“The baseball
All-Star Game is the only one that's legit.Everyone knows they don't play defense in the NBA or the NHL All-Star
games.That's not real. And no one
cares about the Pro Bowl.”- Tony Gwynn
The in-season salary cap officially increases to $3.50
effective Noon on Tuesday July 10.However,
keep in mind that you cannot make roster moves on that
day just to raise your total salary above the $3.00 level.All mid-week moves must still be in reaction to an MLB roster move or a
CFCL trade.The earliest date you
can make free moves to take advantage of the higher cap is Sunday July 15, to be
effective on Monday.
Coming Soon ... IFAB Day
Here's an early reminder that the Interleague Free Agent
Bidding (IFAB) Day is just around the corner.Specifically, it will be Wednesday August 1, the day after MLB's July 31
trading deadline.
We added this new wrinkle a few years ago to address some
issues concerning players who came to the NL on the date of the MLB interleague
trading deadline, as well as to increase the excitement that goes along with
that day.
IFAB day is the only time during the season when free agent
bidding is allowed on a non-Sunday.The
intent is to allow CFCL teams to acquire players who come over to the NL at the
trading deadline immediately, rather than waiting until the following Sunday.
IFAB Day is the day immediately following the MLB interleague
trading deadline, regardless of when it occurs.For example, a couple years ago we had normal transaction day on July 31,
and then ALSO allowed bidding on free agents on August 1 to cover all the guys
who came to the NL after the regular deadline.This year the trading deadline falls on a Tuesday, so we allow free agent
bidding on the following Wednesday.
Here are some important details about this rule:
1.On the Interleague Free Agent Bid Day, bidding will be allowed on ALL
free agents (not only those that came over from the AL in trades).
2.ONLY free agent bidding and associated moves (reserves, waivers) will be
allowed.You cannot make a straight
reserve/activate move on IFAB Day.
3.Any players waived on IFAB Day will remain on waivers only until 6:00 on
the Sunday immediately following (so in most cases the waiver period will be
less than the usual week).
4.If the MLB trade deadline falls on
a Sunday, players traded to the
NL on July 31 can ONLY be bid on on the Interleague Free Agent Bid Day (Monday).This would prevent a situation where Alex Rodriguez gets traded to the
Reds at 5:45 on Sunday and is snagged for .12 by someone who's been pounding the
Refresh icon on the ESPN transaction wire all afternoon.
If anyone has questions about how this works, contact an
Executive Committee member.
The
Monroe Doctrine
We are already at the Mid Summer
Classic point of the baseball season. That means we
have just finished the voting procedure implemented by
baseball that Chicago politics has used for the past
century – logging on to our computers and voting 25
times for the candidate we most want.
In a recent Baseball Tonight (seen
locally on ESPN), the “experts” were providing
their .02 on who should be the final member of the NL
squad. Brandon Webb, Carlos Zambrano, Chris Young, Roy
Oswalt and Tom Gorzelanny were the choices.
by Rich Bentel
Barry Bonds apologist John Kruk said that Chris Young deserves to
go and pointed to Young’s statistics as reasons why.
Steve Phillips says he would take Brandon Webb over Chris
Young or others because he is looking at the possible match-ups later in the
All-Star game (needing a strikeout late in the game). This is a very intriguing
approach. Not surprisingly Phillips looked at it as “building a team” and
trying to plan for various game scenarios. The problem is that Phillips is
trying to round out the team based on match-ups to win the game and the rest of
the team is put together based on popularity. Considering that the winner of the
All-Star game dictates home field advantage for the World Series, Phillips’ is
probably the best way to approach it, but the whole team isn’t picked that
way.
You know, when I started to write this, it was going to be a
complaint of how stupid the All-Star game selection (fan vote) is. Usually a
city decides that Ryan Doumit deserves to be the starting catcher (much like
Cincinnati did back in 1957 by electing seven starters (and leaving off Aaron
and Mays). But when I look at the starting line-up for the NL (we’re not going
to examine the AL because, well frankly, it’s the AL) I am amazed at how
prescient the voters were.
