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Top 10 Baseball story lines for the 2007 season... (1 Viewer)

posty

Footballguy
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20...s&fext=.jsp

No. 10 -- Will Roger Clemens stay retired this time or come back for one more season?

We should know one way or the other by late May or early June as the Astros, Red Sox, Yankees and baseball fans await an answer from the seven-time Cy Young Award winner.

No. 9 -- The NL East battle

The Mets were the dominant regular-season team in the league last year and have arguably the best lineup in the league, but have an unsettled rotation. Philadelphia, with MVP Ryan Howard and star second baseman Chase Utley, may be ready to assume command in the division. And don't forget the retooled Braves, who will try to prove last year's end to their string of 14 consecutive division titles was just an aberration.

No. 8 -- Five for 500

Other historic home runs could be flying out of several parks this year, as five players could pass the 500 career home run milestone this season, including Frank Thomas (with 487 career homers), Jim Thome (472), Manny Ramirez (470), A-Rod (464) and Gary Sheffield (455).

No. 7 -- Milestone year

It's a milestone year for milestones, as Craig Biggio closes in on 3,000 hits, Tom Glavine needs 10 wins for 300 and both Sammy Sosa and Ken Griffey Jr. could hit career home run No. 600 this season.

No. 6 -- The AL East

Boston spent heavily during the offseason and the Yankees made some significant moves, but Toronto, which finished second last year, might be ready to pull off a surprise in this division.

No. 5 -- Alex Rodriguez and the Yankees

Is this the make or break year for this high-profile relationship?

No. 4 -- The American League Central

With four teams talented enough to reach the playoffs in '07, the American League Central figures to be baseball's toughest division again this year. Will it be a four-team cavalry charge between the Twins, Tigers, White Sox and Indians all the way to the wire?

No. 3 -- The Chicago Cubs

Can Lou Piniella, Alfonso Soriano, Ted Lilly, Jason Marquis and Mark DeRosa fix what ails the Cubs? Can the franchise's $300 million offseason investment lift the Cubs from worst to first in the National League Central?

No. 2 -- Barry Bonds' pursuit of Hank Aaron's home run record

Bonds, with 734 career home runs, needs 21 to tie all-time home run king Aaron and 159 hits to reach 3,000 for his career. Whether you like, loathe or are indifferent to Bonds, most fans will want to see what the reaction is when he closes in on Aaron.

No. 1 -- Matsuzaka Mania

The hype began building last winter when the Boston Red Sox bid $51 million just for the right to negotiate with Japanese superstar pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka. Boston's total outlay of $103 million for Matsuzaka and his "gyroball" has become an international story and one that will command a similar level of attention especially in the early days of the season.

 
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A 15 win pitcher being ranked ahead of a guy who is about to break one of the hallowed sports records of all time under a cloud of controversy?

PLease.

 
I think the Dodgers with their loaded starting rotation and bullpen, and the youthful core of talented players, belong on that list somewhere.

 
I think the Dodgers with their loaded starting rotation and bullpen, and the youthful core of talented players, belong on that list somewhere.
11. The Dodgers annual choke-job despite having more then enough talent to win the crummy NL West.
 
No. 4 -- The American League Central

With four teams talented enough to reach the playoffs in '07, the American League Central figures to be baseball's toughest division again this year. Will it be a four-team cavalry charge between the Twins, Tigers, White Sox and Indians all the way to the wire?
Cleveland radio reporting C.C. Sabathia taken for x-rays. Took a line drive off his pitching hand. :popcorn:

 
*Josh Hamilton looks to put his drug-laden past behind him and finally tries to display his Mantle-esque ability.

 
No. 4 -- The American League Central

With four teams talented enough to reach the playoffs in '07, the American League Central figures to be baseball's toughest division again this year. Will it be a four-team cavalry charge between the Twins, Tigers, White Sox and Indians all the way to the wire?
Cleveland radio reporting C.C. Sabathia taken for x-rays. Took a line drive off his pitching hand. :popcorn:
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20...sp&c_id=cleWINTER HAVEN, Fla. -- Mere hours after the Indians set their Opening Day roster, they watched their Opening Day starter come out of his final spring tune-up with an injury.

On the second pitch of his Grapefruit League outing against the Blue Jays, left-hander C.C. Sabathia was struck by a line drive off the bat of Jays leadoff man Reed Johnson.

Sabathia tried to shield himself from the ball with his throwing hand and his glove. It appeared to strike him in the left wrist. A frustrated Sabathia came out of the game immediately. He was replaced by Tom Mastny.

Coming into the outing, Sabathia had gone 1-1 with a 3.21 ERA in four spring starts. He looked ready to build on a strong 2006 in which he went 12-11 with a 3.22 ERA in 28 starts.

The Indians have already lost starter Cliff Lee for at least the first two weeks of the season with a strained right abdominal muscle. He'll be replaced in the rotation by Fausto Carmona.

Another injury blow to the starting setup could open the door for top prospect Adam Miller, who had a dominant spring. Miller, the Eastern League Pitcher of the Year at Double-A Akron last season, pitched 14 scoreless Grapefruit League innings before being reassigned to Minor League camp on March 20.

 
Switch #1 and #2 -- Bonds, the home record, and the stench of his steroids taint will supercede all of the other stories.

