 is once again injury plagued and poorly attended, it could not only spell the end for Beane’s run in Oakland, it could also be the final bit of ammunition ownership needs to force the franchise out of the East Bay and into San Jose, Las Vegas or whatever greener pastures Lew Wolff fancies.

On the other hand, if the team can take advantage of a rebuilt roster and a depleted AL West, it would go a long way toward rejuvenating a dying franchise and making a great part for Brad Pitt in Moneyball 2. 

The road down one of those two paths begins over the next few weeks at Spring Training in Arizona. Here are a few questions the A’s need to answer before they return to Oakland.

Begin Slideshow


Oakland A’s Spring Training: Gio Gonzalez Emerging as Ace, Choice Turning Heads

The biggest competition this Spring in Athletics camp was supposed to be the battle for the fifth starter spot in the rotation. Gio Gonzalez has taken center stage in his appearances this spring and created a competition with fellow rotation-mates Trevor Cahill and Brett Anderson for the team’s number one spot.

While Trevor Cahill emerged as the team’s ace last season, and Brett Anderson has been hyped as being the pitcher eventually poised to take over the team’s role as the ace of the staff, Gonzalez did not spend the offseason sitting back, content in his role as the number three pitcher. Instead Gonzalez spent the offseason working on his legs, abs and his balance.

“I wanted to get myself ready for Dallas Braden, Brett Anderson, Trevor Cahill,” Gonzalez said. “They’re always ready. I figured, ‘”Hey, why not join them?'”

The difference from a year ago is amazing. Last spring Gio was competing with Trevor Cahill for the fifth spot in the rotation. Gonzalez eventually won that competition, thanks in part to an injury that would land Cahill in Sacramento for a pair of tune-up starts to begin the season. Gonzalez is guaranteed of a spot in this year’s rotation, allowing him to relax and work on fine-tuning his pitches for the regular season.

“You still have to go out there and try to perform,” Gonzalez said. “At the same time, I don’t have to kill myself like I did last year.”

So far, the results have been dominant. In two appearances Gonzalez has pitched a total of five innings and compiled the following line: 0.00 ERA, zero hits, zero runs, zero earned runs, 10 strikeouts, two base on balls and a 0.40 WHIP.

According to Oakland backup catcher Landon Powell, Gonzalez can be unhittable, as he has been so far this spring.

“His stuff is electric. When he spots his fastball and gets ahead in the count, the curveball is unhittable,” Powell said.

In his spring debut, Gonzalez threw 25 pitches as he shut down the Cincinnati Reds, striking out five batters. Of his 25 pitches, 17 were thrown for strikes and he reached 95 MPH on the radar gun.

“That was amazing,” manager Bob Geren said of Gonzalez’s outing. “He was sharp as can be.”

Following Gonzalez in the game was Brett Anderson, who many scouts and baseball writers had slotted ahead of Gio in the rotation. “Yeah, Gio totally screwed me on that one,” Anderson said with a grin. “How am I supposed to follow that?”

And so was the case in Gonzalez’s second appearance this spring, three more scoreless innings and five more strikeouts.

Trevor Cahill (8.10 ERA, 10 hits, six earned runs, 1.80 WHIP in 6.2 innings over three games) and Brett Anderson (7.20 ERA, seven hits, four earned runs, 1.60 WHIP in five innings over two games) will likely wind up the two candidates competing for the Opening Day start against Felix Hernandez and the Seattle Mariners. If Gonzalez continues to dominate the Cactus League, it will be hard for manager Bob Geren to overlook Gio for the honor.

As Gonzalez continues his maturity and development as a major league pitcher, he could very well wind up the ace of the Athletics’ elite rotation.

Gonzalez recognizes that while he has enjoyed early success, it is still very early and he must keep working to improve on his craft.

“I hope I don’t peak too soon. I’ve got a lot of work to do. I’ve still got a lot of room for growth, mentally,” says Gonzalez.

 

Fifth Starter Update

Rich Harden has been improving from his early spring injury and has been able to throw pain free from 120 feet twice in his most recent spring workouts. The next step for Harden is to throw from the mound and throw a live batting practice. Harden is at least still a week or two away from making his Cactus League debut, leaving him little time to jump back into the competition.

