Friday, May 9, 2008

Possible trades and signings for the Yankees


Wow, sorry guys, its been a while, almost a month actually.  I'm sorry for the lack of posts and updates as of late during a very up-and-down first month plus.  I've been really, really busy at work lately and have had little time to myself.  So I figured while I do have some time on my hands I would post something that's been on my mind for some time now.  This lack of posts will not happen again, sorry.
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Well, Ken Griffey Jr., earlier this week, asked the Reds for a trade.  Now is it just me or is Griffey a perfect fit as a DH?  He's a power-hitting, run producer who can no longer play the field daily.  If you put him on the bench for half the game, it could extend his career 2 years or so.  Now, the Yanks have been getting some good production from Matsui out of the DH spot, so this isn't necessarily a need for them, but they do lack some Griffey-like hitting from 1B Jason Giambi.  This might sound crazy, and in now way do I expect it to happen, if the Yankees moved Damon to 1B, put Matsui in LF, that opens up the DH spot where Griffey could fall in quite nicely.  They could deal some young pitching, which the Reds seem to have a liking of recently, or some young prospects down on the farm. 
Possibility: Not likely, but don't count it out.
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Ol' Boomer Wells says he wants to be a Yankee again.  Why?  Because he knows they're willing to pay the money he'll demand.  Why else?  He knows the Yankees need pitching badly and the history of the Yankees will to sign post-prime starters.  I don't know how many people would want him because of what happened last year with Clemens.  But Hank "Lil' Stein" Steinbrenner admitted that Wells has crossed his mind and would consider him.  I used to like Wells, his previous 2 stays with the Yankees, but now, I don't think they need a 45 year old in the rotation, they're better off just mixing and matching with the younger guys until something concrete arises.
Possibility: Possible, because Hank may want him, but not necessarily likely.
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This comes from Steve Phillips in ESPN the Magazine...
The Reds should offer the Yankees Jared Burton, who's ringing up K's in bunches, and Jeremy Affeldt for Phil Hughes.  That way the Yankees can move Joba to the rotation, which satisfies Hank, and then use Burton as the 8th inning man.  And then Affeldt could become the lefty specialist, which the Yankees lack in their pen.  They could also throw in Arroyo if they wanted him.  Doing this deal would be a sign that Cashman acknowledging a possible mistake in banking on Hughes and Kennedy and not acquiring Johan Santana.
Possibility: Pretty much none.  I don't think they would trade Hughes without seeing him over the course of a full year.
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Did I leave anything or anyone out?  Let me know by just commenting below.

That's all for now, thanks for reading.

Friday, April 11, 2008

The Rivalry Renewed, Tonight

Starting tonight the Yankees will renew their historic rivalry with the Red Sox.  This is just the first installment of many to come in the 2008 season.  The first meeting of the year will be at, as the Great Pete Abraham put it, the world's largest drunk tank, I mean Fenway Park.  

This should be an interesting weekend from Beer-- I mean Beantown.  This series will feature what each team is made of.  It's not a weekend that will cost the Yankees or the Sox with some losses.  This is sort of like an exhibition between the two teams, to see what each are made of.  Each game features some good pitching match-ups that look to prove things.

Game 1: Chien-Ming Wang vs. Clay Buchholz
Wang looks to prove that he can not only win and be successful on the road, but also in Boston.
Buchholz looks to prove to all the fans up in Boston that all the hype from his one big game is actually worth it.  Where would he be without that no-hitter?

Game 2: Mike Mussina vs. Josh Beckett
Moose looks to prove that he can be good in back-to-back starts and that he's still got it.
Beckett looks to prove that his last start was just him being rusty and the injury to his back is not affecting him.  He has the most to prove, actually.

Game 3: Phil Hughes vs. Daisuke Matsuzaka
Hughes has to prove that he can handle the majors and the pressure of a big rivalry.   Although it is only April, a victory would be a tell-tale sign that he can handle what could be late season pressure.
Matsuzaka has been good, but last year he wasn't great.  He has to show that what he's done so far isn't a fluke.  He has to show that he can also pitch well versus the Yankees.

