A Month of Fundays

A New York Yankees, Giants, Knicks, Rangers and other stuff blog.


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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Knicks Wake Up

The Knicks finally crushed the Bobcats, which they should have been doing all year. But, better late than never. Tyson Chandler had a huge night with 20 points, 17 boards and a block. Amar'e also started to round into form. Heck, Jared Jeffries played well! Melo had a mellow night, scoring just 1 point, but grabbing 11 boards and dishing out 4 assists. He needs to get healthy, but games like this when he doesn't try to do to much, will ultimately help him and the Knicks play better. Go Knicks!

Hank!!!

Hank was not supposed to start tonight, but Biron had the flu and he was in the net. So why not just post his 40th career shutout? As good as he's been, this feels like his best year. Remind you of any Super Bowl bound QB? It should. Part of it's the D, and part is Biron, but a lot of it is just a Hall of Famer doing what they do. Callahan, Mitchell and Richards had the goals in their 3-0 victory, now I believe they are skating into their well earned break. Great first half, Rangers!

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Super Bowl Bound!

Here we go again! The Giants overcame lousy field conditions, unbelievable numbers of uncalled illegal contacts and got the job done. I was surprised it took them till overtime to nail it down, but is was just tough sledding out there all day. They will face a Pats team that they are just physically tougher than. They still have a great QB and are dangerous, but they have a bad D, and we should be able to beat them for the second time this year. Go Giants!

Go Giants!!!

Let's just do this! It is there for the taking!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Gaborik!!!

Marian Gaborik just scored in overtime to give the Rangers a HUGE WIN over the Bruins. In a game that saw them lose the time of possession battle, but take 1-0 and 2-1 leads before giving up the goal that sent them into overtime, the Rangers really battled to win this one. What's more the refs were horrible and let the Bruins get away with murder all day, until Ference, empowered by the refs absolutely ran/cheap shotted Ryan McDonagh to draw a game misconduct and put the Rangers on the power play to finish OT.

It was Gaborik's second goal of the game. The Rangers other goal was from the Captain, Ryan Callahan. Let's hope McDonagh is okay. Go Rangers!

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Pineda

Okay, the mistake has been made but it could have been worse. Michael Pineda, though not a generational talent, has the upside to perhaps be a righty version of CC Sabathia. He's 6'7" and thick. If he picks up a change, he could really be that good, ie, a horse who has periods of Cy Young type dominance. Those are good to have. Not as good as having catchers who hit like Miggy, but better than having neither. Jose Campos is another good arm for the Yanks farm. I'm not sure if they are developing pitchers properly these days, but he joins a group of dynamic A ball arms, that also includes the big righties from last year's draft, Cote, Sharp, Davis and Maher. They'll all be 19 or 20 this year and have really nice power upsides.

The reason this trade was really made now is not because the Yanks don't think Montero can be a Posada level defender at C. It's because they wanted to add another ACE type and they didn't want to spend what it will take to lock up Hamels or Cain next year, because they need to be under 189M in 2014. That's all it was about: 2014; like all those lopsided trades the Knicks made leading up to 2010.

If you want we can look at the remaining Yanee Bats later this week. We still have a lot of them, but they are mostly in A ball or below.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Hank!!!

Girardi, Mitchell and Callahan (empty netter) scored and Henrik Lundqvist recorded his 4th shutout of the season. This was a big win for Hank coming off of two losses. The teams played a hard game, and the Rangers' win was well earned. Let's hope the little string of .500 play is over and the Rangers are back to putting together streaks. Go Rangers!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Phasers on Kill

The Giants did what they do when they're set on kill. They went up to Green Bay and kicked their pansy asses. The road before them is clear. Everything they want is available, even if the refs are gonna screw up fumble calls, allow late hits on Eli and mark the ball short on spots. Screw the refs, too. The Giants are set on Kill, and when that happens, we get those silvers things and parades. Now it's on to San Francisco and let's win there! Go Giants!