Josh Outman, who looked impressive in his bullpen sessions early on, has been anything but impressive in his three appearances so far. This spring Outman has yielded six runs and 11 hits while walking six in 4 2/3 innings. If Outman does not rebound in his next few appearances he will likely find himself starting the season in Sacramento to continue improving his control and gaining more game experience.

Tyson Ross followed up Gonzalez’s impressive performance against the Brewers with three scoreless innings of his own. In three appearances so far Ross has a perfect 0.00 ERA with six hits and six strikeouts in 6.2 innings.

Brandon McCarthy has pitched twice this spring, compiling five innings allowing only two runs (3.60 ERA) while striking out four.

Rounding out the A’s competition for the fifth spot, Bobby Cramer has an impressive 1.29 ERA in seven innings, allowing only four hits while striking out one.

 

Michael Choice Turning Heads

Choice spent the offseason working with Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Torii Hunter, and the results have been impressive in his first Spring Training. So far in 16 at-bats Choice has six hits for a .375 AVG.

Choice has been impressing veterans and scouts alike with his time in the batting cage, but also with his preparation and approach to his first Cactus League camp.

“Nothing fazes him,” manager Bob Geren said. “I’ve never seen anyone that played at basically one of the lowest levels come up here and be so comfortable. You’d never know that he had never been here before. He gets good jumps on balls in the outfield, he’s been aggressive at the plate, he’s swung at strikes for the most part. He looks pretty advanced based on his experience level. What you see and then knowing what he’s done, experience-wise, they don’t match. He’s way ahead of that.”

Coco Crisp, who will eventually be replaced by Choice in centerfield (possibly as early as next season), added this about the rookie:

“He seems to have a good head on his shoulders,” Crisp said. “From the baseball standpoint, you’d think he’s been here for a couple years. Inside the clubhouse, he’s very quiet and humble.”

“He puts a lot into his swing,” Crisp added, “but it doesn’t look that way. It’s hard but effortless. He’s just a natural baseball player.”

“From what I’ve seen, he definitely has the ability to be something special. I’m not sure how that’s going to translate.”

Crisp was not the only person at A’s camp to comment about Choice. Oakland A’s Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson, on hand as a special instructor for Spring Training has also taken note of Michael Choice.

“He’s got all the tools, and he’s just here at camp to develop and make all those things come out,” Henderson said. “I’m very impressed with him, especially the power that comes out of him. He’s a real nice player, goes about his business the right way. He’s very smart, he observes a lot and that’s a good sign.”

Upon being drafted last season, Choice declared that he would be in the Major Leagues within two seasons. While at the time it seemed like a long shot, Choice seems to be headed in that direction.

“It might have been a little premature to say I’ll be in the big leagues in two years, but it’s still a goal,” he said. “It’s a good goal to have because that’s extremely fast. If I can get there in that time, then great. If I can’t, I’ll keep working as hard as I can.”

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB: Oakland A’s Prospect Michael Choice Probably the Right One

For me, watching the Oakland A’s in the late 2000s was particularly painful. Although Billy Beane is one of the best general managers in the game and makes do with what he has to work with, the A’s have struggled. They have struggled so much that their Triple-A affiliate, the Sacramento River Cats, won four Pacific Coast League (PCL) titles in the 2000s, becoming champions in 2003, 2004, 2007 and 2008. They were runner ups in 2009.

Since baseball rosters like the A’s are an ever-revolving door where new faces are shuffled in and out, the A’s have had very few mainstays throughout the last decade. With third baseman Eric Chavez now with the New York Yankees, the longest tenured Athletic is Mark Ellis, who has been with the team since 2002.

Enter Michael Choice, the A’s first round draft pick in 2010. Choice’s selection at 10th overall out of the University of Texas-Arlington wasn’t unwarranted: he had won numerous awards in college and was compared to power hitters like Ryan Howard and Adam Dunn.

With much-hyped prospects such as Chris Carter and Michael Taylor struggling in the minors, Choice can possibly reach the majors before them because of his combination of average, power and speed. In addition, Choice has an even more imposing weapon in his arsenal: nine-time Gold Glover and current Angels outfielder Torii Hunter, who serves as his mentor and lives near Choice’s hometown of Arlington, Texas.

“A lot of it was just talking about professionalism, how you handle your business,” Choice said. “When we’d hit, it’d be strictly focused on hitting. He saw my swing, just kind of helped me out from there.”