It should be a fun series.
Tonight's game starts at 7:00 on YES.  Tomorrow's game starts at 3:55 on FOX.  And Sunday's game starts at 8:00 on ESPN.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Sterling's View: From Section 29



So today I attended my first of many games at the Final Season at Yankee Stadium.  It started off well with a pretty good first inning from Pettitte and then the offense picked him up and scored early.  But it was all pretty much downhill from there.  My friend said to me in the second inning that they'd be lucky to get four good innings out of Pettitte today, he couldn't have been more right.  We could just see that he didn't have it today, not his usual self, and he will be the first to tell you that.

I'm not going to go into this with sort of play-by-play coverage, because if that's what your seeking there are other places to find it, but I just want to get into some of the things that I saw from the team and such.

* Andy's start was an isolated case I think.  He was shortened in spring training with the HGH stuff and the back injury.  I'm sure next time he'll be better, don't worry about him yet.  ...  The relievers looked good today, they kept the Yanks in the game, it could've been a barn burner early.  Brian Bruney looked very good today, I'm hoping for a good year from him big time, 4K in 2 innings.  Ross Ohlendorf got off to a bad start, but pitched well the rest of the way.

* Joe Pepitone pulled the lever to make it official that there 76 scheduled regular season games left at the stadium, tick tock (see above).

* The offense wasn't good today, obviously.  ...  I was impressed with A-Rod and Posada.  ...  Today was the worst I've ever seen Jeter play live going 0-5.  ...  Shelley Duncan swings for the fences every swing, he will either hit a HR or strikeout.  He's one of those guys.

* It's the first week of the season, it's not time to panic yet.  If this goes on for another 3-4 weeks, maybe you can get back to me.

Every time I go to a game I'll be doing this sort of recap thing.  And I'm also going to show you all the view from my seat, just for fun.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Baseball '08: Yankees Preview




New York's Newsday came out with their annual Baseball Preview section in today's paper.  There are some interesting points on the Yankees and all of baseball in the section.  They are written by Yanks' beat writer Kat O'Brien, Jim Baumbach, and Ken Davidoff.  It's so in-depth and a great read.  Pick up a copy of the paper or look at it on Newsday.com.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

MLB Season Prediction

In this post, I'm going to steer away from the Yankees a bit and talk about all of the MLB with my season predictions.  They will include standings for each division, the wild card winners, award winners, and playoff and Series predictions.  I hope everyone reading this won't take it personally if a fellow Yankee fan doesn't pick them to go all the way this year.

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AL East:
The American League's Best Division

1. New York Yankees- This may be me speaking from the heart more than the head here, but the questions people have about the Yankees this year are the same questions that have to be answered for the Red Sox.  People seem to forget that only because they are the defending champs.  Young pitching, can it be relied on?  Is the bullpen going to hold up all year?  Both questions need to be answered by BOTH teams, don't forget it.

2. Boston Red Sox- For them to go back-to-back, they need to make sure that Lester can do his thing for a full year, and if Buchholz can do the same, or was his 1 great game just a fluke?  People seem to want to say Buchholz is the man already, but how many games did he pitch, off the top of my head I think he pitched 3, why people think he is exempt from that young pitching question, his no-hitter.  He needs to prove it wasn't a fluke, big time.  They don't have Timlin for a while this year, can their bullpen be relied on, who knows yet.  Their starting pitching is subject, Lester and Buchholz aside, Dice-K never once impressed me, Wakefield is a crap shoot every game, Schilling won't pitch till at best July, and Josh Beckett's injury could be one that lingers all year.  If the Sox' pitching crumbles on them, their offense has to be relied on.  In a battle of offenses, I take the Yankees offense any day of the week.

3. Toronto Blue Jays- It's a shame for them that they have to be in this division.  They have talent, but no where up to go.  The only place I can see them going is down.  And if injuries gets the best of them like they usually do, I think that will happen.  Can they handle another Burnett or Halladay injury, what about a Rolen injury?  Injuries are their achilles heel.  If they under achieve again, which I do think is highly likely, John Gibbons is the first manager to go this year.