Go Giants!

The Giants caught a huge break yesterday when the Saints were eliminated. Of course, it's meaningless if they don't beat the Packers today. For some reason, though, I think they are back and I think they will beat the Pack. They almost did it last time but for some bad calls and injuries. They come into a rematch healthier than they were and playing with the physical edge they did on their SB run in 2007 and during most of the year in 2008. I think they're going to rough up the Packers and win the game. Go Giants!

Ugh 2

Physicals have apparently not been completed, so there's still some hope that the Yanks' latest foolish attempt to trade Jesus Montero will be scuttled. But that hope is fading, and we are left with the reality that the Yanks made a ponderous trade, exchanging their best hitting prospect since Mantle, and a perfect long man/rotation piece to the hapless Mariners for a talented pitching project in Michael Pineda, and a possibly big time pitching prospect in 19 year old Venezuelan Jose Campos.

While the Yanks were apparently responding to irrational insecurity over their rotation - they signed Kurdo, too - what they should have been worried about is their aging lineup. Sure, Cano and Granderson had big years, but Jeter and ARod saw their numbers shrink from age and injury. Strangely, Mark Teixeira has had two straight years of early decline, Swisher and Gardner are streaky and Russell Martin's just not a good hitter. With Posada retired and Montero traded, they have no DH.

Yet Friday they were worried about a rotation that already had CC, AJ, Nova, Hughes, Garcia, and Noesi, with Phelps and Warren immediately available and Banuelos and Betances possibly ready by June. As I've said before, it wasn't the `71 Orioles, but with Kuroda added in, they had enough to win the division with their killer BP and especially with Montero in the lineup either catching of DHing every day.

But they traded Montero and got back a pitcher who may one day be an ACE but is pretty far from one now. He put up an ERA+ of 103 in his big rookie season. That's three points above average. He won't come near his ceiling unless he develops a reliable changeup. Who knows when that will happen? He is not the ready made ACE that Halladay and Lee were when Montero was offered for them. No, they gave away a great hitter for a project, and it was unresourceful on a variety of levels.

The latest Montero to the Mariners saga started when Brian Cashman once again approached them about acquiring King Felix. Now, though it would have been unwise to trade Montero for anything at this point, an absolute ACE like King Felix would have fit the bill. How this got turned into the Yanks swapping a more highly rated prospect into Montero for the Mariners second or third best pitcher is unfathomable.

What's more, while the Yanks already have pitchers like Betances and Banuelos who project to be top of the rotation pieces and could be ready soon, with Montero gone, they are at least two years away from producing another Yankee Bat from the farm.

So what are they going to do about O for the next two years? Re-sign Russel Martin and platoon him with his clone Austin Romine? Yikes!

It seems like the Yanks could have avoided the coming offensive armageddon by keeping Montero, adding Kuroda and maybe even another one year deal, and seeing what could be done for the rotation at the deadline. By then they'd have been able to trade or promote other prospects for the very "need" they just traded Montero to fill.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Rangers Win!

The Rangers went up to Toronto and got back to doing what they do - winning. Derek Stepan had a goal and assist, Rupp and Boyle also scored. Marty Biron was once again more than solid in goal, pitching a 19 shot shutout. It would be good if Wolski could score a little while we're waiting for Dubi to return, as it could make him easier to move at the deadline. Go Rangers!

Friday, January 13, 2012

Kuroda?

Apparently, the Yanks may also have added Hiroki Kuroda. Sheesh, they have no faith in their system. Why have one?

Ugh

The Yankees have once again traded Jesus Montero to the Mariners. This time along with Hector Noesi for Pineda and another RHP named Jose Campos. This is ludicrous. Montero is the best hitting prospect the Yanks have developed since Mantle, and comes along at a time when Posada has retired and most of their other Yankee Bats are over 3o and declining. Pineda is a possible #2 this year and may have ACE upside, but there's a reason they moved Babe Ruth from ACE to hitter and it's the value they give you everyday. Now, it's possible the Yanks think Sanchez is the same hitter as Montero with better defensive potential, but there was no reason not to keep both, as the AL plays with a DH. Campos is supposed to be another high upside pitching prospect, but we'll see.