Hunter had some nice things to say about the prospect. “It was cool to bring him over,” Hunter said. “The guy has some power. He’s an athlete and he worked pretty hard this off-season.”

According to Baseball America, Choice is the No. 3 prospect behind Carter and shortstop Grant Green. In 30 games last year split between the rookie league AZL Athletics and A- league Vancouver Canadians, Choice hit .266 with seven home runs and six stolen bases. The numbers may not look eye-popping, but Choice also had an on-base percentage of .377, which is a sign of things to come.

On the flip side of things, Choice needs to work on his patience at the plate. Baseball Prospectus pundit Kevin Goldstein said: “Strikeouts are a HUGE concern with him. That’s the one thing that could hold him back.”

However, with Choice working with Hunter, he could hurdle some of his hitting problems and develop into a great corner outfielder. If he does make the majors, it may be in time for the 2012 season at the earliest. Expect him to come up to Double-A Midland by the middle or second-half of this summer if he proves himself.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Oakland Athletics Commercials: "Hustle Meets Humor"

Not a whole lot of insight to this posting, just thought it would be fun to post some of the A’s funnier commercials from past seasons.

The A’s put together several commercials each year. These are the ones I was able to find on YouTube. Starting with 1981 and Billy Ball, then skipping all the way to 2005 and finishing up with the full play-list of 2010 commercials.

The A’s filmed their 2011 commercials in the very beginning of spring training, and they promise to be of their usual comedic quality.

If you have links to any commercials that I did not include, please attach a link in a comment for me to add them in.

Begin Slideshow


Battle of the Bay: Oakland A’s Defeat Giants in First 2011 Meeting

I admit that if the Athletics had lost this game, I would probably have fallen into the crowd that says “well this is just spring training and doesn’t matter, we’ll get them in the regular season.” Thankfully, the A’s took care of business (and the Giants) today behind a solid pitching performance and plenty of support from the lineup beating the World Champion Giants, 6-0.

In his three innings of work, Brett Anderson gave up only one hit and one walk while striking out five. Anderson was followed by a scoreless inning from Joey Devine, two scoreless innings from Fernando Cabrera, an inning from Gabe DeHoyas, and a combined inning from Fautino De Los Santos and Brad Ziegler. Ziegler returned to the mound to shut down the Giants in the ninth.

On the offensive side, the A’s received contributions from Coco Crisp (1-3, two RBI), Daric Barton (1-3), Mark Ellis (1-3, one RBI), Eric Sogard (1-3) and Michael Choice (2-4).

The A’s got the scoring started in the first inning when Mark Ellis singed on a fly ball to San Francisco center fielder Aaron Rowand, scoring Coco Crisp. Oakland pushed two more runs across in the fifth inning on a Coco Crisp single to right fielder Nate Shierholtz, scoring Landon Powell and Michael Choice.

In the seventh inning, the A’s scored another run when Jai Miller scored as Josh Willingham reached base safely on an error by San Francisco left fielder Thomas Neal. Michael Taylor reached on another error by San Francisco in the seventh inning, scoring Josh Donadson to give Oakland a 6-0 lead.

Brett Anderson was credited with the win, improving to 1-1 in his spring appearances. Madison Bumgarner received the loss for the Giants, moving to 0-2, although he did not give up an earned run in his three innings of work.

The Giants allowed three unearned runs to the Athletics on four errors by Mark DeRosa, Miguel Tejada, Thomas Neal and Charlie Culbertson. Oakland had one error by left fielder Michael Choice.

Oakland AB R H RBI BB SO LOB AVG
Crisp, CF 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 .417
 – Miller, Ja PR-LF 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 .500
Barton, 1B 3 0 1 0 0 0 2 .273
 – Timmons PR-1B 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 .231
Ellis, 2B 3 0 1 1 0 0 2 .444
 – Cardenas, 2B 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 .250
Willingham, DH 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 .364
 – Donaldson, PH-DH 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 .300
LaRoche, 3B 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 .273
 – Tolleson, PR-3B 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 .154
Taylor, RF 4 0 0 0 0 2 5 .167
Powell, C 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 .222
 – Recker, PR-C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Choice, LF 4 1 2 0 0 1 3 .417
Sogard, SS 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 .364
 – Horton, SS 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .250
Total 30 6 6 3 8 4 18  
  
Oakland IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA
Anderson, B (W, 1-1)  3.0 1 0 0 1 5 0 7.20
Devine (H, 2) 1.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Cabrera, F (H, 1) 2.0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
DeHoyos 1.0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
De Los Santos 0.2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0.00
Ziegler 1.1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0.00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB Oakland Athletics 2011: Breaking Down the A’s Roster by Position

With not a lot of competition for roster positions existing thanks to the added roster depth during the offseason, let’s take a look at who’s filling each spot on the A’s roster right now. As things change during the spring, we’ll update and reevaluate as necessary.

