Posts Tagged ‘Dustin Pedroia’

The Daily Dirt from Sunday

Mike Leake debuted for the Cincinnati Reds as the 5th starter after spending zero time in the major leagues. Leake became the 21st player since 1965 to go from the draft to the major leagues. With a fastball touching 90, he was able to throw a variety of pitches to keep the Chicago Cubs hitters of balance, allowing one run in 6 2/3 innings with five strikeouts. The downside to his performance were seven walks and the fact manager Dusty Baker let him throw 106 pitches in his first start. In other fantasy baseball news around the diamond on Sunday…

Hitters:

Josh Willingham went 2-for-3 and drove in five RBI, four coming on his first inning grand slam off losing pitcher Johan Santana.

Jorge Cantu went 2-for-4 with five RBI, giving him 10 RBI for the first week of the year. Cantu also doubled and hit his second home run of the year.

Alex Gonzalez hit two home runs for the Toronto Blue Jays, giving him four solo home runs for the first week of the season. He has moved up to second in the line up with Aaron Hill out of action.

Dustin Pedroia went 4-for-5 and launched his 3rd home run of the season for the Boston Red Sox.

Scott Podsednik went 2-for-4 with two runs scored and two stolen bases giving him four steals for the first week and a .364 average.

Rajai Davis swiped two bases also giving him four steals for the Oakland A’s.

Kelly Johnson and Chris Young each hit their third home run of the season for the Arizona Diamondbacks. New starting catcher Chris Snyder, filling in for the injured Miguel Montero, went 2-for-4 with a home run and five RBI.

Albert Pujols went 3-for-5 with two home runs and four RBI to lead a St. Louis rally against the Milwaukee Brewers that ultimately came up short.

Pitchers:

Tom Gorzelanny looked good for the Chicago Cubs, allowing no earned runs in 6 1/3 innings with seven strikeouts.

Charlie Haeger had his knuckle ball dancing Sunday afternoon en route to 12 strikeouts. Haeger allowed three hits, four walks and three earned runs through six innings.

Roy Halladay tossed a complete game shutout, allowing seven hits with no walks and eight strikeouts against the hapless Houston Astros.

Roy Oswalt pitched good, allowing two runs in six innings with eight strikeouts, but it was not enough to win with Halladay as the opposing pitcher.

Scott Feldman allowed one run in seven innings with four strikeouts to pick up his first win of the year for the Texas Rangers.

Ubaldo Jimenez picked up his second win of the year, allowing two runs in six innings with seven strikeouts.

Tim Lincecum also notched his second win, allowing two runs in seven innings with 10 strikeouts, while throwing 108 pitches.

Closers:

Chris Perez blew his first save of the season, done in by walking three hitters and allowing the game-winning run on a wild pitch.

Kevin Gregg picked up his second save of the season as Jason Frasor was given the night off. It was quite a week for the Toronto Blue Jays as they went 5-1 and recorded saves in each of the wins.

Trevor Hoffman allowed back-to-back home runs to Pujols and Matt Holliday in the ninth inning to blow the save, although he got the win after Casey McGehee hit a home run off Kyle McClellan in the bottom of the ninth inning.

2010 Boston Red Sox Team Preview

This is the second part our series of 2010 fantasy baseball team previews looking at the American League East. The team previews will include the projected batting order, projected rotation, rookies that could make an impact in 2010 as well as each players current ADP for a 15 team mixed fantasy baseball league.

2010 Boston Red Sox Projected Batting Order:

1.  LF Jacoby Ellsbury (ADP 19)
2.  2B Dustin Pedroia (ADP 37)
3.  C Victor Martinez (ADP 22)
4.  1B Kevin Youkilis (ADP 32)
5.  DH David Ortiz (ADP 188)
6.  RF J.D. Drew (ADP 260)
7.  3B Adrian Beltre (ADP 174)
8.  CF Mike Cameron (ADP 218)
9.  SS Marco Scutaro (ADP 194)

2010 Boston Red Sox Projected Rotation & Bullpen:

1.  Josh Beckett (ADP 79)
2.  Jon Lester (ADP 60)
3.  John Lackey (ADP 123)
4.  Clay Buchholz (ADP 200)
5.  Daisuke Matsuzaka / Tim Wakefield (ADP 197 / ND)

Closer – Jon Papelbon (ADP 67)
Handcuff – Daniel Bard

2010 Boston Red Sox Prospects with potential impact this year:

1.  Junichi Tazawa – SP


2009 Fantasy Baseball Upside / Downside Rounds 1-5

by Todd Lammi

Today we are going to look at the one person with the most upside and downside per round based on a 15 team fantasy baseball draft with average draft positions provided by Mock Draft Central.

Round 1:

Upside - Ryan Braun (7) – Has a great chance of hitting over 40 home run this season, with 100+ runs and rbi’s. Add in 15-20 steals and the potential for a .300 average and Braun represents the best upside in the first round, based on his draft slot and the chance to exceed his 2008 numbers.

Downside - Ian Kinsler (9) – I like Kinsler, but not at number nine. He has never surpassed 518 at bats in the last three years and with the possibility to grab Pedroia / Phillips/ Roberts in the 2nd round or even Alexei Ramirez in the third round, Kinsler is going to leave some owners crushed if they are picking him this high.

Round 2:

Upside - Alfonso Soriano (24) – it was just two years ago he was 40-40 and that was for the lowly Washington Nationals. Prorate his numbers over a whole season last year and Soriano would have been at 44 home runs and 28 stolen bases. If you are slotted in the in the 7-9 spots of your draft order, count your lucky stars if Soriano falls to you in the second round.

Downside – Dustin Pedroia (23) There is some regression coming this year, there is little chance Pedroia duplicates his stats from last season. Take away 10 steals from Pedroia and a couple of home runs and you are looking at Kelly Johnson plus 30 points in batting average. Not a second round pick in my eyes with the other players available on the board.

Round 3:

Upside - Matt Kemp (38) The explosion is coming, it might be a year away, but soon we will be seeing regular seasons of 25 home runs and 35+ steals from Mr. Kemp. To get those steals in the middle of the third round, plus close to a .300 average is a bargain.

Downside - Kevin Youkilis (37) Not sure that I believe he is a 30 home run hitter after hitting only 16 in 2007. Even if I knew for certain he was going to hit 30, I would rather wait until round 4 or 5 and grab Chris Davis or Joey Votto.  There is better value available in the third round.

Round 4:

Upside - Alexei Ramirez (48) – his numbers are not that far off from the three second baseman that are going ahead of him in the draft, discounting Chase Utley. Ramirez will have the added bonus after three weeks into the regular season of being eligible at SS for those leagues with a 20 game rule.

Downside - Joe Mauer (53) – Mauer is coming off of kidney surgery in January and recently has been bothered by a sore back. There are four very good options at catcher available after Mauer, who could potentially start the season the disabled list.  I would take the following; Soto (67), Victor Martinez (78), Doumit (120) and Ianetta (133), all ahead of Mauer.

Round 5:

Upside - Chris Davis (65) – Has a chance to be this year’s Ryan Howard with a higher batting average. A nice upside pick with the chance to hit 35-40 home runs and bat over .290.

Downside - Magglio Ordonez (64) – Ordonez had a solid year last year, and is always around the .300 mark but with zero speed and with only 20-25 home run, spending a fifth round pick on him is not  a good investment. There are lots of outfielders you can select later on in the draft that will put up the same or better numbers than Ordonez will in 2008.

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