Regular Season Preview: Tampa Bay Rays
2008 was a spectacular year for the Tampa Bay Rays. They went from having the worst record in the MLB a year before, to going to the World Series in ’08. They weren’t satisfied with their team even after this, so they went out and made two key additions to their lineup. After deciding to move David Price into the rotation, they deemed Edwin Jackson as expendable. E-Jax was swapped to the Tigers for outfielder Matt Joyce. Joyce will be the primary right fielder for the team and adds some nice pop to the lineup. After that, they went out and signing Pat Burrell to a 2 year deal. He will be the Designated Hitter for the team, and adds a big bat from the right side of the plate – something the Rays were looking for.
The 97 win Rays have gotten better. Burrell and Joyce will improve the lineup, and Price will offer at least the same production that Jackson would. He has a lot of upside, and could be this year’s version of Tim Lincecum. The bullpen is the one area that might not be as good as the year before. They struggled through the playoffs, and many of the relievers could come back down to Earth in ’09. However, with their fantastic farm system, they could easily make a bullpen acquisition mid-season.
The race for the AL East is going to be the most fun thing to watch in baseball next year. I wouldn’t be surprised at all if the Rays, Yankees, or Red Sox win this division. You could pick a name out of a hat and I would believe you. I slightly favor the Yanks for the division, and the Rays for the Wild Card. I think that the acquisition of Burrell makes their lineup a very good one, and the pitching staff could be even better than last year depending on how good Price is. He is the difference maker. If he comes out and has a Lincecum type year, the Rays will be in the playoffs with a dynamic 1-2-3 punch and a great chance of returning to the World Series. If not, then the Rays might not even make the playoffs. It’s all up to him.
This is going to be a very fun team to watch no matter what happens. I can’t wait for April!
Regular Season Preview: The Los Angeles Angels of Aneheim
The next team I will preview for the regular season is the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. The Angels had a fantastic regular season. This team was able to win over 100 games while clinching their division in early September. Unfortunately for Angel fans, the Red Sox defeated their team once again in the first round of the playoffs. The Angels will be looking for more
October success this time around.
To me, this team is just not as good as the one that won over 100 games last year. Losing Mark Teixeira and Francisco Rodriguez will hurt the team immensely. Signing Brian Fuentes helps to keep the bullpen strong, but I think that the offense in not going to be as good as it was in the second half of last year. Vladimir Guerrero is not going to get pitched to now that Tex isn’t sitting there behind him. Adding Bobby Abreu will help make up for the OBP that Tex would’ve brought, but with him you don’t get the power or the gold glove defense that would’ve come from Teixeira. I also think that starters such as Joe Saunders and Ervin Santana will slightly regress. This is still a very good team, but I doubt that they’ll win 100 games again.
Despite the regression, they probably still are the best team in the AL West. The A’s will be much improved after acquiring Matt Holliday and Jason Giambi, but they have some concerns with the pitching staff. Unless the young pitchers have breakout years, they probably won’t be good enough to pass up the Halos in this division. The Rangers will also be very good because of all the talent they have in the farm system. It’s the same thing, though. The Rangers don’t have the pitching. So, this division is still the Angels to lose, but it will be tighter than last year.
If and when the Angels make the playoffs, it will be difficult to advance. Anything can happen, but I just don’t think that this team has the hitting to beat teams like the Yankees, Red Sox, or Rays. However, you never know what can happen in October.
My early prediction is that the Angels will win their division once again, but they won’t play very deep into October.
Regular Season Preview: The Chicago Cubs
First up in the Regular Season Preview series is the Chicago Cubs. The Cubs were obviously very upset about their finish to ’08. After getting swept by the Dodgers in the first round of the playoffs, the Cubs realized that they had to get some left handed hitting for the lineup. They did just that when they signed Milton Bradley to a 3 year, 30 million dollar contract. The Cubbies also kept their starting pitching strong by resigning
Ryan Dempster. Unfortunately, the payroll got too tight to afford players such as Kerry Wood, Mark DeRosa, and Jason Marquis. Right after the Cubs set their mind to acquiring a left handed hitting right fielder for the lineup, it became obvious that Woody would not return. The Cubs also had to trade away Marquis and DeRosa in order to clear the money needed to sign Bradley. Meanwhile, Kevin Gregg was acquired in a trade to replace Wood, and Aaron Miles was signed to help out at second base. Some other acquisitions were Aaron Heilman and Luis Vizcaino. Some other losses were Bob Howry and Jim Edmonds.
The Cubs once again have very high expectations heading into the season. I know that I’m slightly biased, but it is a lock that the Cubs will win the NL Central in my eyes. I think that last year’s team was a little bit better, but they will be in the playoffs no matter what, and probably as the first seed. The big question will be what they can do in the playoffs. If they are out in the first round again, it is pretty much a lost season. I really don’t know what’s going to happen. They have a great team talent wise, but they just cannot do a thing once they get into the playoffs.