4. Tampa Bay Rays- They are on the upswing now.  They could finish at 81-81, or even 82-80.  They have some good, young players coming up.  No bigger than Evan Longoria.  He will start in AAA, but will come up mid-May and have a big impact on that team.  They are my sleeper team to finish after the top 2 in this division.  Joe Maddon will have a good time this year after he sees what his team can do.  If he has the patience to stick around another 3 years, he could be dealing with a pennant contender.

5. Baltimore Orioles- No Bedard, no chance.  They might trade Brian Roberts.  They have no pitching, no offense.  The one bright spot on this team to look out for is Adam Jones, I think he will be a good player in this league.  These Orioles are my pick for the worst team in baseball, they have a realistic chance to lose 110 games, they're pitiful.

AL Central:
The AL's Powerhouse

1. Detroit Tigers- These Tigers were already dangerous.  But with the additions of Dontrelle Willis, Miguel Cabrera, and Edgar Renteria, they are flat out scary.  They have some of the best and underrated players in all of baseball.  Three players they have that are tops at what they do are some of the most underrated players out there, Edgar Renteria, Placido Polanco, and Carlos Guillen.  Their one question is the bullpen, will it be effective and can they get the ball to Todd Jones without blowing anything?  That's their one and possibly only concern this year.

2. Cleveland Indians-  With stronger competition this year, they are the odd men out of the AL Central.  They have the AL's best one-two punch I think, with Cy Young Winner C.C. Sabathia and 19-game winner, Fausto Carmona.  They're offense is very efficient, and they seem to be able to fire on all cylinders.  Their bullpen is solid, and their bridge to Borowski (Perez and Bentancourt) cannot be questioned.  Say what you want about Borowski and his enflamed ERA. but he can rack up those saves as well as anybody.

3. Kansas City Royals-  Another young team on the upswing.  They've got a future star in Alex Gordon and a future slugger in Billy Butler.  They're going to play a lot of young, unproven players.  And their pitching could be mix-and-match all year long, but they've got nothing to lose, and nowhere to go but up.  I think they are 3-5 years away from being pennant contenders.

4. Chicago White Sox- This team isn't good, just simply put.  They lost a key member to their rotation in Jon Garland.  Ozzie Guillen is clearly not the manager for this club he once was.  He seems to want to go one way, why the management wants to go another.  He and GM Kenny Williams are not on the same page.  That leads to his downfall.  It's a race between Guillen and Gibbons for who is fired first in baseball this year.

5. Minnesota Twins- They can't win without Johan Santana and Torii Hunter.  They clearly seem to be in a rebuilding stage for certain.  Yes, their offense is good, but it's not nearly a good enough offense to carry them throughout the season without pitching.  This Twins team has some work to do before they get back to their winning ways.

AL West:
Baseball's Worst Division

1. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim-  The acquisition of Torii Hunter seems to solidify an already great offense.  They're pitching is great, especially with the addition of Jon Garland.  Although today we all found out Kelvim Escobar is out most likely for the whole year, and maybe forever.  I still see them as too good of a team for a good Mariners team to pass.  They have the guy who I consider to be the AL's best manager in Mike Scioscia, that and they're all around solid team, they look to be a good team for me this year.

2. Seattle Mariners- The addition of Erik Bedard solidifies their pitching staff, with Bedard and King Felix as the one-two punch.  We know what we're going to get from all the offensive players on that squad, but I don't think it's enough.  I like this team a lot, and I think they're a playoff and division winning sleeper this year.  If they can lock down one or two good offensive acquisitions, they will a team to be reckoned with again.  Not this year though.

3. Oakland Athletics- This team is in what seems to be a rebuilding stage, but it's not easy to see exactly what direction they are in.  They don't have a good offense, and with the loss of Dan Haren, they're pitching is weak.  Third place in this case looks better than it actually is only because it's a 4-team division.  They have some young players who are going to be good in 3-5 years, which is when I can see them being a top team again.  Daric Barton and Jack Cust are going to be a dangerous 3-4 combo in the middle of that lineup in a couple of years, that's when this A's club has got a legit shot, not this year.