Russell Martin at catcher – The right choice. LoDuca could
have gotten the traditional love or McCann could have been voted in because of
what he did the last two years.
Prince Fielder at first – This would have been easy for the
fans to go with perennial All-Star Albert Pujols. But Fielder, again, is the
right choice.
Chase Utley at second – Unless you’re voting for Biggio on
the “What he’s done for the past 20 years” plan, again the right choice.
Uggla started slow and could have ridden his success from last year, but the
fans showed some intelligence.
Jose Reyes at shortstop – A lot of talented shortstops out
there, but Reyes is head and shoulders above all of them this year. Rollins
started hot, but his .323 OBP doesn’t cut it.
David Wright at third – Probably the best selection.
Depending on what statistic you wanted to argue, you could say Cabrera or
Ramirez is more worthy, but being close in Runs, RBI and Home Runs AND having 18
stolen bases pushes Wright to the top.
Now we get to the outfield where I have some issues. No, not
because Cub Alfonso Soriano didn’t get voted in; but because Bonds did. The
Bonds apologists can point to his high OBP, but he’s been streaky (like
Soriano) and doesn’t play everyday due to age and injury.
The fans selected Carlos Beltran, Bonds and Ken Griffey Jr.
Here’s where I think they made some mistakes. Matt Holiday should be starting.
Carlos Lee should be starting. I guess I don’t have a problem with Junior, but
Brad Hawpe deserves consideration and he didn’t even make the team.
Beltran made it on past performance, not this year’s merit
and Bonds made it because baseball couldn’t imagine him not playing in
(hopefully) his last All-Star game which happens to take place in his home park.
Fortunately the remaining selection process (LaRussa and the players voting)
brought Holliday and Lee on board.
Over the years I’ve heard guys argue that there doesn’t
have to be a representative from every team. I always thought they were wrong.
Not because they were, but because of the tradition. For as long as I can
remember, each team has had a representative. But since the rules have changed
(the winner deciding who has home field during the World Series) baseball should
do away with every team getting a representative. Freddy Sanchez is having a
season that wouldn’t be worthy of All-Star consideration in High Rookie Ball,
but there he is, headed for Frisco by the Bay. If Pittsburgh has to have a rep,
Gorzelanny should be the one going. So with this archaic rule, baseball still
can’t get it right.
Then I started thinking from a ballplayer’s perspective.
While going to an All-Star Game as a player would be cool as hell, imagine being
the Freddy Sanchez (or Robert Fick) example. Forever you would be known as an
All-Star but in your mind you would know it was only because you were
(supposedly) the best player on a pathetic team. The only accomplishment, wasn’t
a great year with superior statistics, it was having signed with a bad team that
had to send a representative.
Again, Bud, if you’re going to do it right, do it right the
whole way. Look at the big picture and understand that if you want the game to
be meaningful (and you created the rule for it to be meaningful) you should give
both leagues the opportunity to create a team they feel is best suited to
accomplish the goal.
De
Aza (.12)-o-Meter
OBP:
.314
TB:
15
RS:
4
RBI:
3
SB:
1
Congrats to Alex
Rodriguez, who scored a huge bonus for his selection
to the 2007 AL All-Star squad: over 1,666,666
De Azas.
Hometown Discount Watch
In 2008, the teams that finished in 5th-12th
place in 2007 will receive a budget of up to .06 to use toward reacquiring
players who had played out their option with the team (B-contract players). The
exact amount each team receives will be based on how far behind the 5th
place team they are at the end of the year, in terms of a percentage of the 5th
place team's point total.
Team
Points
%
of
5th Place
Discount
Budget
Graging
Bulls
72.0
100.00%
.06
DoorMatts
68.0
94.44%
.05
Red
Hots
60.0
83.33%
.05
Steve's
Stones
58.5
81.25%
.04
Nick's
Picts
57.0
79.17%
.04
Splendid
Splinters
56.5
78.47%
.04
Eric's
Lambchops
50.0
69.44%
.04
Da
Paul Meisters
33.0
45.83%
.02
Record Book
Week Ending 07/08: No new
records were set this week.