During the Cashman era, we have traded for pre-established starters like Jeff Weaver and Javy Vazquez and neither panned out. We just sent much more for Pineda and Campos. Let's hope there's something there, and hope the Yanks stop trading Yankee Bats. It takes a lot to piss me off these days, and I've got to say, this comes close.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Edwin Jackson?

So the Yankees apparently met with Scott Boras about Edwin Jackson. Here's hoping it was just a favor to Boras. And here's why: if the Yankees really are budget conscious, they cannot pay inflated market prices for mid-rotation starters. Edwin Jackson is a pretty good pitcher who has been traded around a lot. After being a tip top minor league prospect, he's never gained top of the rotation status anywhere, but teams have always been willing to acquire him because he was relatively CHEAP.

If the Yanks give him 12-15M he will lose his most favorable attribute - his cheapness. Instead, he will be overpaid and hard to move. This is the lesson we all should have learned from the AJ Burnett saga. Giving a pitcher with "great stuff" great money doesn't turn him into a great pitcher. It turns him into a contract that can't be traded till it's almost over. This is not what the Yanks should be signing up for again.

With the absence of available aces or playoff caliber #2's on the free agent market, the Yanks should be holding onto their money until the right opportunity presents itself. Right now, the Yanks will be going into the season with CC, AJ, Nova, Hughes, Garcia and Noesi as projected starters. Not exactly the `71 Orioles rotation, but they have a true ACE in Sabathia and upside in Hughes, Nova and Noesi. And they still have a super destroyer of a bullpen.

Plus, the Yanks are going to have a lot of pitching talent in AAA. Someone like Phelps could help right out of Spring Training. But more excitingly, Betances or Banuelos could be ready come June. Both Betances and Banuelos have top of the rotation stuff right now. What they lacked this past season was top of the rotation fastball control, but they both made it through the season healthy, and one or both of them could really take off this year.

So, the Yanks should keep there eyes and ears open for reasonable rotation help, but pass on Edwin Jackson, and count on Phelps possibly helping to start the season and Betances and Banuelos to help come midseason. If none of that works, they can always see what's available at the trade deadline.

And if they are getting itchy to spend money again, the two Cubans, Cespedes and Soler are still out there, and both seem to have Yankee Bats. The Yanks can always use more Yankee Bats.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Knicks Win Again

Melo had 27 and 9 but somehow the Knicks almost managed to blow a 17 point 4th quarter lead to the 76ers. Some things they did tonight were very good, but overall, they have to play a different game than they are playing on O. They have to have set plays for Melo, Stat, and Chandler and live at the free throw line. That's how they can pound teams and they are not doing it. They should be set up so the other team doesn't know which hand they're gonna get hit with. This may become easier when Baron Davis is healthier, but they are always in danger of blowing leads with the style they are playing. Shumpert was a little up and down tonight, and Harrelson was excellent. Chandler continues to get into it. A more defined roll for him could come with the emergence of Baron Davis. Everyone is making a better effort of defense, except for Amar'e. He refuses to move his feet so he is a reaching in foul waiting to happen. C'mon, Amar'e. Go Knicks.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Rangers in Shootout for 5th Straight

Win Streaks are Us! Or at least they seem to be through the halfway mark of the season. Tonight was a trap game, and the Coyote Goalie was RED HOT. The Rangers were peppering him all night but could only come up with 1 goal in regulation. Then Hank got beat in traffic, and we ended up in a shootout. Gaborik scored, but Hank gave one up, before Derek Stepan scored the game winner. 2 points, by whatever means necessary. I was sort of dreading a shootout against Smith, but the Rangers got it done. Again. Fedotenko had the only goal in regulation. Let's keep this streak going! Go Rangers!