4. Texas Rangers- To keep it simple...  They're just bad.  No pitching + no offense= no winning.  The clock of success for Hank Blalock is ticking for me, and it's almost out of battery.  That same situation is on the way for Michael Young this year.

NL East:
The Division for NL Supremacy

1. New York Mets- The acquisition of Johan Santana gets them an extra, say, 5-6 wins, which is enough for them to eek out the division win by a margin of around 3 games over the Phillies.  If the Mets win the division this year, it's solely because of the Santana addition.  If he wasn't on this team, they would finish in 2nd, maybe even 3rd in this division.  Wright will have another good year.  But Jose Reyes is going to have a better year, to show everyone that last year's horrific slump where he seemed to not be trying was just a hunch.  He's going to have a monster year.  I am not a believer in the school of thought that says, "The trade for Johan gets the Mets over the top and will win them the whole damn thing."  Nah uh, it can't happen, a guy who plays only once a week or so cannot be the reason they win the whole thing.  And don't give me the "he lifts the morale in the clubhouse" crap, because there is no such thing as moral victories.  Ok, rant over.

2. Philadelphia Phillies- No doubt about it, the Phillies have a great offense.  One of the game's best (that bandbox of a park helps).  But simply put, they don't have the pitching to keep them atop the division and stay a game or a half behind the Mets all year long.  That's the big issue, that will be the reason they can't win the division.  If they had some better pitching, they'd win the division because their offense is better than the Mets', and the Mets won't stay healthy either.  To capitalize on that, they would need the pitching.  Pitching, pitching, pitching...

3. Atlanta Braves-  This is my sleeper of all sleeper teams this year.  They could win the division and blow both the Phillies and the Mets out of the water.  The pitching needs some work, and Hampton must stay healthy.  But their middle of the order can compete with the best of them.  It includes Francoeur, C. Jones, McCann, and Teixeria.  If their pitching overachieves, they will win this division.  That's not a guarantee, because I can't say their pitching will do so.  But if I were to know for a fact that it could and would, I would guarantee it.

4. Washington Nationals- They're young, so that can be a valid excuse of why they're so bad.  They have ZERO pitching, and their offense is no good, but I question why Dmitri Young is sitting on the bench.  He's their best offensive player.  Hmmm, I know a team that might like a good, power hitting first baseman, I'm thinking of a team that plays in New York and wears an NY on their chest, hmmm, I wonder.  They're going nowhere.

5. Florida Marlins- As good as Hanley Ramirez is, he's not good enough to make this team good.  There's no offense outside of him after the lose of Miggy.  And their pitching is pitiful.  They have something to look forward to in the future though in Cameron Maybin and Andrew Miller.

NL Central:
Two Good Teams, Four Teams... Not So Much

1. Chicago Cubs- They're a very complete team.  They have speed, power, scoring, good hitting, and good pitching.  They might even get Brian Roberts by the end of this month which would add even more speed and more hitting to their already good lineup.  I like their pitching a lot and Zambrano for me is a sleeper to do better than Johan in NY.  I have a lot of issues with Japanese players coming over, because usually it doesn't work out.  I think Fukudome will be solid, .280, 13, 50.  They're good and they're poised to do some damage this season.

2. Milwaukee Brewers- This team has offensive firepower and have some very underrated players in Corey Hart, and Bill Hall.  They have essentially the same team except for a downgrade in closer from CoCo Cordero to Eric Gagne.  They finished in second last year also.  With that being said, if you have the same team pretty much, they won't improve.  More of the same for Milwaukee this year, but with a good pitching pickup, this team can make some noise.

