Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The Pujols Injury - What Does it Mean For My Team?

We all know now know that Albert Pujols is expected to be out four to six weeks with a small, non-displaced fracture in his left forearm bone. We have also learned that Pujols has been having some shoulder discomfort, but nothing bad enough to keep him out of the lineup. Injuries like this typically take closer to six weeks to heal not four. And after the six weeks Albert’s arm will be six weeks gone without any movement or training. It might take a while for him to get back to his normal level of strength and movement.  
This is bad timing for fantasy owners who were just beginning to reap the rewards of their patience. Pujols has hit .300 with 10 homeruns and 20 RBI over the last month. Even if Pujols takes a while to get back to 100% there is still no way you can afford to drop him. If you feel that you don’t have room on your bench for another guy on the DH you can try to trade him. Selling low is never a good idea, but it is better than dropping him outright. So who can you find to replace him for 4-6 weeks?
With Albert out, Lance Berkman will slide over to 1B, this allows Jon Jay to see the field more in the OF. Jay is worth a look if you are in a deep league. He is a young player without a proven track record, but he has been productive in his time in the majors. He has an OPS nearly .800 and while he won’t hit you a ton of homeruns, he can get you some (4 so far this year) and he will also steal some bases for you, so he has some value.
Jon Jay will pick up a lot of extra at-bats while Pujols heals

There are plenty of options outside of St. Louis too. Former New York Met great Ty Wigginton, now of the Colorado Rockies is an option. Wigginton has now hit 4 homeruns in his last 71 at bats, and is getting regular hitting time at Coors field. The best part is that he has eligibility at 1B, 2B, 3B, and OF. He is available in 74% of public leagues. Another player that is too hot to ignore is Roger Bernadina of the Nationals. Bernadina has now homered in three straight days. He is already a threat to steal bases going 10 for 10 so far this year. Now that he has added some pop to his bat he is a solid fantasy player, at least while he is starting everyday with Rick Ankiel out. If he keeps his power numbers up, he will be hard to replace from the lineup even once Ankiel is healthy.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Off Topic: MLB Realignment

One of the hot topics around the MLB world recently has been division realignment. It’s time for MLB to take a step away from its "purist" form and do what is fair. It is time to put the same number of teams in each league and balance out the schedules. Here are a few possible alignments the MLB could switch to. Some are realistic and some are a little more outrageous.


1. This is the simplest realignment. It only involves the Astros moving from the 6 team NL Central to the 4 team AL West. This creates 6, 5-team divisions and 2, 15-team conferences. The drawback to having even conferences is that there are an odd number of teams in each conference so you must have at least one interleague series going on at a time. I don't see why this is an issue as every other major North American sport already does this including the NBA and NFL.



NL East
NL Central
NL West
Atlanta Braves
Cincinnati Reds
Colorado Rockies
Philadelphia Phillies
Chicago Cubs
Arizona Diamondbacks
New York Mets
Milwaukee Brewers
Las Angeles Dodgers
Florida Marlins
Pittsburgh Pirates
San Diego Padres
Washington Nationals
St. Louis Cardinals
San Francisco Giants
AL East
AL Central
AL West
Boston Red Sox
Cleveland Indians
Houston Astros
New York Yankees
Detroit Tigers
Texas Rangers
Baltimore Orioles
Chicago White Sox
Las Angeles Angels
Tampa Bay Rays
Kansas City Royals
Oakland Athletics
Toronto Blue Jays
Minnesota Twins
Seattle Mariners




2. If you want to take it a step further you can realign the divisions based on geographic location. In this economy even a professional sports team should be looking on ways to cut down on travel costs. This model divides the teams by location.


NL East
NL Central
NL West
Florida Marlins
Philadelphia Phillies
Houston Astros
Tampa Bay Rays
Pittsburgh Pirates
Texas Rangers
Atlanta Braves
Cleveland Indians
Colorado Rockies
St. Louis Cardinals
Cincinnati Reds
Arizona Diamondbacks
Kansas City Royals
Detroit Tigers
San Diego Padres
AL East
AL Central
AL West
Boston Red Sox
Chicago Cubs
Seattle Mariners
New York Mets
Chicago White Sox
San Francisco Giants
New York Yankees
Milwaukee Brewers
Oakland Athletics
Baltimore Orioles
Minnesota Twins
Las Angeles Dodgers
Washington Nationals
Toronto Blue Jays
Las Angeles Angels




3. Yet another model based on geographic location. This one is unique because it creates a division for California tams to call their own. It also puts closer together teams from the north-east together. One drawback is that this will create a super division of the Phillies, Yankees, and Res Sox.  But through time things should change. And has anybody thought about realigning the leagues instead of National and American but now East and West?



EL New England
EL Atlantic
EL Midwest
Boston Red Sox
Baltimore Orioles
Toronto Blue Jays
New York Yankees
Washington Nationals
Detroit Tigers
New York Mets
Atlanta Braves
Cleveland Indians
Philadelphia Phillies
Tampa Bay Rays
Cincinnati Reds
Pittsburgh Pirates
Florida Marlins
St. Louis Cardinals
WL Central
WL Frontier
WL California
Chicago White Sox
Houston Astros
San Francisco Giants
Chicago Cubs
Texas Rangers
Oakland Athletics
Milwaukee Brewers
Colorado Rockies
Las Angeles Dodgers
Minnesota Twins
Arizona Diamondbacks
Las Angeles Angels
Kansas City Royals
Seattle Mariners
San Diego Padres



4. Yet another geographical influenced realignment. This one breaks up the Yankees from Boston and from the Mets. This alignment features more balanced divisions and features both good and bad teams in all divisions. And do you even need leagues anymore? You could just take the top 8 or ten teams in baseball and put them in the playoffs.



Atlantic
North
Mid West
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Cincinnati Reds
New York Mets
Toronto Blue Jays
Chicago White Sox
Philadelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
Chicago Cubs
Baltimore Orioles
Cleveland Indians
Milwaukee Brewers
Washington Nationals
Detroit Tigers
Minnesota Twins
South East
South
West
Florida Marlins
St. Louis Cardinals
Colorado Rockies
Tampa Bay Rays
Kansas City Royals
Las Angeles Dodgers
Atlanta Braves
Arizona Diamondbacks
Oakland Athletics
Houston Astros
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
Texas Rangers
Las Angeles Angels
Seattle Mariners



5. Bear with me on my final suggestion. This would be more of a rotating division format, updated every couple years based on past performance. In this setup you would have the most parity and the most fairness. Every league is as competitive as the next. Best 8 or 10 teams make the playoffs every year. 


Ruth Division
Wagner Division
Koufax Division
New York Mets
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Cincinnati Reds
Toronto Blue Jays
Cleveland Indians
Texas Rangers
Milwaukee Brewers
Minnesota Twins
Arizona Diamondbacks
Kansas City Royals
Houston Astros
Seattle Mariners
San Diego Padres
Oakland Athletics
Mays Division
Williams Division
Ryan Division
Philadelphia Phillies
Baltimore Orioles
Tampa Bay Rays
Washington Nationals
Florida Marlins
Detroit Tigers
Atlanta Braves
St. Louis Cardinals
Pittsburgh Pirates
Chicago White Sox
Colorado Rockies
Chicago Cubs
Las Angeles Dodgers
Las Angeles Angels
San Francisco Giants