Monday, January 09, 2012

Knicks Win Again

The Knicks just pulled one out against Charlotte. It would not have be a close game at all, but Amar'e and Melo couldn't hit the broad side of a barn all night and were terribly inefficient. But Melo hit some big FT's down the stretch and the Knicks were able to win in regulation. Iman Shumpert had another impressive game featuring 16 points, several assists, some boards and some steals. This kid is gonna be good! He's already the best wing defender on the Knicks. Douglas and Fields continue to struggle, and Tyson Chandler continues to emerge. I doubt we'll see many nights were Amar'e and Melo are both ice cold. Go Knicks!

Sunday, January 08, 2012

Giants Blowout Falcons

The Giant O took some time to get going, but the D was more than solid all day. The Giants ended up winning 24-2, but they could have scored more. The Giants D bottled up the Falcons running game most of the day, and they really didn't have much trouble with the White and Jones. Eli was superb, throwing 2 TD's to Hakeem Nicks and 1 to Mario Manning. Brandon Jacobs and Ahmad Bradshaw ran like they used to, and the Giants mostly cruised. Now it's on to Green Bay and let's win there!

Saturday, January 07, 2012

Knicks Win Again

The Knicks got off to such a good start against the Pistons, that Carmelo took a big chunk of the night off. The Knicks SHARED the ball like we always want them to, and blew the doors off of the Pistons. Shumpert started for Douglas and it was a big difference. His D set the tone for the team and the Knicks did, indeed, play some good D tonight. Just and impressive win with mucho garbage time, on the road. Maybe there is something there. Go Knicks!

Friday, January 06, 2012

Knicks Won, Too

The Knicks finally won another game tonight, after getting blown out in yet another first period. Melo and Stat finally took a game over, with some help from Chandler and Shumpert. Btw, Iman ran the point some, even starting over Douglas in the third, and finished up with 10 points and 7 dimes, oh yeah, and 5 steals! Folks, he's good, and while I ponder a long piece on the Knicks, believe me he'll be a big part of it. Melo finished with 37 and 7 and Amar'e had his best game yet going 23 and 12. Could his slow start really just be his adjustment to his stronger body? He's rebounding more. Let's see where they go from here. Shump needs to play more and Fields and Douglas need to play less. That really won't be straightened out till Baron Davis gets activated. Until then, keep your heads above water, Knicks!

4 Straight!

The Rangers won again! Boy, in the first it looked like the Pens were hunting for bear as they came out flying and taking shot after shot. They scored, one, too. But that was that. Richards tied it up near the end of the first. Early in the second, Dubi scored a shorty, from Cally, of course, and after that, it was pretty much over. Stepan scored the coup de grace on a Gaborik rebound that may or may not have been scored an assist. The Rangers an Hank held on from there, and really looked like a team that can get it done under a number of circumstances. Henrik Lundqvist has been awesome, and clearly, using Biron to spot him more often has not hurt at all. And Biron is 8-2. There's no telling where this could go, but through 39 games, this team has some guts. They have a few days off to let us focus on the Giants. Go Rangers!

Thursday, January 05, 2012

Gaborik!!!

Marian Gaborik just scored the overtime game winner to give the Rangers 2 more big points. The goal was set-up by Del Zotto and Stepan! Farmboys! Biron was in goal tonight, so that's the 8th or 9th won without Hank this season. Great stuff. Callahan and Stralman had the first two Ranger goals. Though it was a home game, it was a tough game c0ming off the hype and excitement of the Winter Classic. Marc Staal played again, and seems to be coming along reasonably well. Big win, now it's on to Pittsburgh and let's win there! Go Rangers!

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

New CBA Yankee Draft Thoughts


Just when you really get the hang of something -- they go and change the rules. That’s the position in which the Yankees find themselves going forward with regard to the Rule 4 draft. Fortunately, both lessons and strategies of the past should stand them in good stead as they move to a more and more farm derived major league roster.