3. Houston Astros-  This team is similar to that of last year's, but in a weaker division, I can see them moving up a bit.  They've got some hot young players in Hunter Pence and J.R. Towles.  They have some always solid veterans like Carlos Lee, Ty Wigginton, and Lance Berkman.  Their SP is suspect though, which is why they won't go any higher than 3.  I think they're bullpen will be much improved this year with the addition of Jose 'Papa Grande' Valverde.

4. Cincinnati Reds- This team has some good players, but some question marks.  I think their pitching is a tad weak, and I don't trust a majority of their hitters.  I really like the CoCo Cordero signing and the hire of manager Dusty Baker, I've always liked him as a manager every place he's been.  They don't have enough trustworthy hitters and SP's.

5. St. Louis Cardinals- This team has an absent ace.  Their pitching is pretty much, well, terrible.  Their offense is not good either.  There's only one guy in that lineup that is going to give consistency in his numbers, and that is Pujols.  But he has a bad elbow, and that could effect him greatly.  If he gets hurt who do they turn to for offense, unproven offensive player Rick Ankiel, injury prone Troy Glaus, or Chris Duncan who is in this league for his power?  That's why they can't succeed, their entire offensive production is a one man show, and that show could get canceled this year.

6. Pittsburgh Pirates- Their ace won 9 games and lost 12 lasy year.  They have awful pitching, atop the league's worst.  The same can be said for their offense.  The guy they rely on mostly for their offense is Jason Bay, the guy I frequently call the most overrated player in the game.  He has a low AVG, strikes out a ton, doesn't drive in enough runs, and his power numbers are declining always.  This lineup cannot be trusted.  They are awful, my vote for NL's worst record.  They may lose 110 games too.

NL West:
The National League's Best Division

1. Arizona Diamondbacks- The ML's best one-two punch in Brandon Webb and Dan Haren.  I loved the offense last year and it was good enough to get them the division last year.  With no changes, I still love it.  The pitching is improved tremendously.  Now, I know Randy Johnson is not what he once was, but he's their 5th starter!  And speaking of him, I do think he will stay healthy this year and have a big, unexpected year.  I can see a 15-9, 3.80-4.00 season for him, but I cannot guarantee.  I really, really love this club.

2. Colorado Rockies- They were the surprise team of the year last season.  I love their hitting.  Matt Holliday should have won the MVP last year for the NL.  I really like Todd Helton, Garrett Atkins, Troy Tulowitzki, and Brad Hawpe.  Their O is awesome to say the least.  But I really question their pitching, I don't like Jeff Francis as the ace of the staff and they have no one I like outside of him really, although Ubaldo Jimenez caught my eye last year.  And speaking from experience, Luis Vizcaino is not to be relied on.  Their offense is good, but their pitching is not good enough for them to surpass a superior Diamondback team.

3. Los Angeles Dodgers- This team has young raw talent all around.  Pitching, hitting, everywhere.  They also have a good mix of veterans like newest Dodger Andruw Jones, Jeff Kent, and Nomar Garciaparra.  I really like their staring pitching, mainly Brad Penny, total animal out there.  Derek Lowe is good for 12-15 wins, and I'm really excited to see what new Japanese export, Hiroki Kuroda can do in the majors, I think he'll do pretty well.  You also can forget the addition of our manager Joe Torre, I hope he has a good time out there in LA and realizes that baseball can be fun again.  Although their pitching is good, I just don't think they have enough experience to get it done this year.  But guys like Loney, Martin, and Kemp are going to spearhead this club into the playoffs and beyond in a few years.

4. San Diego Padres-  This team has great pitching in Peavy, Young, and Maddux but they don't have enough offense.  They don't have a player who batted over .285 last year, there's just not enough production up and down that lineup to keep them in contention for that long.  The division is better now, and they're going to be able to skate by like they used to when the division wasn't good.

5. San Francisco Giants- Post-Bonds Era begins.  It will begin the same way it ended, bad, awful, any of those kinds of words will suit fine.  Their pitching stinks, their bullpen stinks, and their offense stinks.  All around they're a pretty terrible team.  I'm trying to think if they'll get 70 wins this year, I'm leaning towards no.  Aaron Rowand isn't going to be the player he was with Philly last year, he played in a bandbox, which largely contributed to his great numbers.  Now he will be playing a big park with a lot of room, won't bode well for him this year.  They're going to need to do some big rebuilding to get them back to 2002 form.

