[转录][讨论] MLB2011美国雅虎运动FA排名(上色+分类版)

楼主: vinla (蜜雪儿)   2010-11-13 10:48:19
※ [本文转录自 Rangers 看板 #1CshFi2F ]
作者: mayfirst (2010AL冠军游骑兵) 看板: Rangers
标题: [讨论] MLB2011美国雅虎运动FA排名(上色+分类版)
时间: Wed Nov 10 23:02:00 2010
SP:
1. Cliff Lee-TEX (1):(TYPE A)
The only question is whether he’ll beat CC Sabathia’s(notes) $161 million
deal. At this point, $125-plus million seems a certainty.
2. Hiroki Kuroda-LAD (9):
Among the mish-mash of middling starters after Lee, he’s the best bet of the
bunch, which isn’t saying much.
3. Andy Pettitte-NYY (11):(TYPE A)
One year, $14 million, to the Yankees – if he doesn’t retire.
4. Jake Westbrook-STL (12):
Pitched tremendously for St. Louis down the stretch, Dave Duncan the Obi-Wan
to his Anakin.
5. Carl Pavano-MIN (13):(TYPE A)
You know, if the Yankees don’t get Lee …
6.Hisashi Iwakuma(Japan)OAK win bidding(14):
Oakland won negotiating rights on Japan’s second-best pitcher behind Yu
Darvish, who should be among the top five on this list next year.
7.Jorge de la Rosa-COL (17):(TYPE A)
His stuff is tremendous. His ability to harness it is not. This year’s
Oliver Perez(notes).
8. Javier Vazquez-NYY (25):(TYPE B)
Get him out of New York, and as long as he’s healthy, he has the potential
to be the second-best starter on this list.
9. Brad Penny-STL (27):
If he ever gets in shape, he can be an excellent No. 3 starter. Until then, he
’s nothing more than a dynamic arm and injury waiting to happen. Do it for
Karina!
10. Jon Garland-SD (29):(TYPE B)
While pitching in San Diego boosted his value, he still is worth plenty as
long as he can keep plugging in 200 league-average innings every year. Had
career-best ground-ball percentage last year.
11. Chris Young-SD (33):
If he ends up leaving San Diego, we’ll finally see if his success – and
when healthy, he always succeeded – was a Petco Park mirage or legitimate in
spite of mediocre raw stuff. Whatever the park, hitters hate facing him.
12. Vicente Padilla-LAD (58):
Elevated home run rate masked solid numbers otherwise. Pitching in NL West
certainly did help.
13. Rich Harden-TEX (61):
Still just 29. Still incapable of making it through a full season healthy.
And still well worth an incentive-loaded deal.
14. Brandon Webb-ARI (65):
Topped out at 83 mph in October instructional league game. Buyer beware.
15. Bruce Chen-KC (67):
He wants a multiyear deal. I want to keep laughing.
16. Kevin Millwood-BAL (74):(TYPE B)
Consistently subpar: ERA between 5.07 and 5.16 in three of the last four
seasons.
17. Erik Bedard-SEA (79):
The new Mark Prior.
18. Justin Duchscherer-OAK (80):
The Erik Bedard of right-handers.
19. Aaron Harang-CIN (82):
One case in which win-loss record tells an accurate story: 18-38 over the
last three years, and every bit as bad.
20. Kevin Correia-SD (87):(TYPE B)
Petco mirage came back to earth in ’10 with 5.40 ERA and ugly peripherals.
21. Chris Capuano-MIL(91):SP/RP
Great comeback story: After missing all of ’08 and ’09, returned with his
best fastball in a decade and the same changeup that helped him win 18 in
2005. Good sleeper.
22. Jeff Francis-COL (92):
Plus control after he returned from year-plus layoff. Stuff never was good in
the first place, though, and at 30, he may have to reinvent himself as a
reliever to extend his career.
23. Jarrod Washburn-DET (96):
Should be healthy after a year off. Should be rusty, too. Will he lower his
asking price for Milwaukee or Minnesota?