The new rules essentially give each drafting team a hard and fast budget based on draft postion and number of picks with a consideration of the team’s previous year’s draft spending. Each team is allowed a 5% overance. But progressive first round picks can be lost for exceeding their budget plus 5. This sort of eliminates the Yanks’ chief market advantage which has historically been their willingness to pay.


Of course, there could be a way around this. The picks that could possibly be forfeited by teams going 10% and further over their budget will be awarded to bad teams in an as yet to be determined formula. What has been determined, is that those picks will, for the first time, be available for trade. In other words, a team like the Yanks could acquire an additional first rounder through trade, which would then increase the calculation of their annual draft budget. That’s not a bad market to start studying every year and would give teams that are “farther away” an opportunity to get a little closer, while giving teams like the Yanks a chance at a real Yankee type player to add to their system through a bit of clever trading.


Further, the free agent compensation rules will change going forward. The old A and B system will be out and teams wil only be able to receive compensation for players lost by offering the player a contract valued at the average of the top 125 salaries in baseball, about 12.5M right now.


Seems like a pretty bad bet, unless you really like the player and the loss is genuinely painful, then the compensation may not be enough. That said, they did close up the loophole that allowed teams like the Red Sox to trade for walk year players and pick up extra picks by offering arb to those players. Players traded in the last year of their deals will no longer bring compensation to their new teams if they sign with someone else.


This year doesn’t have much of an impact on how the Yanks do business as they’ve avoided the risk of players they no longer wanted accepting arbitration and staying.


Two more issues come up for the Yanks: one, the new draft rules seem to establish a period in which draft eligible players can be medically examined before the Rule 4 takes place; and the deadline for signing players moves from mid-August to mid-July.


They complicate things to a degree but both should be navigable. The concern with the physicals is not that they will reveal injuries and pre-exisisting conditions, but that they may reveal a team’s interest. So I think some time should be spent on subterfuge looking at prospects that BA might like, but the Yanks would never draft. It’s unclear how private the physicals will be, but if kids can just be checked out when they visit Tampa, subterfuge might not be necessary.


The mid-July deadline is both good and bad. It’s good that players can get into the system more quickly and less development is lost. It’s bad because summer draft and follows may become things of the past. Why wouldn’t agents just shut the kids down for a month while deals get made? How that plays out remains to be seen, but with a finite and fixed budget each year, many decisions will have to be made before or during the draft on who’s going to get the money.


A final tweek that really shouldn’t effect the Yanks is that teams will no longer be able to offer major league deals to drafted players, unless they are two sport athletes. It’s unclear if those bonuses will still be splttable, at the same time, the Yanks should probably stick to drafting baseball players. The Shea Morenz years seem to thankfully be long gone.


Because of the finite budget each team will have generated, it seems like the first ten rounds will be closely watched, while the back 40 will be catch as catch can with what you have left. So draft order might become more important in those first ten picks, ie, you might want to take a Mason Williams or Greg Bird first, or much later in the new format.


So how can the Yanks take advantage of the new rules?


The chief way will be by playing the comp pick trade market.


Otherwise, the Yanks should probably continue the things they have been doing in terms of spending on creating an overwhelming scouting advantage. Let’s face it, anyone can spot a top 5 player, but it’s trickier to find a kid who projects to be something good, and trickier still to spot a kid who projects to be a Yankee.


Here’s where it will be trickier for the Yanks. The Yanks have been moving to a more prep based model over the past few years, and it makes all the sense in the world for the Yanks for a variety of reasons, primarily because prep picks offer the Yanks the greatest possible return. What’s more, they don’t have the dings and haven’t taken the abuse of college picks. They’re also much more likely to make it to the bigs by their early 20s.


The problem is, the Yanks will have to hope they can get great players for slightly less. The ways to do this are a) keep finding kids like Dante Bichette Jr. who will be top prospects but will also sign for slot, b) come up with more system extras to offer prep parents - things like book clubs or something - that convey a human interest in the young players, and c) really get ahead of the drafts and choose certain years to go way over the 5% allowance to have the kids that must be had, with the idea that the forfeited pick or picks could be recovered or improved in trade.


