Latest CFCL Bulletin and Roster Changes

07/30/07

  

“The Hall of Fame is a place of grace and class ...  You arrive expecting to tour Baseball’s past.  What you discover is your own ...  It is pictures of places you’ve never been and belongings of people you’ve never met.  Yet you are drawn to its scuffed baseballs and gritty photographs as if they were your own.  And in a way they are.”    - The Bergen Record


Click here for a copy of this report in Word for Windows format

July 24

DEM REBELS reserve H Pence, activate R Flores.

July 26

STEVES STONES trade C Lee (.39B), P Burrell (.38D), C Delgado (.41D), R Oswalt (.43D), R Dempster (.01B), T Graffanino (.07D), D Wells (.01D), and their 8th and 13th round Rotation Draft picks in 2008 to KENNDOZA LINE for M Kemp (.05D), F Lewis (.02D), R Martinez (.06D), T Abreu (.05D), T Lincecum (.10D), K Wells (.15D), W Inman (.05M), and their 4th and 7th round Rotation Draft Picks in 2008.

KENNDOZA LINE reserve R Ludwick, R Oswalt, and M Giles.

STONES activate D Miller, R Martinez, and Y Gallardo.

STONES reserve T Gwynn, activate B Hall.

July 28

COPPERFIELDS reserve D Bush, activate B Myers.

July 30

COPPERFIELDS reserve O Villareal, activate D Bush.

COPPERFIELDS sign M Parra for .06, reserve him, waive H Blanco.

RED HOTS reserve B Fuentes, activate W Williams.

KENNDOZA LINE reserve J Smith, activate R Oswalt.

KENNDOZA LINE sign T Iguchi for .18, reserve C Beltran, waive S Olsen.

LAMBCHOPS reserve K Frandsen, activate M Murton.

LAMBCHOPS reserve M Montero, activate C Coste.

LAMBCHOPS sign T Wigginton for .27, reserve D Ward, waive M Bowie.

DEM REBELS reserve A Harang, activate J Moyer.

STONES reserve A Alfonseca, activate L Ayala.

DOORMATTS sign U Jimenez for .05, reserve B Carlyle, waive K Casto.

DOORMATTS sign J Keppinger for .08, reserve C Burke, waive A Escobar.

GRAGING BULLS reserve C Young, activate A Cook.

Click here for updated rosters in Excel format.
Click here for the 2008 Rotation Draft Pick Tracker


Free Agent Bids and Waiver Claims

Ty Wigginton

.27 Chops (Bowie)

.25 Coppers (Callaspo)

.24 Kenndoza (Olson)

.24 Rebels (Castro)

.14 Bulls (McBeth)

.11 Stones (Wells)

Tadahito Iguchi

.18 Kenndoza (Olson)

.16 Rebels (Castro)

.11 Coppers (Borchard)

.07 Stones (Watson)

 

Manny Parra

.06 Coppers (Blanco) 

.05 Bulls (Lopez)

.05 Stones (Wells)

Jeff Keppinger

.08 Matts (Escobar)

.06 Chops (Brocail)

.05 Kenndoza (Olson)

Ubaldo Jimenez

.05 Matts (Casto)

.05 Bulls (Maroth)

 

Trade Deadline

The CFCL trade deadline is Noon on Wednesday August 1.  This is 21 hours after the MLB interleague trade deadline (3:00 PM Central on Tuesday July 31). 

All CFCL trades must be reported, along with all corresponding moves, by Noon next Wednesday.  The “all corresponding moves” part means that if you make trades on Wednesday you must:  1) be at or under the salary cap ($3.50), 2) have 23 active players that fit the position requirements, and 3) have no more than 17 players on your Reserve List.


IFAB Day

Wednesday August 1 is also IFAB (Interleague Free Agent Bidding) Day.  All players who come to the NL between now and Wednesday will be eligible for bidding.  Remember, bidding is not limited to players who just came over in trades.  Players who are currently in the free agent pool are also eligible for bidding on IFAB Day.

The deadline for IFAB Day bids is 6:00 PM Central on Wednesday August 1.  Note that this is 6 hours after the CFCL trade deadline – this will give everyone a chance who made trades on Wednesday morning a chance to calculate room remaining under the salary cap, etc.

If I get the chance, I will publish current salary levels and FAAB balances for all teams on the website by Wednesday.  If you want to be proactive, check the Excel rosters in the Download Center to make sure what I have down as your FAAB balance matches what you think it is.  Remember, you can hover your cursor over the cell that contains your FAAB balance and a list will display showing all the free agents you’ve acquired during the year and what you paid for them.


The Trade Deadline, IFAB, and the Working Man

Unfortunately, I'll be out of town on Deadline/IFAB Day.  I'll try my best to post updates about trades in the Forum as they are made, but I'd advise everyone to take extra care to make sure they've got their transactions in order.  

To make sure things get to me, please e-mail any transactions, trade announcements, and IFAB bids to my work address ([email protected]) in addition to the usual [email protected] address. 