The goal for the Cubs is to make it to the World Series, something tha
t they have the talent to do. It’s just a matter of getting it done in October.
Regular Season Preview: Introduction
I am going to start a new series here on All Baseball All The Time. It will be called the “Regular Season Preview.” I will go through all 30 teams and preview their regular season while also reviewing what they did in the offseason. This will be a sidebar link.
Getting Back To Posting
I know that I haven’t posted for about a month and a half. To be honest, I just started to get bored of all the free agent talk. I was getting tired of hearing the same names over and over again. I’m going to get the site going again for the start of the new season season, and I hope that you will give me a second chance. Hopefully, I will be able to get back up to the top of the latest leaders board. I can’t wait until the new season.
Rays Sign Pat Burrell
According to Ken Rosenthal and Buster Olney, the Rays have signed Pat Burrell for 2 years, 16 million. To me, this is the steal of the winter to date. Excellent move by Tampa Bay.
Everything had to fall into place for the Rays to be able to sign a big bat for their open DH spot. The player would need to come on a short term deal and would have to have a reasonable annual salary. Those things happened because of the overflowing market for outfielders, and the Rays are very lucky to have ‘Pat the Bat’ under contract at a very under-market rate.
This signing pushes their payroll up to the 55-60 million dollar range. I’m guessing that they are done. No major holes need to be filled, no money left. The Rays will most likely head into 2009 with their current team.
Injecting Burrell into this lineup should make the Rays offense very solid next year. They have so many players likely to improve on what they did last year, and now they add ‘Pat the Bat’ to solidify things. Carl Crawford and BJ Upton should see their batting averages come back to life. Evan Longoria should improve all the parts of his game with the more experience he is getting. Burrell is obviously going to be better than what the Rays had at DH last year. Matt Joyce will be an improvement offensively and defensively in right field. I guess that you could see Dioner Navarro come back to earth, but when you look at the lineup as a whole, it is much improved. A lineup of Akinori Iwamura – Carl Crawford, Evan Longoria – Carlos Pena – Pat Burrell – BJ Upton – Dioner Navarro – Matt Joyce – Jason Bartlett is going to be very deadly for opposing pitchers to face. The defense, rotation, and bullpen should all remain the way they were last year, and the 97-win Tampa Bay Rays look primed to contend for a playoff spot once again.
A lot of teams passed on the chance to pick up a very good outfielder. The Angels, Reds, Braves, Phillies (before they signed Raul Ibanez), and other teams could’ve easily matched this offer. This is another reason why this is such a great signing by the Rays.
Things are going to be very tight in the AL East division. The Red Sox, Yankees, and of course Rays all stand a good shot at a playoff berth. First, I will analyze the starting rotations of these teams.
The Rays have the best rotation in my opinion. A rotation of Scott Kazmir – James Shields – Matt Garza – Andy Sonnanstine – David Price is very good, and very durable. The Yankees’ rotation might have more talent, but they also have a lot of injury-prone pitchers. (examples: AJ Burnett, Joba Chamberlain, Phil Hughes) The Red Sox rotation also has their share of pitchers with an injury history (Josh Beckett, Disuke Matsuzaka, & Brad Penny). The Rays have the most durable rotation in the AL East.
I prefer Yankees and Red Sox lineups over the Rays, but not by much. If players like Upton and Crawford bounce back they’ll have a great hitting team. I guess that with those two players rebounding, and with Longoria advancing his batting skills with more experience, the Rays might have the best offense. I still lean toward the Yanks and BoSox, however, because those teams have more power.
The bullpens should all be near the same. The Rays might see some of the relievers come back to earth, but it should still be a solid group. It is pretty much a toss up between all 3 teams.
I know that defense doesn’t make a big impact on a teams’ win-loss record, but the Rays have the top one. Maybe it will tack on a couple wins over a team like the Yankees, who have a terrible defense.
The AL East race is shaping out to be the most competitive division in the MLB next year. I don’t know who I will pick, but I know things will be very close throughout.
Mets Offer Derek Lowe 3 Years, 36 Million; No Fit For Him Besides The Mets
The Mets have finally made an offer to free agent starter Derek Lowe. They have proposed 3 years, 36 million.
If Lowe ends up with this, it will be a major steal for the Mets. Could you believe that after Carlos Silva nabbed 4 years, 48 million that Lowe could be stuck with only 3 years, 36 million? It makes no sense at all. Even after this year, a year in which AJ Burnett received 5 years, 82.5 million, Lowe could get less. I know that some will disagree, but Lowe is a better, more durable pitcher than Burnett. It is just blowing my mind that Lowe might only get a 3 year, 36 million dollar contract.
All the signs point to him making more, but who will give him more? Almost every mid or large-market contending team on the east coast or the mid west won’t be pursuing him.