In order to make the decisions that will have to be made in each draft, it’s essential that the scouts start looking for Yankees instead of looking for major leaguers.


So how do you pick the Yankees out of the future major leaguers out of the organizational types, etc.


For position players, it’s really rather easy and it seems to have been figured out over the past two drafts. You look for Yankee Bats. These are the kids with bat speed, that either have now power, or project to have power once they fill out, but already have the quick bat, the direct stroke and let the ball get deep.


Now where a lot scouts have made mistakes on “power” and “future power” is assuming every kid who can square up 92 is gonna add power. The thing is, a lot of these kids have to load up to do it, and the way you can tell who’s loading up, is by how much trouble they do or do not have with the curve ball and the change. Melky Mesa, for example, has terrific power, but must be loading for the fastball because he has a crappy average most years and isn’t making hay on the breaking stuff. Now that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have the talent to square up a fastball without cheating, but then you have to try telling HIM that because he’s the only one who doesn’t believe it, and is thus messing up his whole development. As an aside, I think it might be time to direct him to the pitchers mound.


Anyway, a kid like Dante Bichette has now power, uses the whole field and takes his walks. He has a Yankee Bat. At the same time, Mason Williams doesn’t have now power, but he has nice pop, and he hit .350 as a 19 year old in a college league last summer. Hitting .350 means he is letting the ball get deep, indentifying it, and hitting it. He has a Yankee Bat, and projects to have some pop. You can project that because he’s not cheating to hit fastballs, no one can stay as skinny as he is, and because his Dad gave him NFL genes.


But between the two of them, you have the Yankee models for a corner guy and an up the middle guy. So the position players the Yanks draft should fit those types.


The organization really shouldn’t waste too much time on kids they HOPE will hit. They should take the kids with Yankee Bats who don’t have to load up to hit the fastball, and are already identifying some pitches because they are able to swing later. It will be easier to get them to walk.


Speed is a helpful attribute, but it’s nowhere near as important as having a Yankee Bat and at least the traits of someone who is going to be able to see pitches well, take his walks and limit his outs.


What’s more, kids with Yankee Bats grow into real Yankees, and don’t have to be paid tens of millions to join the team, like a Mark Teixeira or Jason Giambi before him. They also don’t have to be replaced. And the Yanks keep looking to replace guys who don’t have Yankee bats, and it’s EXPENSIVE. Instead the Yanks can get 6 great seasons for cheap, unless they want to do something sooner, and can keep freshening the deals as the kids become vets and then are either moved for younger assetts or retired. Cano has a Yankee Bat, though he should walk more, and Montero has a Yankee Bat and he should not be traded.


On the pitching side, there hasn’t been as much of a Yankee Type. The Yanks have won with all sorts of pitching over the decades -- and largely because of their Yankee Bats. Anyway, the Yanks should be looking for kids with good arms, that strike people out. Projectable bodies are great, too, but smaller guys will be underrated and should not be overlooked.


The Yanks have been really smart about arms lately, and the new rules shouldn’t effect their strategy.


First, the Yanks have found prep arms in Northeast corridor, and though they haven’t signed them all, they have gotten kids like Cote, Maher, DeLuca, Checo and others over the past few years and all of them would have gone higher if they’d grown up in Florida or California. That’s been smart, and the Yankee Brand is strong for all of those parents, too, and that should continue to help them find common ground with the Yanks.


The other smart thing the Yanks have done is to take college relievers with stuff and strikeouts. College relievers are cheaper than college starters with comparable stuff, and that will help keep the cumulative budget down, what’s more, college seniors are cheapest of all.