 
' said:
wadegarrett said:
' said:
No. 4 -- The American League Central

With four teams talented enough to reach the playoffs in '07, the American League Central figures to be baseball's toughest division again this year. Will it be a four-team cavalry charge between the Twins, Tigers, White Sox and Indians all the way to the wire?
Cleveland radio reporting C.C. Sabathia taken for x-rays. Took a line drive off his pitching hand. :shrug:
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20...sp&c_id=cleWINTER HAVEN, Fla. -- Mere hours after the Indians set their Opening Day roster, they watched their Opening Day starter come out of his final spring tune-up with an injury.

On the second pitch of his Grapefruit League outing against the Blue Jays, left-hander C.C. Sabathia was struck by a line drive off the bat of Jays leadoff man Reed Johnson.

Sabathia tried to shield himself from the ball with his throwing hand and his glove. It appeared to strike him in the left wrist. A frustrated Sabathia came out of the game immediately. He was replaced by Tom Mastny.

Coming into the outing, Sabathia had gone 1-1 with a 3.21 ERA in four spring starts. He looked ready to build on a strong 2006 in which he went 12-11 with a 3.22 ERA in 28 starts.

The Indians have already lost starter Cliff Lee for at least the first two weeks of the season with a strained right abdominal muscle. He'll be replaced in the rotation by Fausto Carmona.

Another injury blow to the starting setup could open the door for top prospect Adam Miller, who had a dominant spring. Miller, the Eastern League Pitcher of the Year at Double-A Akron last season, pitched 14 scoreless Grapefruit League innings before being reassigned to Minor League camp on March 20.
This absolutely blows about CC, but maybe a blessing in disguise (as long as CC is not out too long). Remember Sizemore being called up one game into the '05 season because of JuanGone's hammy?
 
And the current reigning World Series champions do not even get mentioned? WTF?!
I would imagine most folks realize they are the worst WS Champ in a very long time.
That doesn't matter. When you are the defending champs, you should at least get mentioned in something like this. Heck, they didn't even mention Albert Pujols, the best player in MLB right now, yet a pile of crap pitcher like Jason Marquis gets mentioned. That makes zero sense.
 
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And the current reigning World Series champions do not even get mentioned? WTF?!
I would imagine most folks realize they are the worst WS Champ in a very long time.
That doesn't matter. When you are the defending champs, you should at least get mentioned in something like this. Heck, they didn't even mention Albert Pujols, the best player in MLB right now, yet a pile of crap pitcher like Jason Marquis gets mentioned. That makes zero sense.
Champs get mentioned when they are interesting and/or have a chance to repeat. I'm not sure either could be said of the Cards as a team.
 
Champs get mentioned when they are interesting and/or have a chance to repeat. I'm not sure either could be said of the Cards as a team.
So you are telling me that a year after an 83-win team won the World Series, a team that is still the best team in their division until further notice has no chance to repeat? Interesting.Besides, anyone who was paying attention last year knows that the Cardinals were better than being an 83-win team. Injuries killed them for much of the year, but look at what happened when they finally got (mostly) healthy in October.Heck, the Tigers were barely mentioned in that article, either, and they were the AL champs last year. But, like the Cardinals, they do not play in New York, Boston, or Chicago, so they simply are not going to get as much attention paid to them.
 
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Champs get mentioned when they are interesting and/or have a chance to repeat. I'm not sure either could be said of the Cards as a team.
So you are telling me that a year after an 83-win team won the World Series, a team that is still the best team in their division until further notice has no chance to repeat? Interesting.
They may well finish 4th in the Central.
It is much more likely that the Cubs will finish in 4th place, unless you really think that Jason Marquis is going to lead them to the promised land. No way do the Cardinals not finish 1st or 2nd, unless their pitching staff completely falls apart.
 
' said:
wadegarrett said:
' said:
No. 4 -- The American League Central

With four teams talented enough to reach the playoffs in '07, the American League Central figures to be baseball's toughest division again this year. Will it be a four-team cavalry charge between the Twins, Tigers, White Sox and Indians all the way to the wire?
Cleveland radio reporting C.C. Sabathia taken for x-rays. Took a line drive off his pitching hand. :wub:
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20...sp&c_id=cleWINTER HAVEN, Fla. -- Mere hours after the Indians set their Opening Day roster, they watched their Opening Day starter come out of his final spring tune-up with an injury.

On the second pitch of his Grapefruit League outing against the Blue Jays, left-hander C.C. Sabathia was struck by a line drive off the bat of Jays leadoff man Reed Johnson.

Sabathia tried to shield himself from the ball with his throwing hand and his glove. It appeared to strike him in the left wrist. A frustrated Sabathia came out of the game immediately. He was replaced by Tom Mastny.

Coming into the outing, Sabathia had gone 1-1 with a 3.21 ERA in four spring starts. He looked ready to build on a strong 2006 in which he went 12-11 with a 3.22 ERA in 28 starts.

The Indians have already lost starter Cliff Lee for at least the first two weeks of the season with a strained right abdominal muscle. He'll be replaced in the rotation by Fausto Carmona.

Another injury blow to the starting setup could open the door for top prospect Adam Miller, who had a dominant spring. Miller, the Eastern League Pitcher of the Year at Double-A Akron last season, pitched 14 scoreless Grapefruit League innings before being reassigned to Minor League camp on March 20.
This absolutely blows about CC, but maybe a blessing in disguise (as long as CC is not out too long). Remember Sizemore being called up one game into the '05 season because of JuanGone's hammy?
Rizzo (local radio guy who may or may not be in Florida right now) reports Xrays negative.
 

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