- The Yankees officially have no money left to spend, especially not the 12 million per year Lowe will require.
- The Red Sox signed Brad Penny, filling the need for a starter.
- The Phillies have nothing left to spend after signing Jamie Moyer and Raul Ibanez.
- The Cubs would rather have a big bat for right field.
- The Brewers don’t seem willing to make any long term commitments because most of their players’ pay is rising through arbitration.
- The Cardinals don’t view starting pitching as a big need.
- The Tigers, Astros, White Sox, Blue Jays, Twins, and Indians can’t afford him.
So, when you narrow things down, the only suitor for Lowe is the Mets. There is a team, that I haven’t named, however. The Braves are a great fit for Lowe. They play on the East Coast, need a starting pitcher, are a contending team (sometimes), and have the money to spend. I predicted Lowe to sign in Atlanta in my Top 50 Free Agents, and I still love the fit. I don’t understand why there is such a lack of interest. The Braves were not shy at all about pursuing AJ Burnett. They even offered him 5 years, 80 million. If I’m GM Frank Wren, I’m making Lowe an offer of 4 years, 48 million. That would probably get him to accept, and if nothing else it will drive up the price for the Mets. The Braves should definitely get in on Derek Lowe. 
As of right now, it looks like Lowe will be in a Met uniform next year. If they get him, they are going to be one hard team to stop. I think they’d win the division with Francisco Rodriguez, JJ Putz, and now Derek Lowe on the team. If they do make the playoffs, watch out! Could you imagine Johan Santana and Derek Lowe pitching 2 games each in a 5 game playoff series. Both pitchers have a lot of playoff experience, and they could pretty much end the game if they could go 7 innings each. That should be no problem for these two. Putz and K-Rod can come in and end the game. Scary!
Giants Sign Randy Johnson, Could Pursue Manny Ramirez
I know that this is old news, but I wanted tLo write about it anyway. The Giants signed Randy Johnson the day after Christmas for 1 year, 8 million. There are incentives that could bring the final total of the deal to 13 million. This is a fantastic signing by the Giants.
The Big Unit came at a very cheap price. Only 8 million per year is a huge steal in my opinion, and I think that a number of teams should’ve matched this offer. I thought that the Dodgers were the best fit for Johnson because
they had a lot of money to spend and could get him on a 1 year deal. LA has 34 million left to spend with only 2 holes – the rotation and the outfield. Manny Ramirez or Adam Dunn or whomever could come in for at the most 22 million per year. That would leave at least 12 million to spend. That is the offer I would’ve made if I was Ned Colletti, the GM of the Dodgers. He got beat by Brian Sebean on this one, and it could cost them big time.
Randy enters an already good rotation to solidify it. The Giants can now boast a rotation of Tim Lincecum – Matt Cain – Randy Johnson – Jonathan Sanchez – Barry Zito. In my opinion, that is the best starting rotation in the NL West. This team could be in some major competition for the division. I think they have already pasted up the Diamond Backs in terms of talent. San Francisco has much more depth in the rotation, and one could make a case that they have a better offense as well. Right now, they are still a step behind the Dodgers. If because of nothing else, the Dodgers still have the much better offense and bullpen. There is only one thing that could make the Giants favorites to win the NL West…
Manny Ramirez. They are said to be aggressively pursuing him, but I don’t know how true that is. There has been zero competition with the Dodgers for his services. Because of this, he should come pretty cheap. Of course, Manny will still probably get at least 2 years, 40 million. I don’t know if the Giants could fit that into their payroll. They have about 88 million committed for ’09. Their highest payroll since 2000 has been 90 million. I don’t know if they will be able to go any higher, but if they have permission to go all the way up to 100 million, a signing could occur.
First, they would have to trade Randy Winn, both to clear salary and to open up a spot for Manny to play. One suitor that I think makes a lot of sense is the White Sox. They need a center fielder, and Winn would be the best available via trade or free agency. The ChiSox would probably be willing to take on the entire 8.25 million he has coming. So, if a trade like this does go through to dump Winn’s contract, the Giants would have 80 million committed. Give Manny 20 million in his first year and call it an offseason. They can then head into the season with a lineup of Fred Lewis – Edgar Renteria - Aaron Rowand - Manny Ramirez - Bengie Molina – Pablo Sandoval – Greg Bowker – Kevin Frandsen / Emmanuel Burris. Very good. If they make this move, they are the favorites to win the NL West in my opinion.
All of it is possible if they get approval to raise payroll all the way up to 100 million. If not, they’ll be in a dog fight for second place with the D’Backs.
Happy New Year!
Happy New Year! I hope that you have a great one. I will try my best to improve my website in the New Year. My New Year wish: That ’09 is the year for the Cubs.

The Red Sox have made a couple of signings recently. They 

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