24. Dave Bush-MIL (102):
Junkballer saw his fastball flatline at 86.5 mph last year, and his career
could do the same.(该网站名字误植为David Bush)
25. Jeremy Bonderman-DET (110):
Awful walk year for someone who, at 28, should be cashing in on a free agent
payday.
26. Freddy Garcia-CWS (111):
Miserable strikeout rate leaves him only with his reputation, and that’s not
terribly stellar, either.
27. Rodrigo Lopez-ARI (134):
Led the NL in losses, earned runs allowed and home runs yielded, the pitching
Triple Crown of Thorns.
28. Jeff Suppan-STL (136):SP/RP
Not a very big market for an 87-mph-throwing right-hander.
29. Brian Moehler-HOU(151):SP/RP
Coming off a torn groin at 38 is a recipe for a minor league deal.
30. Kelvim Escobar-NYM (159):
Of all Omar Minaya’s bungles, the funniest might be giving $1.25 million to
a guy who had thrown five innings since 2007 and watching him get hurt almost
immediately. This time around, it’s minor league deal or retirement.
31. Doug Davis-MIL (162):
He beat cancer. He overcame a heart condition. Now he’s trying to recover
from elbow surgery.
32. Ben Sheets-OAK (164):
Gone for 2011 after Tommy John surgery. Minimal chance a team brings him on
now hoping he returns in ’12
RP:
1. Mariano Rivera-NYY (7):(TYPE A)
Two years, $36 million, to the Yankees. He’s going nowhere.
2. Rafael Soriano-TB (8):(TYPE A)
Health is the lone question. Any team that acquiesces to Scott Boras’four-year
starting point likely is throwing money away.
3. Joaquin Benoit-TB (20):(TYPE B)
The Rays aren’t just draft wizards. Their bargain-basement signing of Benoit
was genius, and he should get a multiyear deal.
4. Kerry Wood-NYY (21):(TYPE B)
Excelled with the Yankees and could get a chance to close again elsewhere.
5. Scott Downs-TOR (32):(TYPE A)
Best lefty reliever in the class could find his market hampered by Type A
designation. Most teams won’t give up a first-round pick for relief.
6. Grant Balfour-TB (34):(TYPE A)
Fastball, fastball, fastball. And it’s a good one.
7. Brian Fuentes-MIN (35):(TYPE B)
Still death to lefties and effective against righties. He’s not a closer.
He is a great option.
8. Koji Uehara-BAL (37):(TYPE B)
Tremendous command with underwhelming stuff. The former outshone the latter
last year. Can that hold form?
9. J.J. Putz-CWS (38):(TYPE B)
Power stuff works in an eighth-inning role. Did tire in September and has an
injury history worth considering.
10. Hisanori Takahashi-NYM (40):SP/RP
His pursuit of a three-year, $15 million deal from the Mets was laughable
until you realize Houston gave Brandon Lyon(notes) the same one last year.
Still, two years at $7.5 million seems likelier for the swingman.
11. Jason Frasor-TOR (41):(TYPE A)
Undersized righty has struck out 273 in 275 2/3 innings the last five seasons.
12. Matt Guerrier-MIN (42):(TYPE A)
Workhorse right-hander good for 75 appearances – and his continued
sustenance of low ERA despite awful strikeout ratio is impressive.
13. Jon Rauch-MIN (43):(TYPE B)
Solid, workmanlike bullpen piece who can pitch in any inning. Best suited for
middle-relief and setup roles.
14. Pedro Feliciano-NYM (45):(TYPE B)
Led NL in appearances three straight seasons, including 92 last year. Lefties
hit .211 with a .576 OPS off him last year and are .214/.282/.297 for career.
15. Frank Francisco-TEX (48):(TYPE A)
Big strikeout rate and reasonable walk rate makes him attractive – as long
as the Rangers don’t offer arbitration and trigger his Type A designation.
16. Jesse Crain-MIN (49):(TYPE B)
The stuff always has been better than the results, and he may have figured
things out last year, throwing his devastating slider nearly 50 percent of
the time, and to great success.
17. Kevin Gregg-TOR (57):(TYPE B)
Example No. 1 of someone whose raw numbers and stuff don’t match up to his
121 saves over the last four years. Most teams know better than to overpay
for that. Most.