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Playoff Predictions:
(* indicates WC winner)

AL:
ALDS:  LA Angels vs. NY Yankees- Yankees in 5
              Boston Red Sox* vs. Detroit Tigers- Tigers in 5
ALCS:  NY Yankees vs. Detroit Tigers- Tigers in 7

NL:
NLDS: Chicago Cubs vs. NY Mets- Mets in 5
             Arizona D-Backs vs. Philadelphia Phillies*- D-Backs in 4
NLCS: NY Mets vs. Arizona D-Backs- D-Backs in 7

World Series:
Detroit Tigers vs. Arizona Diamondbacks
WINNER: Diamondbacks in 6, They're pitching is too good to beat late in the season and the offense does it's part consistently like usual.  They're not the best team in the big leagues, but pitching, which they do have the best of, wins championships.  In a short series, Webb-Haren is scary, and in a long series, seeing one or both of them twice is even worse.  They have the advantage.  It will be their 2nd World Championship in 7 years.

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Awards:

MVP:
AL- Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees
NL- Jose Reyes, New York Mets

Cy Young:
AL- Erik Bedard, Seattle Mariners
NL- Jake Peavy, San Diego Padres

Rookie of the Year:
AL- Evan Longoria, Tampa Bay Rays
NL- Geovany Soto, Chicago Cubs

Manager of the Year:
AL- Joe Maddon, Tampa Bay Rays
NL- Lou Piniella, Chicago Cubs


Monday, March 24, 2008

Player Profiles: Phil Hughes

This is the second installment of the Player Profiles section.  This Profile will be on Phil Hughes.  If you haven't done so yet, please check out the first installment below, on Joba Chamberlain.

Here's an excerpt from a Phil Hughes scouting report:
"Philip Hughes is a rare blend in baseball.  He has plenty of skills, plays for a New York team and is nearly appropriately hyped.  Hughes has been able to breeze his way through the minor leagues and prior 2006, ascended to become the Yankees number one prospect.  Prior to 2007 he was one of the two pitchers debated as the top pitching prospect along with Reds pitcher, Homer Bailey."

Now it appears this piece was written prior to his major league debut, but it still holds true.  Hughes did come up rather quickly, and probably sooner than expected due to injuries at the big club.  Because of Hughes' ability to use his pitches just the way he wants to, he is extremely hyped, and rightfully so.  Before his debut, Yankee fans knew him as the best pitching prospect in the game.  But after watching him almost no-hit the Rangers in his second career start, and pitch 4 brilliant innings in relief with the season on the line in the playoffs, Yankee fans now think of Hughes as the young stud, who is going to save the Yankees from ever having the rebuild.  Simply put, Hughes went from being the best prospect to the savior of the Yankees for years, and years to come.

"Hughes boasts a good fastball that works comfortably in the mid 90s. His four-seamer has good movement and is able to locate it very well.  All of Hughes' pitching is based on his ability to locate pitches.  Hughes also throws a plus two-seam fastball that sits in the low 90s."

All of this is very true, but the pitch that is the reason he is what he is, is his curve.  The curve is thrown in the mid 80's, unheard of, this is his out pitch.  He locates it so well, and can do anything he wants with it.  It's his best pitch by far.  He is also working on a change-up, and if he can get that to work for him, he will have 4 plus pitches, he can also throw a slider if he so chooses.

"Long-term, Hughes is going to be a strikeout pitcher with a long career in the big leagues.  He will certainly know how to use his pitches as well as anyone.  He will be a star."

I would have to second that last statement.  There's no other way to put it than Hughes has a bright future and has the potential to be a special, special player in this game for a long time.

