I take a look at the Brett Favre situation over at the American Spectator Online.
If Brett is traded, I hope he goes to Baltimore. Then it would only be a 45-minute drive to see him play.
I take a look at the Brett Favre situation over at the American Spectator Online.
If Brett is traded, I hope he goes to Baltimore. Then it would only be a 45-minute drive to see him play.
I have a piece in today’s American Spectator Online about what the CC Sabathia and Rich Harden trades mean for the pennant race.
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Posted in Publications, Sports
In an otherwise misguided article, Ken Rosenthal brings up an excellent point that I missed about the Brewers’ acquisition of C.C. Sabathia. When he leaves Milwaukee this winter for a big-market team, the Brewers will be compensated with two extra draft picks next year.
Ben Sheets, the Brewers’ incumbent ace pitcher, will also be leaving the team in free agency. That’s another two bonus picks for the Brewers.
What’s more, Yovani Gallardo, another ace-caliber Brewers pitcher, will be back to full strength next season after a season-ending injury from a freak play earlier this season.
All of a sudden I don’t feel so bad about the Brewers giving up four (at latest count) of their top prospects to rent Sabathia for three months. Milwaukee has perhaps the best scouts in baseball; their top scout is the only non-GM to ever win baseball’s prestigious Executive of the Year award. Now those scouts get four extra high-round draft picks to play with next year. The team will be able to replenish itself just fine.
Comments Off on One More Thought on the Sabathia Trade
Posted in Sports
The Brewers have just completed a deal with the Cleveland Indians for C.C. Sabathia, one of the best pitchers in baseball. He is the reigning Cy Young award winner, stands 6’7″ and weighs 290 pounds, and has an eye-popping 2.16 ERA since the end of April.
I have some reservations about the deal, though. Sabathia will be a free agent after the season ends, and he is well out of small-market Milwaukee’s price range. He’ll probably be in New York or Boston next year. He is basically a rental for half a season. But the Brewers want to win now, and think the deal will help their chances.
The Brewers, renowned for their farm system, are giving up three of their top prospects in return for Sabathia’s services. The only one confirmed at this point is Matt LaPorta, one of the best pure hitters in the minor leagues. As last year’s top draft pick, he’ll probably be ready to move up to the big leagues next year. He may even be a late-season call up this year.
The deal will be good for LaPorta, a first baseman and left fielder. The Brewers currently have Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun at those positions. Fielder hit 51 home runs last year. Braun was Rookie of the Year last year, and is starting in this year’s All-Star Game. They’re not going anywhere, so LaPorta is blocked. There is plenty of room for him in Cleveland.
Meanwhile, the Brewers haven’t made the playoffs in 26 years. Sabathia improves their chance to end the drought. The deal also lets Sabathia play for a winning team, something he is missing in Cleveland. The last-place Indians will get some good young players they can develop.
The loser is Milwaukee’s farm system. It looks deep enough to take the hit, but I worry; injuries happen. Hopefully those worries are unfounded.
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Posted in Sports
Milwaukee Brewers Hall-of-Famer Robin Yount is coming out with his own brand of lemonade. I chuckled when I saw that Robinade is “made in Wisconsin from 100% natural ingredients including real lemon juice concentrate, lemon pulp and natural lemon oils.” (emphasis mine)
I didn’t chuckle when I read that “In line with Yount’s tradition of giving back to the community, a percentage of profits will go directly to Wisconsin children’s charities.”
It is wonderful that Yount is giving to charity. But he’s not giving back to the community. What has he taken? He is simply giving to the community.
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Posted in Philosophy, Sports
The NFL’s Spygate scandal has disappeared from the headlines. Coincidentally, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) has announced that he won’t hold hearings on the matter. I’ve been worried that he would.
There is a cloud in this silver lining, though: “Instead, he said he plans to look into another hot-button issue where sports and politics meet: public financing of sports stadiums.”
It never ends.
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Posted in Political Animals, Sports
I have an article over at The American Spectator Online on Sen. Specter’s odd involvement in the NFL’s Spygate scandal.
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Posted in Publications, Sports
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) wants the federal government to open an investigation of the NFL’s Spygate scandal.
For those not in the know, the New England Patriots are accused of taping other teams’ signals from the bench. That is against league rules.
We are fighting two wars. Economic growth is slowing down. Entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare are headed for financial meltdowns.
Sen. Specter’s solution? Involve the federal government in a sports league’s internal affairs.
Priorities please, Senator.
On the other hand, any time the Senate spends bungling this issue is time they can’t spend bungling more important matters. Maybe there’s a silver lining to this political grandstanding, after all.
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Posted in Political Animals, Sports
As I noted before, I think the lead poisoning scare surrounding artificial turf is exaggerated. I take a more in-depth look over at the American Spectator Online.
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Posted in Publications, Science, Sports
Even though the Yankees have a payroll 1/3 larger than any other team, I don’t think baseball needs a salary cap. I say why over at the American Spectator Online.
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Posted in Economics, Publications, Sports
Tagged baseball, new york yankees, payroll, salary cap, Yankees, yankees payroll