Make sure you include all necessary associated moves, are under the salary cap, don't overspend your available FAAB, etc.  Chances are good that I won't be able to respond quickly if any of your moves are invalid, and I definitely won't be able to track you down via phone.  Likewise, I'll be sticking strictly to the deadlines -- your trades/bids/moves must be in and complete by the appropriate deadline or they're no good. 


The Monroe Doctrine Another phone call from the brain trust of the Monroe Doctrine (and by that I mean, the DoorMatts). Whenever Matt has time to think and gives me a call, we end up with an article that causes you to think – like the greatest player of each decade. Whenever he’s too busy to call, we end up with silly fluff – like a tribute to the number 4.

The latest call generated this: Twelve of the twenty-one members of the 500 Homerun club are black or Hispanic. And when A-Rod hits his next homerun it will be thirteen of twenty-two.

by Rich Bentel

Zero of the twenty-two members of the 300 win club are black or Hispanic. When Glavine wins his next it will be zero of twenty-three.

Why?

There have been great non-white pitchers. Gibson, Marichal, Newcombe, Jenkins, Pedro, Vida Blue, Dennis Martinez. But none of them have 300 wins (Jenkins is closest with 284).

It could be the black quarterback syndrome wherein a team puts their most talented player at a position where they can display all their “skills” on a daily basis.

It could be that there was/is a sense of racism (in baseball? No way!) such that management didn’t feel comfortable putting the fate of their team in the hands of a person of color.

It could be that teams wouldn’t give pitchers of color as much leeway to pitch out of jams and thus earn wins. Or didn’t allow them to begin their major league career as early so they had a chance at getting 300 wins. Or wore out their arms (Gooden, Gibson, Martinez) so that their careers were cut short.

Certainly the fact that players of color were not allowed to participate in the Major Leagues until 1947, and then at an embarrassingly slow pace, plays into the fact that a lot of careers didn’t blossom to full potential (Newcombe, Paige, Radcliffe). But in our lifetime we have seen Clemens, Maddux, Carlton, Ryan, Sutton, Niekro, Perry and Seaver (and soon Glavine) eclipse the 300 mark. Why no pitchers of color?

Offensively in our lifetime (and by that I mean when we were old enough to pay attention to baseball) we have seen Schmidt and McGwire pass 500. But also there have been Bonds, Palmiero, Sosa, Griffey, Jackson, McCovey, Thomas and soon A-Rod who have joined the 500 club.

Nine new members of the 500 club and seven are of color. Eight new members of the 300 win club and none are of color. What gives? Perhaps it comes from the adage of why there were so many aggressive hitters coming from the Dominican. “You can’t walk off the island.” Unless you throw a ball 105 mph, it may be hard to impress scouts and truly standout. But if you can hit a ball 500 feet and run like the wind, you have more opportunity to catch a scout’s eye. So maybe players of color are themselves deciding to line up on the offensive side of the ball.

At first I thought it could be economics; that a ballclub didn’t want to pay a player of color more than a white guy. But starting pitchers don’t make as much as the offensive stars, so that theory doesn’t fly.

I honestly don’t have an answer with which to end this column. Since Matt pointed this out a couple of weeks ago, I have wracked my brain to come up with a logical answer. The “black quarterback syndrome” is what Matt and his entourage have settled on. Could be. I have no clear cut answer in my mind.


De Aza (.12)-o-Meter

OBP: .314
TB: 15
RS: 4
RBI: 3
SB: 1

Amount of value the Stones received for dumping most all of their talent: 0 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

71.0

98.61%

.05

Nick's Picts

59.0

81.94%

.04

Splendid Splinters

59.0

81.94%

.04

Steve's Stones

57.0

79.17%

.04

Mo's Red Hots

56.0

77.78%

.04

Eric's Lambchops

47.0

65.28%

.03

Da Paul Meisters

34.0

47.22%

.02


Record Book

Week Ending 07/29:  The Ruffins set a new weekly record for ERA, besting the mark of 0.81 set by the Copperfields in September 2000.

Weekly Records Seasonal Records
CAT CFCL TEAM STAT PERIOD CAT CFCL TEAM STAT YEAR
TB Stones 195 7/3/04 TB Ruffins 3366 2006
R Da Paul Meisters
Copperfields
62 7/11/03
9/17/04
R Copperfields 1059 2004
RBI Copperfields 70 9/12/00 RBI Copperfields 1201 2000
SB Ruffins 20 7/29/97 SB Bald Eagles 312 1988
OBA Reservoir Dogs .4453 6/10/05 OBA Da Paul Mesiters .3681 2004
QS Reservoir Dogs
Ruffins
Copperfields
Copperfields
10 4/25/03
8/1/03
5/13/05
5/26/06
QS Da Paul Meisters 119 2005
HoSv Reservoir Dogs 12 6/3/05 HoSv Da Paul Meisters 160 2004
ERA Ruffins 0.67 7/29/07 ERA Mudville Sluggers 2.828 1985
WHIP Stones 0.675 5/30/03 WHIP Copperfields 1.15048 1992
K:BB Stones 13.00 7/14/06 K:BB Ruffins 3.04 2005
OFF Ruffins 59 2006
PIT Lambchops 57 2003
TOT Ruffins 111 2006


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