The Yanks have found some good College Seniors lately, like Matt Tracy this past year, who were very much worth their while and a tribute to the scout who isolated him. Tracy was a position player and a mid-week pitcher, who really blossomed with very little pro-coaching. He’s a lefty with nice velo and a strong body, but he wasn’t overscouted because he was a mid-week guy and a position player. Well done!


That’s the sort of “buy” the Yanks should always be on the look out for.


Other pitching value can be found in pitchers who are maybe 6 feet tall or shorter, but are striking people out. Mark Montgomery is such a prospect and all he has done is go through the system like a hot knife though butter, with a knockout slider.


Guys like that are good buys, but under the new rules, probably shouldn’t be looked at until after round 10.


One thing the Yanks have been known for on the pitching side has been Lefties. While the Yanks should never, ever favor handedness over goodness, it does behoove them to search far and wide for quality lefties, remembering both Guidry and Ford were under 6 feet tall. Daniel Camarena, from the `11 draft is looking like he could fit that model of a shorter lefty who gets people out, as frequently as a big righty might. So whether it’s a big underrated guy like Tracy or a smaller gem like Camarena, you want to keep finding lefties with a chance to be Yanks, not just lefties who might make it to the show. Eventually almost all lefties make it to the show (unless they get hurt), so it’s a fool’s errand to bonus them and develop them just to throw them back in the pool.


This brings up another thing the Yanks have been doing right more often, and should continue doing, that is: not wasting picks!


In general, the organizational picks should come from the 5% allowable overage, with the entire budget going to prep prospects or college bargains with Yankee upside. You don’t want to let the org signings have any effect whatsoever on the prospects.


Oh, and really don’t bother with S2’s under the new rules, especially not on the position side. Taking someone like Suttle now, with the fixed budget is just a disaster waiting to happen. And what are S2’s anyway, but old sophomores? True Juniors who are the same age and have played more and are somehow less valuable and exotic? It’s a con that makes no sense. Now you can always make an exception for an S2 pitcher who you think can be a Yank, but don’t do it with hitters. They’re too expensive and they are older than their classes. before you know it, they are 26 and in AA. It’s a bad bet, and one that should be avoided under the new rules.


So, overall, the Yanks should keep doing what they are doing in terms of adding scouting talent and continuing their prep focus.


They should play the comp pick trade market.


They should look ahead to see if anyone or group is worth forfeiting a future (but possibly re-acquirable) first round pick over.


They should only look for future Yanks and not waste budget on typical major leaguers.


They should keep looking for corner Yankee Bats like Bichette’s and up the middle Yankee Bats like Williams.


They should continue to scout underscouted regions like the Northeast and Canada.


They should keep looking for college “bargains” like Tracy and Montgomery.


They should never waste picks, and only spend the allowable 5% or less on organizational picks.

Monday, January 02, 2012

Rangers Win Winter Classic!

Wow! What a game! Henrik Lundqvist, turned back a penalty shot with 19 seconds left to preserve and come from behind 3-2 win for the Rangers. Wild game that saw the Rangers fall behind 2-0 mid-second only to have Mike Rupp score in the second and early in the third to tie it up for the Good Guys, Mitchell and Prust both had assists on both goals. Then, Richards, once again, scored what turned out to be the game winner and the Rangers held for the rest of the third. Philadelphia born and raised ref Ian Walsh made things interesting in the third, with 3 ridiculous calls agains the Rangers, two of which should have given them power plays with a 3-2 lead. Oh well. Even he couldn't stop the Rangers, and Marc Staal is BACK! Go Rangers!

The Giants Are In

As he's been for most of the season, Eli was fantastic last night as the Giants put the Cowboys away till next season. Victor Cruz was once again electric, and Hakeem Nicks, who's been dinged up all year, also score a TD and made some plays. The running game was shutdown again, but Eli worked around it. The D was excellent in the first half, then really struggled in the 3rd quarter as the Cowboys got back into the game. But the D settled back down and the Giants won going away.

They'll play the Falcons in the first round, and if the defense holds and they win. It could be another 2007 sort of run. We'll see. Go Giants!