During the offseason, the A’s said goodbye to Justin Duchscherer, Eric Chavez, Travis Buck, Jack Cust, Ben Sheets, Gabe Gross, Rajai Davis, Henry Rodriguez and Vin Mazzaro.

In return, the A’s welcomed Hideki Matsui, David DeJesus, Josh Willingham, Rich Harden, Brandon McCarthy, Trystan Magnusun, and Daniel Farquhar.

The most publicized roster battle is for the fifth starter position, however the backup catcher position and utility infielder role are also up for grabs early on. Adam Rosales will likely remain the utility infielder, but he is currently injured and not expected to return to the team until early May, opening a spot on the opening day roster.

Begin Slideshow


MLB Spring Training 2011: Josh Outman Leading A’s Fifth Starter Competition

Nearly two years removed from season-ending Tommy John surgery that interrupted his very promising rookie season, Josh Outman is back on the mound for the Oakland Athletics in spring training, and it appears he is ready to pick up right where he left off.

In his first live action during a scrimmage game against his own teammates Outman looked like his old self pitching against his teammates.

While limited to only 20 pitches during the intra-squad game, Outman allowed only one hit on a Coco Crisp single up the middle. Pitching at only a 90 percent exertion level, Outman was reaching 92 MPH on the radar gun.

More importantly though, he is pitching completely pain-free.

“After everything he’s been through, it’s good to see him do that,” A’s manager Bob Geren said. “His velocity was pretty good, and he had a pretty good changeup.”

During his rookie season in 2009, Outman posted a 4-1 record with a 3.48 ERA and a 7.1 K/9 ratio in 12 starts. This season Outman is trying to earn the fifth starter spot in the Oakland A’s extremely talented rotation.

Outman’s primary competition this spring, Rich Harden, has already suffered a setback giving Outman an increasing edge in the competition. While his velocity is down a little from where he was in 2009, Outman still is proving to be a very effective pitcher.

“If I can stay in the low 90s, that’s all I can really ask for,” Outman said. “Two years [since surgery] will be June, and they say that’s when your velocity comes back. Hopefully, by after the All-Star break, I can get back into the middle/upper 90s where I was able to get to.

“Even if I stay 90-93 right now, I can pitch with that and I can get people out with that. I’m happy.”

Unlike Harden, Outman has felt great all spring while showing off his surgically repaired elbow. 

“I feel pretty comfortable with my elbow [being] recovered and I’m ready to compete in games,” Outman said. “I’m not going to say I wasn’t a little nervous, just getting back out there and facing major league hitters again. As far as worrying about my health, I don’t have any issue with that.”

If both Harden and Outman emerge from spring training healthy the A’s will have six major league starters they can add to the roster (with Brandon McCarthy, Tyson Ross and Bobby Cramer also major league quality options).

Perhaps the only thing that didn’t look the Josh Outman of 2009—his socks.

The clubhouse attendant forgot to have Outman’s preferred green stir-ups available to him, prompting Outman to wear yellow knee-high socks with the green stir-up stripe dyed into the sock.

“I hadn’t done this in so long that they forgot to get me stirrups,” he said. “That’s why I’m wearing these Little League socks.”

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


2011 MLB Spring Training: Oakland A’s Promising Journey Begins Sunday

As the A’s get ready to officially begin the 2011 season on Sunday, a few questions still circulate around this club, but the optimism remains high. With a fresh season and healed players, the A’s are starting to take the shape of a complete ball club, but as it goes for all teams, spring training is in place for a reason.

After an offseason of smart moves, from boosting the offense to bolstering the bullpen, the bar has been set high for this 2011 A’s team, but only time will tell what’s going to happen and how they can live up to their own goals.