18. Dan Wheeler-TB (59):(TYPE A)
Another underappreciated right-handed setup man, whose ability to limit hits
is too consistent to be fluky.
19. Jose Contreras-PHI (69):
Reborn as a reliever, Contreras should have no problem finding work, even at
39.
20. J.C. Romero-PHI (70):
Effective lefty specialist whose control problems are a bugaboo.
21. Chad Qualls-TB (71):(TYPE B)
Should improve after horrific luck in ’10. Good add on the cheap for team in
need of bullpen help.
22. Dennys Reyes-STL (77):
The game’s oldest 33-year-old is a LOOGY (lefty one-out guy) extraordinaire.
23. Arthur Rhodes-CIN (78):(TYPE A)
Primed to pitch his 20th season after excellent back-to-back years in
Cincinnati. Fastball-slider combo remains potent.
24. Kyle Farnsworth-ATL (84):
As long as he’s throwing 95 with low walk rates, he’ll have a job. Is not
going to get a two-year deal like Kansas City gave him last time around,
though.
25. Chad Durbin-PHI (94):(TYPE B)
Workaday reliever who shouldn’t lack for suitors in need of mop-up pitching.
26. Joe Beimel-COL (95):
Still plenty effective as a LOOGY. Just needs a manager who can limit his
at-bats to righties better than Jim Tracy did last year.
27. Miguel Batista-WAS (100):
Perhaps the budding poet can write a haiku about this offseason. Free agency
is/awfully harrowing if you/have middling stuff
28. Ron Mahay-MIN (107):
Turns 40 in June and lost nearly 2 mph of velocity last year. But he’s
left-handed.
29. Guillermo Mota-SF (108):
If only Mota could throw a baseball as well as he did beer during the Giants’
championship celebration.
30. Chan Ho Park-PIT (109):
Pitched well for Pittsburgh after bombing out with New York and should latch
on somewhere with a one-year, $1 million-or-so deal.
31. Octavio Dotel-COL (112):(TYPE B)
His fastball doesn’t sizzle nearly like it used to, and when you throw it
more than 80 percent of the time, sharp declines in velocity never bode well.
32. Will Ohman-FLA (118):
At 33, he still has a good dozen years left to get out one guy at a time.
33. Aaron Heilman-ARI (119):(TYPE B)
Another mediocre year for the underachieving reliever. Perhaps he’s the rare
pitcher who would benefit from going to the AL, where they’re unfamiliar
with his stuff.
34. Elmer Dessens-NYM (120):
How one manages a 2.30 ERA with 16 strikeouts in 47 innings with a 43.5
percent fly ball rate defies all reason, but Dessens managed it and may get a
big league deal.
35. Randy Choate-TB (121):(TYPE B)
Led AL in appearances just two years after spending the whole season in the
minor leagues. LOOGY of LOOGYs.
36. Randy Flores-MIN (137):
Left-handed, pulse.
37. Jamey Wright-SEA (138):
Classic baseball vagrant who will sign with a team that has a thin pitching
staff and hope injuries and other erosion opens a spot.
38. Mark Hendrickson-BAL (139):
In eight full major league seasons, he still has never given up fewer hits
than innings. His flexibility is nice, but he doesn’t deserve another major
league deal.
39. Scot Shields-LAA (141):
Command is gone, and with it, his value.
40. Mike MacDougal-STL (144)
Still utterly clueless as to where the ball is going, which is entertaining
if not effective.
41. Jeff Weaver-LAD (150):
Yep, it gets worse.
42. Mike Hampton-ARI (155):
Patron saint of Harden, Bedard, Duchscherer and Johnson.
43. Trevor Hoffman-MIL (156):(TYPE B)
Almost certain to retire.
44. Jorge Sosa-FLA (157):
Will go same route as always: Sign a minor league deal, pitch well at
Triple-A, wait for an injury, get called up and stink.
45. Bobby Seay-DET (163):
Didn’t pitch last season with rotator cuff injury, and surgery likely will
keep him out for 2011, too.
