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Prince Fielder (1 Viewer)

  • Thread starter Thread starter The Ghost of Common
  • Start date Start date
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The Ghost of Common

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He's gutta run into one soon right?

Yeeesh. Don't wanna go Finless on everyone here, but I'm getting a bit impatient.

 
Add Ryan Howard to this rant. Finally hit #2 yesterday but only has 4 rbis.
I'm not sure you can really blame Ryan Howard for his teammates not being on base when he hits home runs.
Ok take away his 2 HRs and he only has 2rbis
That will change. He's just not hitting well right now.
I know. I just ranting a little. Not too worried about him just like Ghost is not too worried about Prince.
 
Add Ryan Howard to this rant. Finally hit #2 yesterday but only has 4 rbis.
I'm not sure you can really blame Ryan Howard for his teammates not being on base when he hits home runs.
Ok take away his 2 HRs and he only has 2rbis
That will change. He's just not hitting well right now.
I know. I just ranting a little. Not too worried about him just like Ghost is not too worried about Prince.
Fair enough.
 
Say good-bye to the Prince of old, and say hello to the Prince of PETA:

Prince is a Vegetarian

Blame it on his wife:

"That 6-foot, 260-pound build is powered by wheatgrass, soy and tofu nowadays. No meat. Not even fish.

It wasn't always this way. Fielder used to enjoy a stacked burger or a juicy steak as much as any carnivore, but a few weeks ago he received a book from his wife, Chanel, that changed his outlook on what he puts in his massive frame. The book described how certain animals are treated and slaughtered for food."

No meat = no power = no more 50 HR seasons

 
Say good-bye to the Prince of old, and say hello to the Prince of PETA:

Prince is a Vegetarian

Blame it on his wife:

"That 6-foot, 260-pound build is powered by wheatgrass, soy and tofu nowadays. No meat. Not even fish.

It wasn't always this way. Fielder used to enjoy a stacked burger or a juicy steak as much as any carnivore, but a few weeks ago he received a book from his wife, Chanel, that changed his outlook on what he puts in his massive frame. The book described how certain animals are treated and slaughtered for food."

No meat = no power = no more 50 HR seasons
Rodriguez traded to YankeesBy: Ronald Blum — The Associated Press

NEW YORK - It's a done deal: Alex Rodriguez is a Yankee.

Commissioner Bud Selig approved the record-setting swap Monday, allowing the reigning American League MVP to be traded to New York by the Texas Rangers.

''I'm pretty excited. This is a big, big one,'' Yankees owner George Steinbrenner said.

''It ranks with when we signed Reggie,'' he said, a reference to when slugger Reggie Jackson joined the Yankees before the 1977 season.

Texas will pay $67 million of the $179 million left on Rodriguez's $252 million, 10-year contract, the most cash included in a trade in major league history. The Rangers get All-Star second baseman Alfonso Soriano and a player to be named - but they also will pay Rodriguez through 2025.

''I am very concerned about the large amount of cash consideration involved in the transaction, and the length of time over which the cash is being paid,'' Selig said.

''I want to make it abundantly clear to all clubs that I will not allow cash transfers of this magnitude to become the norm. However, given the unique circumstances, including the size, length and complexity of Mr. Rodriguez's contract and the quality of the talent moving in both directions, I have decided to approve the transaction.''

Rodriguez will move from shortstop, a position at which he's been an All-Star seven times, to third base, where he will replace injured Aaron Boone. The Yankees will keep Derek Jeter at shortstop.

"Jeter is the captain. He is the leader," Steinbrenner said at the team's minor league complex in Tampa, Fla.

Both Jeter and Yankees manager Joe Torre were expected to attend Tuesday's news conference at Yankee Stadium to introduce Rodriguez.

Torre will miss the first day of spring training.

Steinbrenner praised Rodriguez's decision to move to third.

''I was very impressed. He's an outstanding young fellow. He'll be very big in New York,'' Steinbrenner said.

Rodriguez, who waived his no-trade clause, was desperate to play for a winner.

''I don't think he ever thought about playing another position until the concept came up,'' Rodriguez's agent, Scott Boras, said Sunday. ''He decided it didn't make a difference - shortstop, third base, center field.

He wanted the opportunity to play on a competitive team.''

The Rangers will wind up paying $140 million for three seasons with Rodriguez, an average of $46.7 million annually for three last-place finishes in the AL West. The Yankees will owe him $112 million over seven years.

''Since the end of last season we said we would not trade Alex unless it made sense for our organization,'' Texas Rangers general manager John Hart said.

''This deal is a win-win-win situation for the Rangers, the Yankees and Alex Rodriguez. This trade is about flexibility. We've traded the best player in the game, and we're getting tremendous financial flexibility.''

Baseball's biggest spenders will raise their payroll to about $190 million.

''The disparity is not healthy for the sport,'' Arizona Diamondbacks owner Jerry Colangelo said Sunday. ''But everyone runs their team the way they see fit, and they did it by the rules.''

Boras said the possibility of a trade first came up last Monday while he was talking to the Yankees about another player. Boras then called Rodriguez.

''I said, 'There may be an opportunity. We have to talk about your goals, about winning,''' Boras recalled telling his client.

''He called me back Tuesday and discussed it further and said, 'Why don't you call (Texas owner) Tom Hicks and let him know we're ready to do that,''' Boras said.

Trade talks began the following day, and the sides reached the agreement Sunday.

The Yankees will pay Rodriguez $15 million in each of the next three seasons, $16 million each in 2007 and 2008, $17 million in 2009 and $18 million in 2010, according to contract information obtained by the AP from player and management sources.

In each of the first four years, $1 million would be deferred without interest, to be paid in 2011.

The trade calls for Texas to pay $43 million of Rodriguez's salary over the remaining seven years. In addition, the Rangers will pay the $24 million remaining in deferred money from the original contract, with the interest rate lowered from 3 percent to 1.75 percent.

All the deferred money owed by Texas - $36 million, including salaries from 2001-03 - will be converted to an assignment bonus, which makes the money guaranteed against a strike or lockout. The payout schedule will be pushed back to 2016-25 from 2011-20.

In exchange for the alterations, which devalue the present-day value of the contract by $5 million, Rodriguez will receive a hotel suite on road trips, have the right to link his Web site to the Yankees' site and get a guarantee that the deferred money won't be wiped out by a work stoppage.

 
Before last season, what was the most HRs Fielder had in a season playing at any level? I seem to remember that it wasn't that many. Maybe he's just falling back to the mean.

 
Sinn Fein said:
Say good-bye to the Prince of old, and say hello to the Prince of PETA:

Prince is a Vegetarian

Blame it on his wife:

"That 6-foot, 260-pound build is powered by wheatgrass, soy and tofu nowadays. No meat. Not even fish.

It wasn't always this way. Fielder used to enjoy a stacked burger or a juicy steak as much as any carnivore, but a few weeks ago he received a book from his wife, Chanel, that changed his outlook on what he puts in his massive frame. The book described how certain animals are treated and slaughtered for food."

No meat = no power = no more 50 HR seasons
that is what you get for marrying a girl named after a crappy perfumeChanel?? Really???

How in the hell can you live in Milwaukee 1/2 the year and not eat meat? Trade him to San Francisco where this new diet will fit in better.

 
I took Ortiz and Fielder at the turn since my league uses OBP instead of batting average. I'm sure some team has got a couple of pitchers with better OBP than these two right now.

 
Assuming the vegetarian things wasn't some PR stunt by some company pimping Fielder, this slump doesn't surprise me in the least.

 

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