MLB: Ripple Effect of Yoenis Céspedes Signing
December 1, 2016 by Joe Aaron · Leave a Comment
The winter season is not usually associated with the MLB, but it is actually one of the most exciting times of the year in professional baseball. Every team in the league is attempting to build a stronger roster through trades and free agent signings. While the free agent market has been rather quiet so far […]
The Sunday Notes: 2015 World Series
October 25, 2015 by Ron Juckett · Leave a Comment
Now that we have enjoyed baseball’s playoff appetizer, it is time for the main course, the 2015 World Series. The plucky Kansas City Royals host the New York Mets starting Tuesday night at Kaufman Stadium in what we hope to be a classic matchup. No deficit is too large for the Royals, who pound out hit after hit. […]
The Monday Notes: Jose Bautista’s Bat Flip Edition
October 19, 2015 by Ron Juckett · 1 Comment
For me, one of the highlights last winter writing for Seamheads was reading my good friend Andrew H. Martin’s weekly Sunday notes. Martin has a good eye for linking good reads and videos from days gone by mixed with today’s baseball. He is working on other projects and I asked if he wanted to continue the series? “No.” […]
An Open Letter to Jose Bautista
October 15, 2015 by Austin Gisriel · 14 Comments
Dear Jose Bautista, Congratulations. No one has ever sullied a glorious moment faster than you did yesterday. You hurled that bat in the clincher over Texas as if someone had smeared it with pig waste, and then stared at Sam Dyson as if he was the one who did it. Oh, that was a monumental […]
Clearing The Bases
March 27, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Well all of the fantasy rankings have been completed, it’s time to talk about real life baseball. There will be very little fantasy talk in this column as I will be making predictions on how the divisions will end. Predictions are never all that easy and in some cases completely useless once the season begins […]
Clearing The Bases
March 13, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The position of shortstop is traditionally weak, and this year is no exception. The first 3-4 players are studs, next two I wouldn’t mind having, then everyone else is pretty much a dartboard throw, hoping they help me more than they hurt me. What I mean by that is that if I take someone like […]
Clearing The Bases
June 5, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
We are now about 1/3 of the way through the 2012 baseball season, which means we are about the same amount of time through the 2012 fantasy baseball season. The time has come now to face some harsh realities about your team. Any player that has been on your roster since opening day has now […]
Clearing The Bases
May 10, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
As Fantasy owners we have been complaining all season about one of three things. Players who are off to slow starts (Albert Pujols, Jose Bautista), injuries (Jacoby Ellsbury, Chris Carpenter, Carl Crawford), and the weekly merry-go-round that has been the closer situation throughout baseball (half the league). This week however, we are starting to get […]
Clearing The Bases
April 12, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The season is only 6-7 games old for most MLB teams to this is certainly no time to panic no matter how bad your fantasy team has started off. Standings can change dramatically in the span of a couple of days. Like every season, there are plenty of players that are off to slow starts. […]
An Interview With Blue Jays’ Prospect Brad Glenn
April 5, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Headlined by Jose Bautista, the Toronto Blue Jays have become known in recent years as a power hitting team, finishing in the top 5 in the American league in home runs in each of the past 3 seasons. With their impressive collection of hitters, there is no indication that they are going to let up […]
Kemp Unanimous Pick For NL Stan Musial Award
October 28, 2011 by Seamheads · 2 Comments
Bautista holds off Ellsbury in American League There were some outstanding performances this year in Major League Baseball. However, one clearly stood out from the pack. Los Angeles Dodger outfielder Matt Kemp was named the National League Stan Musial Award winner for 2011 in voting held by the Baseball Bloggers Alliance. Kemp received all 15 […]
Triple Milestones–Final 2011
October 1, 2011 by Bill Gilbert · Leave a Comment
Seven players reached the milestones of a .300 batting average, 30 home runs and 100 RBI this year. Four American Leaguers and three National Leaguers made it. The only repeaters are Miguel Cabrera and Paul Konerko. The three National Leaguers who made it last year, Albert Pujols, Joey Votto and Carlos Gonzalez fell short but Pujols […]
Who Will Win the American League MVP
August 24, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 5 Comments
As the home stretch to the playoffs approaches, it is time to start thinking about the individual player awards. In particular, the American League MVP race has been tight all year, with no clear-cut candidate having completely separated themselves from the pack. Fortunately, I have evaluated the evidence and determined the current frontrunner for the […]
The Illumination of Jose Bautista
July 18, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 7 Comments
I can’t say for certain what it was, but sometime in early September, 2009, something seemed to click for Jose Bautista that hadn’t before. Prior to that time Bautista was at best an average utility man who was rapidly approaching 30 years of age. Drafted in the 20th round of the 2000 draft, he also […]
19 to 21…Jose?
June 13, 2011 by John Shiffert · Leave a Comment
Volume 9, #15 Jose Bautista has become such a big name in baseball that, before every game, everyone in the park stands up and asks in unison how he was following the ball in BP. “Jose, can you see…?” Alright, so that’s a lousy joke. The more important issue is, what’s up with Jose Bautista, […]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: AL East – Toronto Blue Jays
March 29, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
Blue Jays 3B Jose Bautista Toronto Blue Jays (2010 record: 85-77) The Blue Jays had the busiest off-season of any team in Major League Baseball. GM Alex Anthopoulos continued the re-structuring of the club – and its salary structure – in earnest… and, in the process, managed to rid his organization of the most untradeable […]
AL East Positional Analysis And Ranking: Third Base
February 5, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
I am in the midst of a series examining the relative strengths and weaknesses of the teams in the AL East, on a position-by-position basis. The players at each position are being ranked in relation to their peers within the division, with each team being assigned points based on where their player ranks in comparison […]
Toronto Acquires Davis, Increases Outfield Options for 2011
November 18, 2010 by Aaron Somers · Leave a Comment
When the Oakland Athletics acquired David DeJesus from the Kansas City Royals one week ago there appeared to be a logjam created within their outfield as the team simply had too many players for the positions available. To further complicate the situation, four of the eight outfielders that were on the team’s 40-man roster as of this morning have […]
Josh Hamilton, Joey Votto Take Home Stan Musial Award
October 29, 2010 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
The Baseball Bloggers Alliance concluded their award season today by naming the best player in each league for 2010. When all the votes were tallied, two men were comfortably ahead. Texas outfielder Josh Hamilton, who hit 32 home runs and fashioned an OPS of 1.044 while leading the Rangers into the playoffs, won the award […]
2010 Season Presents Puzzling Mathematical Results
September 27, 2010 by Jess Coleman · 1 Comment
If you can understand correlations, you can begin to understand something essential to success in baseball. Why? Because correlations show how one variable affects another variable. For example, we can see how strikeouts influence runs scored, and we would find that there is no notable correlation (actually true). The dictionary describes a correlation as a […]
Cards Soar In Foreign Land
June 23, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
You know, when the discussion of launching pad stadiums comes up, I never think of Toronto’s Rogers Center. Â Wrigley, Coors, even the old Atlanta stadium that started the nickname. Â However, if last night is any indication, Rogers Center is right up there with the rest of them. The Cardinals played the long ball better, smashing […]