C:
1. Victor Martinez-BOS (6):C/1B(TYPE A)
Pure hitter’s value is tied almost exclusively to his ability to stay at
catcher. He’s 31, and his defensive skills have eroded like a wind-battered
beach, which doesn’t bode well.
2. John Buck-TOR (50):(TYPE B)
Awesome power, awful plate discipline. Pretty much the modus operandi for all
non-Martinez catchers in the class.
3. Miguel Olivo-COL->TOR (TYPE B)(本季效力于洛矶队,季后被交易至蓝鸟队)(53):
Absurd strikeout-to-walk ratio (800 to 108 non-intentional for his career)
offset by plus power for catcher and plus arm behind the plate.
4. A.J. Pierzynski-CWS (54):(TYPE A)
Thin catching market is the only saving grace for soon-to-be 34-year-old who
hasn’t been a league-average offensive player since he was with Minnesota
seven years ago.
5. Ramon Hernandez-CIN (55):(TYPE A)
Lost all the power from his time in Baltimore, and his career-high average
last year was a complete BABIP mirage.
6. Bengie Molina-TEX (83):(TYPE B)
Capable of a big hit every once in a while, but that doesn’t justify a
starting job if he chooses to return.
7. Yorvit Torrealba-SD (85):(TYPE B)
Acceptable in a time split, particularly for a team with a young catcher in
need of tutelage.
8. Rod Barajas-LAD (86):(TYPE B)
Another decent-slugging, miserable-on-base catcher. And he’s older than the
others.
9. Gregg Zaun-MIL (113):
Remains a plenty capable backup, even as he turns 40 within the season’s
first month.
10. Gerald Laird-DET (125):(TYPE B)
A backup. At best.
11. Jason Varitek-BOS (128):(TYPE B)
Could – and probably should – retire. The paucity of catching, however,
makes him a commodity if he decides to play.
12. Matt Treanor-TEX (130):
Had a chance to distinguish himself with the most playing time in his career.
Back to being Misty May’s husband.
13. Henry Blanco-NYM (132):
The baseball Twinkie: fat, white (or at least Blanco) and somehow able to
survive for a number of years beyond his expiration date.
14. Josh Bard-SEA (149):
You know we’re getting to the dregs when even the catchers are likely to
snag only a minor league deal.
15. Chad Moeller-NYY (158):
The catching version of Jorge Sosa.
1B:
1. Adam Dunn-WAS (4):1B/OF(TYPE B)
Classic is-what-he-is guy: masher on offense, butcher on defense, with the
former far outweighing the latter, especially if he can hide at first.
2. Carlos Pena-TB (15):(TYPE B)
Try to ignore the .196 average and absurd strikeouts. Pena hits for power,has
tremendous plate discipline and is an asset at first base and in the clubhouse. Bargain shoppers: Meet this year’s blue-light special.
3. Paul Konerko-CWS(16):(TYPE A)
Great year in 2010. Great chance of decline as his mid-30s and the vagaries
of a slower bat beckon.
4. Aubrey Huff-SF (23):(TYPE B)
Inconsistency makes anything beyond a one-year commitment too much.
5. Derrek Lee-ATL (24):(TYPE B)
The power remains. The defense is good enough. If a team needs a stopgap, he’
s an excellent option in a crowded first-base market.
6. Adam LaRoche-ARI (26):(TYPE B)
Good for 20-plus home runs and well above-average defense at first base.
7. Russell Branyan-SEA (44)1B/DH
Consistently undervalued. He’s always an injury risk – and he always will
hit 20 home runs given 350 plate appearances.
8. Lance Berkman-NYY (46)1B/DH(TYPE B)
Still can swing from the left side, and his ability to take a walk will get
him a job somewhere. Would be perfect for Thome role if he leaves Minnesota.
9. Ty Wigginton-BAL (62):1B/2B/3B
Made his first All-Star team last year, then hit .244/.286/.394 in the second
half. A good superutility option at first, second and third base.
10. Xavier Nady-CHC (66):1B/OF
At 32 and coming off the worst season of his career, he’ll have trouble
finding an every-day job on a contender.
11. Jorge Cantu-TEX (73):1B/3B
Slumped after trade to Texas. Still just 28, and could get a chance to start
and rebuild value on a second-division team or play utility role on a
contender.
12. Lyle Overbay-TOR (75):
Probably will head to the bench as a pinch-hitting threat and defensive
replacement. OPS as a pinch hitter is better than .800 in 46 career
appearances.
13. Troy Glaus-ATL (88):
On and off, hot and cold, Glaus re-established himself as a big leaguer. Just
not a starter.
14. Fernando Tatis-NYM (146):1B/2B/3B
Coming off an injury-filled season and, at 36 on New Year’s Day, may retire.
2B:
1. Orlando Hudson-MIN (19):(TYPE B)
At 32, he may be forced to take another one-year deal. Shame. Hudson is too
good to be an annual mercenary.
2. David Eckstein-SD (60):(TYPE B)
Second-best second baseman. And you wonder why so many teams try to shift
players from other positions to second.
3. Adam Kennedy-WAS (124):
The power Kennedy showed in 2009 disappeared last year, and he’ll be happy
to get a backup infield job somewhere.
4. Cristian Guzman-TEX (129):2B/SS
Brutal finish. Couldn’t even crack Texas’ playoff roster.
5. Julio Lugo-BAL(135):2B/SS
It’s one thing to slug lower than your on-base percentage. It’s another to
do so when both are sub-.300. A complete nonentity.
3B:
1. Adrian Beltre-BOS (5):(TYPE A)
Déjà vu: Monster walk year gets him rich long-term deal. Will the team regret
again?
2. Miguel Tejada-SD (56):3B/SS(TYPE A)
Not much life left in his bat, even less in his legs. Still could start, more
on reputation than ability.
3. Miguel Cairo-CIN (97):UT
Another solid season should ensure his 16th in the major leagues.
4. Felipe Lopez-BOS (98):UT(TYPE B)
Cardinals tired of his act. Boston didn’t want him. Total flake, but he’s
only 30 and can play every infield position.
5. Melvin Mora-COL (104):UT
Accepted utility role in Colorado and earned himself another job, unless he
demands to start again.
6. Omar Vizquel-CWS (105):UT(SIGNED)
SIGNEDAn able fill-in with plus defense at all the infield positions, Vizquel
was overused with Chicago but returns for another year as he approaches his
44th birthday.
7. Nick Punto-MIN (127):
The original piranha could have trouble getting a bite.
8. Geoff Blum-HOU(131):UT
He can play all four infield positions and, uh, hmmm. OK. Getting to that
point on the list.
9. Aaron Miles-STL (147):2B/SS/3B/P
Always capable of getting a Tony La Russa man-crush contract. And he might be
the best emergency pitcher among position players today.
10. Pedro Feliz-STL (148):3B/1B
Won dubious title of Worst Position Player by FanGraphs’ WAR, which had him
losing two games’ worth of value for Houston and St. Louis. Ain’t getting
any better, either.
11. Chad Tracy-FLA (152):3B/1B
Two years ago, he was making $5 million. This year, he’ll be lucky to get
$500,000.
SS:
1. Derek Jeter-NYY (10):(TYPE A)
Three years, $60 million, to the Yankees. He’s going nowhere … though this
one will take a whole lot more work than Rivera’s.
2. Juan Uribe-SF (22):UT(TYPE B)
Pop and ability to play all infield positions makes up for his status as
foremost on-base suckhole among top players.
3. Jhonny Peralta-DET (36):SS/3B(SIGNED)(TYPE B)
Detroit got itself the anti-Adam Everett(notes), re-signing Peralta to a
two-year, $11.25 million deal to play shortstop.
4. Jerry Hairston Jr.-SD (89):SS/2B
San Diego’s record before Hairston’s elbow injury: 76-51. Its record after:
14-21. More interesting than indicative of anything, but Hairston can be a
glue guy on a good team.
5. Orlando Cabrera-CIN (90):(TYPE B)
Credit where it’s due: 2011 will be his 15th season, an amazing feat for
someone with a better-than-league-average OPS just once in his career.
6. Cesar Izturis-BAL (99):
The single worst hitter in the major leagues last season, and it wasn’t
really close. Still can pick it, though, and will remain employed accordingly.
7. Craig Counsell-MIL (106):UT
Rare is the middle infielder who can play through his 40th birthday – only
10 in the last 50 years – and teams’ utility needs will dictate whether
Counsell joins that group.
8. Edgar Renteria-SF (116):
World Series hero is back, and anyone expecting his two weeks of magic to
continue into 2011 will be sorely disappointed.
9. Chris Woodward-SEA (161):SS/2B
Epitome of a minor league invite.
OF:
1. Carl Crawford-TB (2):(TYPE A)
The only concern is mileage on legs after playing on Tampa turf. Otherwise,
as safe a bet as there is – and a dozen teams will place it.
2. Jayson Werth-PHI (3):(TYPE A)
Power bat, excellent baserunner and plus defensively. Late bloomer looking
for nine figures and might get it.
3. Manny Ramirez-CWS(18):(TYPE A)
He’s an unapologetic narcissist limited to DH duties. He also gets on base
40 percent of the time. If he’ll accept an 80 percent pay cut, he’s an
excellent signing.
4. Magglio Ordonez-DET (30):OF/DH(TYPE A)
Was hitting before season-ending injury – but then, he always hits,
finishing better than .300 in 10 of his 13 full seasons.
5. Bill Hall-BOS (51):LF/2B
Versatile utility guy, little more. Any team that starts him is desperate,
crazy or both.
6. Pat BurrellSF (52):
Man or Machine? Definitely the latter, with a modifier: strikeout machine.
7. Eric Hinske-ATL (63):OF/1B
Rare utilityman who can hit for power and produce every day if prodded into
duty. With four straight postseasons on four different teams, perhaps Hinske
is the new Jason Marquis.
8. Marcus Thames-NYY (64):
For someone the Yankees used as a platoon player against lefties, he was
significantly better against righties: .300/.347/.549. Excellent fourth
outfielder for 300 plate appearances.
9. Brad Hawpe-TB (68):(TYPE B)
From .500-slugging All-Star to washout at 31. Could be a good find for the
flea-market set.
10. Rick Ankiel-ATL (72):
Plenty passable fourth outfielder. If he’s starting, however, the team’s
probably not very good.
11. Jim Edmonds-CIN (76):
Played very well in part-time duty and should have a job if he chooses not to
retire.
12. Andruw Jones-CWS (93):
Tremendous start, brutal summer, tremendous August and September. The key is
limiting his at-bats and keeping him out of center field, where he is lousy.
13. Austin Kearns-NYY (101):
May have found his niche as a defensive-minded fourth outfielder. His
metrics, in right field particularly, are outstanding.
14. Melky Cabrera-ATL (103):
Overrated as a Yankee, exposed as a Brave. Cabrera does nothing well enough
to merit a full-time job.
15. Reed Johnson-LAD (114):
Perfect late-inning defensive replacement who should come cheap.
16. Matt Stairs-SD (117):OF/DH
Beware, Ron Villone(notes) and Mike Morgan: Stairs still can hit (.475
slugging percentage in 99 at-bats) and might well latch on to a
record-breaking team No. 13.
17. Willie Bloomquist-CIN (122):UT
Just a guess: He’s not going to get two years this time around. Middling
utilityman brings smart baserunning, versatility and little else.
18. Rocco Baldelli-TB (123):
Another great comeback story, and it’s a shame he’s limited to pinch
hitting and spot starts.
19. Jose Guillen-SF (126):OF/DH
Still capable of hitting in fits and spurts. Second connection to HGH,
however, could make him toxic.
20. Jay Payton-COL (140):
Probably won’t get a major league contract but did impress in a 35-at-bat
late-season stint, his first in the big leagues since 2008.
21. Corey Patterson-BAL (142):
As mediocre as ever, and a minor league deal waiting to happen.
22. Willie Harris-WAS (143):OF/3B
Spike in strikeout rate and ugly rate stats likely damn him to minor league
contractdom.
23. Randy Winn-STL (145):
No big league deal this year, not at 36 with a diminished bat and regressing
defensive skills.
24. Gabe Kapler-TB (154):
Could return to managing in the minors after a down season if he doesn’t
want to take the minor league contract route.
DH:
1. Jim Thome-MIN (28):
Bunyan wants bank, and after his second half last year, some team may forget
he’s 40 and give it to him.
2. Vladimir Guerrero(notes)-TEX (31):(TYPE A)
Incredible first half, mediocre the second half, exposed in the playoffs. He’
ll always be OK because of contact rate, but no more than that anymore.
3. Johnny Damon-DET (39)OF/DH(TYPE B)
The whole DH-with-no-power thing is novel, and the bigger question than
whether he can produce is if he can make it to 3,000 hits. With 429 to go,
the guess is no.
4. Hideki Matsui-LAA (47):(TYPE B)
For an off-year, he put up a better OPS+ than any of his last three seasons
with the Yankees. Vulnerability against lefties remains a problem.
5. Nick Johnson-NYY (81):DH/1B
The Justin Duchscherer of hitters.
6. Jason Giambi-COL (115):DH/1B
If an AL team has room for a DH/pinch hitter, there are plenty worse, as long
as his manager treats first base for him like alcoholics do open bars.
7. Mark Kotsay-CWS (133):DH/1B
His swing looks dial-up slow.
8. Mike Sweeney-PHI (153):DH/1B
Could try to scratch out another season off a minor league invitation after
winning roster spots each of the last two years.
9. Eric Chavez-OAK (160):DH/3B/1B
Would be nice to see him try one more time, but it’s probably best for
everyone that he skulks away and retires.
资料来源:
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=AsNREpmHBPtAQz64J_bex6QRvLYF?slug=jp-
freeagenttracker110810
Type A and Type B MLB Free Agents
http://www.sportscity.com/MLB/Type-A-and-Type-B-MLB-Free-Agents
注:1.该文章发表时FA人数为全164名~
2.该文章发表后申请成为FA球员(filed for free agency):结算至11/12止
SP Brian Bannister(KC)
C Corky Miller(CIN)
LF Laynce Nix(CIN)
RF Jeff Francoeur(TEX)
RF Brad Snyder(CHC)
3.本文章暂不包括部分被球团移出40人名单球员
4.括号内为球员FA总排名,球员名字后为申请FA前最后待的球队
4.本文欢迎转载,另因本文资料庞大,若有错误请多给予指教
作者: WuAShan (是谁住在深海大凤梨里)   2009-01-10 23:39:00
作者: cloudfour   2009-01-11 01:14:00
推~
作者: lucky0623 (lucky0623)   2009-01-11 08:45:00
条子怎么还不报价给Lee,我想看到Lee留在游骑兵阿....
作者: gonzalez0528 (已经回国啦~~)   2009-01-11 22:04:00
早报价只是在抬高价格而已 出的早不如出的巧
作者: becseger (思路)   2009-01-13 11:46:00
所以陈用彩真的不值得签复数年合约吗?
作者: tmlc (置身于Asgard)   2009-01-13 11:55:00
值得签复数年小联盟约吧
作者: flylos (Papelbon)   2009-01-13 12:19:00
You know, if the Yankees don’t get Lee …
作者: Tulowitzki2 (图喏)   2009-01-13 12:35:00
Rhodes和Hoffman也被排得太后面了吧
作者: jimmyexe (飞扬)   2009-01-13 14:06:00
比大跟德谢德评论很好笑 左手的PRIOR 右手的BEDARD
作者: accin (acc)   2009-01-13 14:26:00
O卡布雷拉是B咖唷@@
作者: Ryushuier (键盘农夫流水儿)   2009-01-13 14:36:00
很酸耶
作者: Tulowitzki2 (图喏)   2009-01-13 15:04:00
He wants a multiyear deal. I want to keep laughing
作者: eanson11 (乌龟也会飞)   2009-01-13 16:57:00
超毒XDDD
作者: a1090299 (呵呵)   2009-01-13 18:24:00
这超酸的...XDDDD
作者: JubeChocobo (啾比)   2009-01-13 21:30:00
The whole DH-with-no-power thing is novel 科科
作者: XDXDXDD (考上吧 我的爱)   2009-01-15 00:42:00
真的好酸...

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