http://tinyurl.com/3hhmwx4
yahoo这个版本收纳的球员大概是最多最完整的
排到182个
而且评论蛮酸的,尤其是排名越后面的球员
我这边只贴前20个,后面的可以上网慢慢看
从后面开始看会更好笑,王建民在 #104
除此之外,有人有订阅espn的吗?
http://tinyurl.com/3vrtuv8
espn的名单中,
陈伟殷有列进去
排名第19名
1. Albert Pujols(notes), 1B: The best player of his generation seeks a
contract to match. While he won’t exceed Alex Rodriguez’s(notes) overall
deal, he might best it in average annual value. The big question: Will St.
Louis go that high?
2. Prince Fielder(notes), 1B: For all the questions about how his body will
age, it has done so remarkably well through his first six seasons. Hitters as
accomplished as Fielder simply don’t hit free agency at 27, and it wouldn’t
be a surprise to see him pass Mark Teixeira’s(notes) eight-year, $180
million deal – or even crack $200 million.
3. Yu Darvish, SP: The Japanese import’s stuff is better than Daisuke
Matsuzaka’s,(notes) his work ethic is way better and his marketability – a
Japanese-Iranian star – is off the charts. If he gets posted, the frenzy
will be similar to Daisuke-mania – only warranted.
4. Jose Reyes(notes), SS: Was well on his way to Carl Crawford(notes) money
before injuries hit and dragged along the same concerns that have plagued his
career. Still could get a nine-figure deal because of positional scarcity as
well as overall explosiveness.
5. C.J. Wilson(notes), SP: Barry Zito(notes) got $126 million. John
Lackey(notes) and A.J. Burnett(notes) each got $82.5 million. Darren Dreifort
got $55 million a decade ago. So when Wilson gets filthy rich after a
mediocre postseason, the answer is one simple word: precedent.
6. Carlos Beltran(notes), OF: Huge comeback year went even more under the
radar once San Francisco dropped out of the wild-card race. While dynamism is
as shot as his knees, the bat still plays, and he’ll forever be a smart
enough ballplayer to adjust to his age.
7. Roy Oswalt(notes), SP: Even if his stuff has gotten more hittable, Oswalt
on a three-year deal is significantly more palatable – and cost-effective –
than committing four years to Edwin Jackson(notes).
8. Jimmy Rollins(notes), SS: His glove and speed remain plus assets, he
rarely strikes out and he’s enough of an emotional force in the clubhouse
that a team with a leadership vacuum could value him accordingly. He wants
four years. Three with a team option seems fair.
9. Grady Sizemore(notes), OF: Nobody else will have him this high, which is
fine. He’s 29, will be a year off microfracture surgery and primed to come
back. Whether it’s a one-year, make-good deal or a multiyear, under-market
package, the team that strikes on Sizemore – and moves him to left field –
will be happy it did.
10. Aramis Ramirez(notes), 3B: Looks and plays a lot older than 33. His
defense is terrible and his baserunning even worse. But third base is a
suckhole of talent, and Ramirez is the only player on this list a contender
would take comfort in starting daily.
11. David Ortiz(notes), 1B: The best DH since Edgar Martinez looks for love
in a market that in recent years has told DHs they’re essentially worthless.
Papi wants multiple years. Despite the numbers to warrant such a deal, he may
not get them.
12. Mark Buehrle(notes), SP: With St. Louis’ rotation more or less set for
next season, Buehrle’s return to Chicago is practically a foregone
conclusion.
13. Hiroki Kuroda(notes), SP: On one hand, he’ll be 37 opening day. On the
other, he’s a 200-inning horse who can generate gaudy groundball rates and
walks few. The perfect two-year gap-plugger for a team in need of a top-notch
No. 3 starter.
14. Jonathan Papelbon(notes), RP: The velocity is there. The strikeout rate
is phenomenal. The walk rate plummeted last year. As long as he doesn’t go
to a place where fly balls really fly, he’ll continue to be among the five
best closers in the game.
15. Ryan Madson(notes), RP: One of the game’s most devastating changeups
makes him the ideal sort of pitcher: a groundball-inducing,
strikeout-throwing machine. That he showcased the ability to pitch in the
ninth inning only increases his value.
16. Michael Cuddyer(notes), 1B/OF: The older he gets, the more contact he
makes. And for a 33-year-old-to-be bat-only guy (whose time spent at second
base does make him an injury-replacement possibility) that’s a pretty good
position to be entering free agency.
17. Edwin Jackson, SP: Yes, he’s an inning-eating horse. Yes, he’s got
great raw stuff, from the mid-90s fastball to the 89-mph slider. Perhaps the
team that awards him four or five years gets great return. And yet something
about this – whether the pitch-count abuse or just how many teams have
willingly dumped him – screams red flag.
18. Hisashi Iwakuma, SP: After Oakland’s proposed deal underwhelmed him last
offseason, the 30-year-old right-hander returns from Japan as a free agent,
happy to sign wherever he pleases.
19. Carlos Pena, 1B: A three-true-outcomes king, with his walk, strikeout and
home run rates all well above average. Don’t let the .225 batting average
last season fool you; Pena put up an excellent season.
Heath Bell has 132 saves over the past three seasons in San Diego.
(Getty Images)
20. Heath Bell(notes), RP: Precipitous drop in strikeout rate could portend
something bad. San Diego plans to offer him arbitration, and Bell could well
accept and return for $10 million.