Can Hughes be a consistent 3 starter this season, will he be able to handle the New York pressure of being the savior, and will he be able to show the fans and management that keeping him in favor of Johan was the right move?  All these questions are important ones, look for these answers in the upcoming months of the 2008 season.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Player Profiles: Joba Chamberlain


In this section, I will be discussing a player on the team and talking about what they've done, what they're doing, and what they need to do.  Basically, it's a profile on a specific player.  This week's, and the first ever profile is on Joba Chamberlain.
Here is how a rival scout sizes up Joba:
"Electric fastball.  One of the best fastballs in the league right now.  He can legitimately throw the thing 100 [mph], and when he's coming out of the bullpen in the eighth inning like he was, it's just impossible.  And then, the way he was throwing his slider in the high 80s and even sometimes 90- completely ridiculous.  I mean, you talk about stuff- this guy has stuff.  And you didn't even see his changeup, which is good, or his curve, which is even better.  I say as a starter, he'll be even better, once he figures out the way he wants to work in all those different pitches."

And that's exactly why he's gotta be a starter.  At first, I wanted him to stay as the 8th inning man because I can't rely on any of the other guys they've got out there.  But the thing that gets me is, he threw two plus pitches last year and guys couldn't touch it, but as a starter he will feature 4 plus or above average pitches.  If you can fathom two pitches people can't touch, mix that with 2 more that look to be tough to hit, you've got yourself quite the pitcher.  And if they were to leave him be in the bullpen for the rest of his career, it would be a waste of talent, because those other plus pitches wouldn't be featured.  If you've got that kind of talent, you've got to let it shine.

"The only question with him is whether he'll hold up.  He's got one of those bodies that has a tendency to get a little bit big, though I understand he's lost a lot of weight, and the encouraging thing is that he didn't seem to put any on while he was in the majors.  Most guys, they get that first taste of the big leagues, they're eating out every night, clubhouse food, whatever- they puff up a bit.  He went the other way- hard workouts, discipline.  If he has the makeup to go with the stuff, you're talking about a special, special pitcher."

And this is why I still have a bit of a hesitant reaction when I hear he will be a starter.  I am from the school of thought that says if it's not broken, don't fix it.  I think that applies here, because Joba's role as the setup man worked perfectly, seeing that and the fact that we don't really have a reliable reliever, why would you want to take a perfect fit and ruin it?  Joba rarely faulted as a reliever, now they take him from looks to be his new element, and put him in another one where they don't know how he will perform under.  Basically, they're fixing something that was flawless, that needs no fixing.  I think of another hefty pitcher, Bartolo Colon, 2 seasons removed from a Cy Young, his body couldn't hold up and now he's on a minor league deal.  He could be effective as a reliever, because he would only need to pitch for an inning or 2.  Now Joba's in much better shape, but I think that if he has to pitch for 6-8 innings, his body may not hold up, where if he pitches 1+ we know his body can hold up.  I am still skeptical about the move, but that really means nothing.

Joba is the impact rookie for the Yankees, here's what the Sporting News says about that:

"Perhaps no minor league pitcher generated as much buzz as Chamberlain last season after his high-profile insertion into the Yankee bullpen.  Despite having first-round talent in 2006, he slid to the draft's supplemental round due to a knee injury.  Possessing a tall, strong frame and plenty of arm strength, he has a very impressive 88-97-mph fastball and a plus 80-85-mph slider that misses bats with ease.  His 72-75-mph curveball is also a solid pitch, and he will offer an 80-82-mph changeup.  Chamberlain was brilliant as a starter at three levels last year, going 9-2 with a 2.45 ERA, 5.3 K/BB ratio 13.8 strikeouts per game and .198 opponents' average.  Surprisingly, he adapted well to relief while serving as Mariano Rivera's primary setup man, and posted a 0.38 ERA and 12.8 strikeouts per game in 19 appearances.  The Yankees plan on moving him back into the rotation to begin 2008."

Indeed his story will be a compelling one over the course of the 2008 season, will he shift from starter to reliever, will he stick as an effective starter, or will he be the heir-apparent to Mariano Rivera?  Important questions, all to be answered this year.