Here’s a few things going in A’s camp so far: 

The biggest question of this time for the A’s is clearly the battle for the fifth spot in their pitching rotation, which seemed to be regarded by a few as Rich Harden’s job to lose, but doesn’t seem the case any more.

After being shut down with stiffness in his arm last Thursday and initially expected to miss two weeks, Harden is pain-free for the most part, but there is no timeline for his return.

The A’s will almost undoubtedly not rush Harden back in, but with competition for that fifth spot, it might not be a good thing, at least for Harden. 

Tyson Ross, a former Cal and Team USA star who opened last season in the A’s bullpen, commanded the attention of anyone within earshot during his side session on Monday.

“I wasn’t even there, but I heard about it,” catcher Kurt Suzuki said. “He was blowing, like, 97, 98 mph.”

Many scouts warned that Ross would have future problems with his upright delivery, but with a few changes, the results have been impressive.

Another candidate, Joey Devine, who hasn’t thrown since 2008 (42 games, 0.59 ERA), threw a 30-pitch bullpen session last week, and seemed to be making substantial progress.

“You add Joey to what we already have in the bullpen, it’s like, ‘Wow,’” coach Tye Walller said. “Talk about shortening the game.”

Josh Outman, who last pitched in 2009, seemed to still have his stuff from that injury-shortened season, according to on-hand observers, who watched his bullpen session.

“I’m ready to make the call right now. As long as he is healthy, Josh Outman will win that job, keep it, and thrive in it,” Waller said.

Whatever the outcome, the A’s have a couple of solid choices to look through, and assuming Rich Harden can stay healthy through the rest of spring training, it might be his spot, due to experience. The A’s staff is still clearly high on Harden, despite his injury-prone tenure with Oakland, and if anyone can turn a pitcher around, it’s Ron Romanick.

As highly anticipated, Hideki Matsui made his appearance at A’s camp earlier this week, and before even being introduced to the team, had a commercial to film.

Following that, while being followed by dozens of Japanese media, Matsui’s first significant interaction was with Dallas Braden, the “team clown” who had a six-foot inflatable Godzilla doll dressed in a Matsui jersey placed in front of Matsui’s locker. When Matsui saw it himself, the tension disappeared.

That wasn’t Braden’s only highlight of the week, as almost everything he seemed to do this week embodied the entire character of this team, even after last season’s disappointment.

During Friday’s intrasquad game, Coco Crisp decided to get comical and mess with Braden. How?

As Crisp took into the batter’s box for his at-bat, the laughs arose, as the team realized he had taped “A-Rod” onto the back of his jersey. In a friendly response, Braden threw behind Crisp—several feet behind him.

For those who don’t remember, Braden’s first interaction wasn’t too friendly, to say the least, with A-Rod, after he “deliberately” crossed his mound last season. Braden didn’t like it. Either way, that’s the past, and the present just involves a couple of comedians, at least in their minds, lightening up the mood around camp.

Nothing will come easy for Bob Geren this season, and with Adam Rosales still ailing from foot surgery in December, Geren will have to find another option beyond Cliff Pennington as a backup SS and utility-type player.

The main candidates at this point appear to be familiar faces Eric Sogard and Steve Tolleson, along with newcomer Andy LaRoche and highly regarded Double-A prospect Josh Horton. Top prospect Grant Green is sure to demand some attention from fans for the spot as well, but the A’s would like to start him in the minors again this year so as to allow him time to continue improving defensively.

Geren mentioned Sogard, Tolleson and LaRoche will see the majority of action at shortstop this spring while Pennington, still recovering from left shoulder surgery, continues to rehab.

Geren has expressed how impressed he’s been by Josh Willingham, and what he’s shown throughout spring workouts so far.

“He has one of the better right-handed approaches I’ve ever seen,” he said. “He has that kind of style that leads to the most consistency. If you’re going to teach a right-handed style, you’d look to his to do so.”

 

Other News and Notes

As expected, Trevor Cahill was announced as the Opening Day starter, but the rest of the rotation has yet to be announced.

Michael Wuertz, who sat out Tuesday due to minor shoulder problems, is likely to begin throwing again Saturday or Sunday.

Ryan Sweeney won’t likely see any time in the outfield according to Geren, giving his surgically-repaired knee more time to heal.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress