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Colorado Rockies Should Pursue Brandon Webb

The winter meetings are here, a time when the hot stove starts heating up. The Rockies offseason, however, is already boiling over.

The Rockies started by signing star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki to a deal that will keep him in purple pinstripes until 2020, giving him the best shot to be the town’s next John Elway. Lost in the Tulowitzki excitement was probably the most unexpected news of the offseason: The club had found a way to convince Jorge De La Rosa, the second-best left-handed starter on the market behind Cliff Lee, to re-sign with the club.
While the Rockies have done a very good job of keeping their core intact, they have yet to address some of their more burning issues. Late last week they traded for non-tender candidate Jose Lopez from the Mariners, a right-hander with power who can spell Todd Helton at first base and also push Ian Stewart for time at third.
For now, the Rockies say that Lopez is in the mix for the perennial second base competition, but Lopez is a long shot behind Eric Young Jr., Jonathan Herrera and Chris Nelson.
Despite signing De La Rosa, the Rockies still have holes. Their starting rotation was adequate in 2010, but Aaron Cook disappointed, and Jeff Francis made progress, but proved that he most likely will never return to his 2007 form in which he won 17 games and was the ace of the National League champions.
Jason Hammel had a breakthrough season, but September was rough on him. He admitted that he was pitching through a dead arm, which raises concern for how well he will bounce back in 2011.
The rotation should be clear at the beginning of the spring. Ubaldo Jimenez, De La Rosa, Jhoulys Chacin, Cook and Hammel. However, as teams often find out, rarely does a team have just five starters throughout a 162-game season. Hammel is a question mark, Cook has been on the disabled list at least once in every season since 2007, Chacin will be just 23, limiting his innings, and Jimenez threw 221.2 innings.
So what is the answer? The Rockies need to do what they do best: sign players who are coming off of bad seasons, are castoffs or both. The club has had much success with this model in the past.
There are plenty of those types of pitchers out there. Kevin Correia would have been a prime candidate, except he signed with the Pirates late on Monday night. One name that has been thrown around that would be a good idea is former Diamondback ace Brandon Webb.
Webb may be a slight diversion from the Rockies normal strategy, as he is coming off of a major shoulder injury, but his resume would suggest that even if he cannot return to his exact form, even getting close would put him in a good position to make a run at the fifth starter spot.
The right-hander won a Cy Young in 2006, and finished second in both 2007 and 2008. He seemed to be in the prime of his career before his shoulder failed him on Opening Day in 2009.
Webb’s name has been thrown around quite a bit this offseason, but no one has taken a shot on him. It may be that he wants too much money, and to be fair, if Webb is asking for a guaranteed $4 million or something like that, the Rockies should forget about it. However, if he is willing to sign for an incentive-laden contract that starts in the range of $2 million guaranteed, it seems like a move the Rockies wouldn’t regret.
At worst, Webb pushes Hammel or even Cook for the final spot in the rotation. If he isn’t quite ready to handle the starter load, he could be used as a mop-up guy. Similar to what Josh Fogg was in ’09. He is a guy who knows how to get outs, even if he doesn’t have his best stuff.
For all of the mediocre starters that are available, the Rockies might just have to take a chance on Webb, if the price is right.

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Colorado Rockies Sign All-Star Shortstop Troy Tulowitzki Through 2020

The silence of the offseason has abruptly ended. The Colorado Rockies have reportedly agreed on a contract extension with All-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki that will keep the 26-year-old in purple pinstripes through 2020.


The usual fans were starting to gain momentum in their theory that the Monfort brothers, who own the Rockies, could care less about winning but instead are simply focused on signing second-rate players who would keep the payroll down.

 

However, the front office of the Rockies quickly put that notion to rest with this signing. The shortstop is coming off of a season in which he hit .315 with 27 home runs and 97 RBIs, all while missing 33 games with a broken wrist.

 

Since 2003 the Colorado Rockies have shifted their focus from going out and signing big name free agents and spending money as if they play in New York or Boston to focusing on the draft and player development. The results have been undeniably good for the club. After two playoff appearances in the last four seasons, including one trip to the World Series, it is hard to deny that the build-from-within model was working.

The model for the team, however, was beginning to reach its next critical stage. After developing all that talent, does the team simply become a farm team for the rest of the league, allowing stars to walk away when they reached free agency? Or would the team pony up money and sign the players that they wanted to stick around?

The Rockies are answering that question with the signing of Tulowitzki. They are not going to be playing the same type of Moneyball that the Oakland Athletics play, they will not be like the Pittsburgh Pirates, trading away their talent before they had to shell out any sort of money to keep them. These Rockies are developing from within and the talent that is willing to stay, will be rewarded with large contracts to keep them around.

This move is great for fans of the Rockies. The heart and soul of the club will be around long-term. The club has shown their commitment to not making the team a revolving door with talent that would only play for championships with other teams.

It will be interesting to see what all of those who can’t help but rip on the Rockies will have to say about this move. The real Rockies fans, however, will spend their cold November night celebrating a great move by the Rockies and reassurance from the front office that they are committed to winning, not just making money.

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Colorado Rockies Must Make a Move To Be Competitive

There are many fans of the Colorado Rockies out there who simply don’t understand how the organization works. They think that the team should be in the running for free agents like Cliff Lee. They believe they should trade their top prospects for players whose contracts are over $10 million per year. The Rockies tried that. It didn’t work.


The Rockies model has proven to be successful. However, if they want to be viewed as more than just a middle-of-the-pack team by both the experts and the online betting world, they must make moves that do not require them to simply bank of their current group of players performing better the next year.

That does not mean that the club should go out and pay a ridiculous amount of money to keep Jorge De La Rosa. Shelling out money does not equal success. A player is not going to play better simply because they have a bigger bank account, nor should they be expected to.

The hot stove season has just begun. The Rockies still have plenty of time to make a move. However, the early signs from the club are eerily familiar. After 2007, when the Rockies stunned the baseball world and found themselves in the World Series, the offseason was filled with very little. Dan O’Dowd brought in very little proven talent. He signed Kip Wells and Josh Towers to fill the role of fifth starter.
It was easy to believe that the Rockies would naturally get better. Ubaldo Jimenez, Franklin Morales and Manny Corpas were all figuring to get better with more maturity and experience under their belt. The one thing that the Rockies failed to remember was that Mark Redman was slotted to be the No. 3 starter. Redman had a good run with the Rockies down the stretch but was with the Rockies because he had been released twice before landing at Coors Field.
There is a fine line for the Rockies. There model is clear. They are never going to be in the market for big name free agents again. What that means is that they have to take chances on veterans and other players who might seem to be washed up. Finding those players is not easy and is quite risky. O’Dowd, however, has had quite a bit of success in finding diamonds in the rough in recent years.
Banking on Ian Stewart, Seth Smith and Chris Iannetta to simply perform better, while watching Jorge De La Rosa walk away from the club and not finding someone to fill his role, is like crossing your fingers and hoping for the best. There must be some sort of padding if the plan fails.
That may be Kevin Kouzmanoff. That may be resigning Melvin Mora for a little bit more money than what the club would like to commit to a 38-year-old. It may even be resigning Miguel Olivo as a fall back in case Iannetta doesn’t perform like his talent has suggested he would be playing like five years ago.
Whatever it is, the Rockies cannot afford to repeat the mistakes of the ’07-’08 offseason when they sat on their hands and found themselves leaning on Kip Wells and Josh Towers.

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Colorado Rockies Should Be Cautious With Jorge De La Rosa

The Colorado Rockies are in a lose-lose situation. If they don’t re-sign Jorge De La Rosa, their fans will boil over with complaints of Rockies cheapness. However, if they do re-sign the left-hander, they may have been successful at tying their own hands behind their backs.

Make no mistake about it, De La Rosa is a very good pitcher. He throws in the mid-90s from the left side and has a biting slider with a great changeup. That type of talent doesn’t come around often.
Throw out De La Rosa’s career 49-47 record with a 5.02 ERA. The majority of those losses came in the early part of his career when four different franchises gave up on him because he simply could not find a way to control his emotions and keep his confidence at a high enough level to compete.
De La Rosa’s career finally turned the corner mid way through the 2008 season, not when he tweaked his mechanics or added an additional pitch, but rather when the club made him take a seat on the couch. The couch just happened to belong to the team’s mental skills coach, Ronn Svetich.
Svetich was able to work with De La Rosa on only worrying about the things that he could control.
Suddenly, De La Rosa wasn’t having the mental meltdowns that caused so many issues in his career. When the umpire wasn’t giving him the corner, he took a deep breath and battled through it, rather than losing his focus and trying to overthrow.
All of that suggests that De La Rosa is a better pitcher than his numbers suggest that he is.
However, the other side of the story is what is scary. Despite finding mental relief that comes with visiting a sports psychologist, De La Rosa is still a very volatile baseball player. In order to perform at his best, he must have a clear head and be focused.
That is exactly why giving De La Rosa a huge contract might not be a good idea. As is the case with many players who sign big contracts that come with big expectations, it is very conceivable that the left-hander could start to over throw and think that he needs to prove that he is worthy of the contract that he just signed.
So is re-signing De La Rosa a bad idea for the Rockies? No. In fact, it is something that the club should make their No. 1 priority. However, they should be very careful not to over commit and break the bank by signing him to a four or five-year deal worth somewhere in the $15 million per year range.
The Rockies should do everything they can to get the 29-year-old to sign a deal in the $12 million range.
That may sound impossible, but what has to remain in the back of the lefties mind has to be that he is very comfortable in Colorado. He finally figured himself out with the organization and became the pitcher that he currently is. By no means does that mean that he will stay, but comfort is worth something, and $12 million over three years is still a pretty good contract for a guy who looked more like a non-tender candidate three years ago than the second best pitcher on the free agent market.

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Troy Tulowitzki and Carlos Gonzalez Take Home Gold Gloves for Colorado Rockies

Apparently the Colorado Rockies ineligibility for postseason awards is over.

 

On Wednesday Major League Baseball announced the National League Gold Glove winners. Included on the list were Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki and outfielder Carlos Gonzalez.

 

Both players won the award for the first time, although Tulowitzki should already have two others to go along with this one. The shortstop led the National League in chances, fielding percentage and double plays, despite missing 33 games with a broken wrist. It is quickly becoming apparent that Tulowitzki is in the elite class of Major League shortstops.

 

Gonzalez won the award despite not having a home at one particular position in the outfield. He played 63 games in left field, 58 games in center field, and 40 games in right.

 

While the Rockies finally took home some postseason hardware, it does not come without controversy. According to the SABR statistic UZR (ultimate zone rating), Gonzalez supposedly was just slightly better than average in left field. Because of this, ESPN’s Rob Neyer said on Twitter that Gonzalez’s award comes not because of good play in the outfield, but because of his good season at the plate.

 

SABR statistics are a great new tool to evaluate baseball players. Instead of just grading a hitter off of batting average, these new methods factor in fly balls and ground balls and how well the player did when he got the ball into play. They also represent the first set of statistics to measure a player’s defensive abilities.

 

The problem, however, is that those from the SABR crowd have begun to rely on their nifty statistics for everything. Instead of watching a player play the game, they simply plug numbers into a computer and judge their abilities from there.

 

UZR is a valuable resource, but the fact is, sometimes it doesn’t tell the whole story. For instance, according to UZR, Clint Barmes is a below-average second baseman, and Seth Smith is a far better left fielder than Carlos Gonzalez. Anyone who actually thinks that is true has never watched the Rockies play.

 

Regardless, history will show that both Tulowitzki and Gonzalez were golden in the field for the Rockies in 2010, and for once, history will have properly represented the Colorado Rockies.

 

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Colorado Rockies Trade Miguel Olivo

The Colorado Rockies have traded catcher Miguel Olivo to the Toronto Blue Jays for a player to be named later.

The club had been mulling over what to do with the catcher, who had a club option for $2.5 million with a $500,000 buyout.
What the move means for Rockies fans is one of a few things. Either the Rockies are serious about pursuing free agent catcher/first baseman Victor Martinez or are pursuing Mike Napoli from the Los Angeles Angels via trade, or they have decided to once again trust the future to Chris Iannetta.
Trusting Iannetta would be a bad choice for the Rockies, who have fallen into the same trap in each of the last two seasons. Luckily for the Rockies, they had a backup plan with Yorvit Torrealba and Olivo, respectively.
Iannetta signed a three-year deal worth just over $8 million before the 2010 season, but found himself in Triple-A before the end of May.
He finished his season with a Mendoza-like batting average of .197 with nine home runs and 27 RBI. While the SABR crowd would argue that Iannetta has been better than his traditional numbers suggest, the fact is, he simply has not passed the eye-test.
Despite hitting two walk-off home runs in 2010, Iannetta all-too-frequently found himself striking out (48 in 188 at-bats) or popping out.
The Rockies may be hoping that working with new hitting coach Carney Lansford, who helped Iannetta figure out his swing in Colorado Springs late in the 2007 season, will help the catcher finally turn the corner.
The move begins what should be an interesting offseason for the Rockies, who are trying to find a way to re-sign lefty starter Jorge De La Rosa and also find a power hitting right handed bat that can play some first base.
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Major League Baseball’s Plan To Expand the Postseason Is Bad For the Game

In the midst of the World Series, Major League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig made a big announcement.

After shying away from the subject for years, Selig is open to expanding the Major League playoffs to include more teams, and believes it could happen as soon as the 2011 season.
The first reaction that comes to mind, after watching a postseason that seems like it started three months ago, is why would there be any reason to expand the postseason to even more teams.

Major League Baseball has already done enough damage by allowing networks like TBS and FOX to ruin the pace of baseball by twisting the schedule to involve what feels like more off days than game days. When the teams are playing, fans of smaller market teams better have days left off in their vacation budget, because their games begin around noon.
To top it off, there is no need to rush to the refrigerator between innings. Instead of a quick break, the networks take the liberty of squeezing in even more advertising between innings, during pitching changes and every single other possible moment.
How long ago does it feel like the Reds were eliminated? How about the Rays? Keep in mind that baseball currently has only four teams from each league making the playoffs.
If the Rangers are able to crawl back into this World Series, a potential Game 7 will be played on November 4. That’s right, most kids will have already come off of their Halloween sugar high’s before the baseball season comes to completion.
What Major League Baseball is proposing is adding another wild card team to the mix from each league. The two wild card teams would then play each other in a best-of-three series that would determine who moves on. It sounds great in principle. The excitement of a team throwing everything they have at a win-or-go-home scenario sounds fun. However, there are some serious issues that need to be factored in.
First, with the World Series already dragging into November, the prospect of a World Series game in mid-November in Detroit, Minneapolis or Denver does not sound appealing to anyone. Late October is already pushing it in many cities.
Second, if Wild Card A and Wild Card B take a day off when the regular season ends, another day off for travel from site A to site B in-between Games 2 and 3, then another day off to travel from Game 3 location to Game 1 of their next round, the three other teams that made the postseason are already staring at a five day layoff.
The last thing a team that is playing well wants to do is sit around for five days. Two days gives guys a chance to catch their breath, five means hitters lose their timing and pitchers lose their sharpness.
The third problem is possibly the biggest. After watching the Colorado Rockies try to scramble into the playoffs late in the season, only to fall short and spin out of control, it became clear that they were a team that was very good, but had not played well enough to be in the playoffs. They did not deserve to be there.
Even teams like the Atlanta Braves, who won the wild card.
They were a good team, but frankly, they were a borderline average team with decent pitching and no depth. Their defensive miscues were embarrassing for a team that played in October. Even Bobby Cox said at a postgame press conference, “Listen, we aren’t the best team in baseball, but if we get on a streak, we can beat anyone.” That statement alone should be enough to squelch plans to expand the playoffs.
With all of the negatives that go along with it, the sad reality is that, possibly as soon as 2011, Major League Baseball will have expanded the playoffs.
Why? Not because it is in the best interest of the game, not because it is in the best interest of the fans, but for one simple reason. Money.
Expanded playoffs means more people tuning in to watch the wild card duel. It means more games to sell advertising for. It means more teams who get a chance to sell tickets at a playoff rate, which means one thing. More money.
Of course baseball is a business and the owners, players and commissioner should be looking for new ways to bring in revenue. That is not a bad thing. However, when it comes at the expense of the quality and integrity of the game, it should be questioned.
Would having the Rockies, a team that never put it together on the field, in a three-game playoff series be a good thing? Would it have been a good thing for the Padres, who collapsed down the stretch, to be given a chance at redemption by playing the Braves in a three-game set? The answer is no.
Those teams were given every chance to prove that they belonged in the playoffs. The Rockies never got it together, and the Padres didn’t have the longevity to make it. Plain and simple, they didn’t deserve to go to the playoffs.
The last thing Major League Baseball needs is for a season that already plays twice as many games as the next closest major sport, is for fans and players to think that each and every single game doesn’t really matter. Teams who are barely above .500 can kick it into cruise control in September because they know that they have a good chance at simply getting in.
Major League Baseball is the last major professional sport in America where making it to the playoffs is truly a privilege. The last thing the sport needs is to let teams that haven’t earned it get in.
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San Francisco Giants Show Why Major League Baseball is Bad at Marketing

Yankees and Red Sox.


That is all anyone in the media talks about all season long. When the Yankees get eliminated from the playoffs, the talk is about how no one will be watching the World Series this year.

The way they make it sound, it was only fair for the American League East powerhouses to allow the junior varsity kids to play in a World Series every now and then. The San Francisco Giants and Texas Rangers made it to the World Series, but everyone who follows baseball knows one thing. There is no way that a team from west of the Mississippi is actually better than the beasts from the east.
While much of the blame falls on the media, particularly ESPN, Major League Baseball must take its fair share of the blame. Baseball is the only sport in which no one cares about teams outside of the major markets.
Case in point. In Major League Baseball, the team that plays in the Dallas area is a small market. In the NFL, the Dallas Cowboys are one of the league favorites.
It is always interesting to hear the commentators during playoff games. On Thursday night, Tim McCarver and Joe Buck talk as if Matt Cain was a guy who is coming out of nowhere. That he really isn’t that good and that his performance is out of the ordinary.
For those who actually watch baseball, and not just the once-a-week national broadcast of the Yankees or Red Sox, know who exactly who Cain is, and just how good he actually is.
Take a look at the two teams in this Series. Why aren’t the Rangers marketable? They have an incredible story in Josh Hamilton, a well-told story of redemption. On top of that, they have a young team that can crush the ball. Even more, they have two guys on their team who have had very good Major League careers that are finally getting a chance at a ring in Vladimir Guerrero and Michael Young. Guys like Ian Kinsler and Elvis Andruws are good players who are fun to watch.
The Giants are very similar. They have a 22-year-old catcher in Buster Posey who has the composure of a grizzled veteran. They have a starting rotation that is second to none in the league. On top of that, they have their own redemption stories in guys like Aubrey Huff, who toiled his way into obscurity in Baltimore and Detroit before becoming a leader in the Giants’ clubhouse. Cody Ross, possibly the biggest surprise of the postseason, was a waiver claim from the Florida Marlins.
Despite the stories that are readily available, no one has heard of any of these guys. Why? The answer is simple. Major League Baseball has done nothing to combat the east coast media love affair with the Yankees and Red Sox. They have allowed everyone to believe that the rest of the league are also-rans to the two big boys in the game.
That type of marketing may be good for ratings on Sunday Night Baseball when Joe Morgan can rave about how good both teams are, but simply wouldn’t compete with the Big Red Machine that he was not only a part of but the unheralded hero of.
The ratings might be good during the regular season, but when those teams falter in the playoffs, fans are left without any knowledge of any other team. Instead of learning who those teams are, people simply figure that the best team didn’t win and wait for next year when the Yankees or Red Sox can dominate again.
All the while, Major League Baseball sits around wondering why their playoff games can’t compete in the ratings with week four of the NFL.
The answer is right in front of them. Instead of marketing two teams and allowing people to believe that the National League is the farm system for the American League, give face time to every team, let people know that, as good as those teams might be, there are clubs out there who can beat them.
Then, and only then, will people start to care about baseball again.

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Grading the 2010 Colorado Rockies Infielders and Outfielders

Despite a tough season from most Colorado Rockies at the plate, there still was quite a bit for fans to be happy about. However, that joy is quickly doused by the reality of the young players’ underperformance.

The offensive highlights of the season for the Rockies came from the two players who have not only proven to be great Rockies players, but have shown themselves to be two of the best young players in the game.
On July 31, Carlos Gonzalez led the Rockies to victory when he drove a high fastball 464 feet into the third deck in right field. The home run propelled the club to a walk-off win and Gonzalez to his first-ever cycle.
The other memorable moment from Rockies hitters was Troy Tulowitzki’s September for the record books.
By the middle of the month, Tulo had 13 home runs and 30 RBI. The Rockies record for home runs in a month was 12 and RBI was 34. The shortstop obliterated both of those records, cooling off slightly and finishing with 15 home runs and 40 RBI.
The hot streak was so incredible that analysts were talking about him having a chance to win the MVP, despite missing 33 games with a broken wrist.
Without further ado, here are the Rockies infielder and outfielder grades for the 2010 season.

Carlos Gonzalez- A
The 24-year old finally showed what all the scouts have been raving about since he was a teenager. His .336 average was good enough for the National League batting crown.
On top of that, he finished with 34 home runs and 117 RBI. His OPS was an incredible .974 despite walking only 40 times. There might be some talk about how Gonzalez isn’t a great fielder, despite him only committing one error.
Throw that talk out, however, as defensive metrics don’t tell the true story. Gonzalez passes the eye test in the outfield. He is one of the best in the game.
Many fans are already wondering why the Rockies haven’t locked him up to a long-term deal before he gets too expensive. The answer is simple. Gonzalez is represented by Scott Boras.
What that means is that there is little to no chance that Gonzalez will ink his name to a long-term deal in the next four years. For Rockies fans, Gonzalez might not be with Colorado forever, but enjoy the ride…this kid is the real deal.

Troy Tulowitzki – A
Rockies fans can only wonder what might have been had Tulo not been out for 33 games in the middle of the season with a broken wrist. Expect him to finish in the top five in the MVP race.
The shortstop in no product of Coors Field either. He hit 12 of his 27 home runs on the road and put up a batting average of .291 despite rarely having anyone on to protect him.
Keep in mind, no one in the Yankees starting lineup hit over .300, at home or on the road.
Tulowitzki is the undisputed leader of the Colorado Rockies and it is clear that as Tulo goes, so go the Rockies.

Melvin Mora – B
Mora was brought in to be a guy who could play a wide variety of positions. After a month, it was clear that he belonged nowhere near second base. However, he still played a large part in the Rockies success.
He was one of the few players on the team who could be counted on to take a professional at-bat. He fouled pitches off when he was behind in the count and hit the opposite way.
With Ian Stewart failing to take the next step forward, Mora was able to fill in the holes and provide a good right-handed bat in the lineup. Mora could be back if the Rockies fail to get a right-handed power bat through free agency.

Dexter Fowler – B
Fowler getting a B might turn some heads. There is no doubt that he struggled early on, warranting his demotion to Triple-A for a month.
However, what he did from there on out was what was impressive. Instead of whining about being sent down, he took the opportunity to slow the game down and learn.
He came back and was a completely different player. He was able to hit from the left side and had confidence at the plate.
In addition to what he brought to the plate, he also played incredibly in center field.
Down the stretch, he robbed three home runs, including two game-savers, one against the Cubs and the other against the Brewers.

Ryan Spilborghs – B
Spilborghs is one of those guys that everyone wants to have on their team. He can play both corner outfield positions well, and has a good bat against left-handed pitchers.
When his name is in the lineup, no one is looking at him as a liability.
On top of that, he is well-known for being a guy who lightens the mood in the clubhouse and keeps everyone loose.

Jason Giambi – B-
Despite Giambi hitting just .244, he had a bigger impact than his numbers. Like Mora, Giambi always took a great at bat. No matter what the count was, Giambi never seemed give in. He always fought for his pitch and had a keen eye for the strike zone.
His walk-off home run against Jonathan Papelbon gets an honorable mention for best moment of the season.

Miguel Olivo – B-
If someone would have said that Olivo would get a B- for the entire season at the All-Star break, no one would have believed them.
Despite getting snubbed out of an All-Star berth, Olivo was the best catcher in baseball through the first half of the season.
The only problem was, for as good as his first half was, his second half was just as bad. In the first half, the catcher hit .325 with 11 home runs and 42 RBI. The second half was completely different, as Olivo hit just .211 with four home runs and 16 RBI.
Olivo’s problem may have been fatigue, or it may have been reality hitting, regardless, his season was the tale of two halves.

Eric Young Jr. – C+
EY still has a long way to go to prove that he can play every day in the big leagues. However, his attitude suggest that he will prove that he belongs. There is no one who hustles more than Young.
When he looks good, he looks really good, but when he looks bad, he looks really bad.
His defense is still in question at second base, but having him and Fowler at the top of the lineup is very intriguing.

Todd Helton – C
Helton has become everyone’s favorite person to hate. People think that because he makes so much money, he should hit to that level. Never mind the fact that he is 37 years old.
Regardless of his age, Helton still plays with a fire that can be seen despite his calm demeanor. He definitely struggled at the plate in 2010, but people forget that after he came off of the disabled list in July, he hit .310 the rest of the way.
The key for Helton is that the Rockies have a reliable option behind him who can give him enough days off to stay healthy.

Seth Smith – C-
Mr. Late Night apparently forgot to show up most nights. The lefty was pretty good for most of the season, but after he was given his chance to prove that he could play every day, saying Smith struggled would be a huge understatement.
After Brad Hawpe was released in mid-August, Smith notched just eight hits. Fatigue may have been a factor with Smith, but if it was, he needs to change his off season workout routine.
He should be ready to be an everyday player, even if he was coming off of the bench most nights. On the road, sometimes Smith simply disappeared.
When he was on camera, he often looked very tired. Many times I had the thought that he might not sleep well on the road.
One way or another, the Rockies need Smith to take a step forward in 2011.

Clint Barmes – D+
It is tough to find someone who doesn’t love Clint Barmes. He gives Charlie Hustle a run for his name. However, what has helped Barmes to the big leagues is exactly what hinders his career at this point.
The second baseman is very determined. He has his mind set on being good. However, at the plate, he is also very determined. He is determined to be able to his sliders off of the plate in the dirt. He is also determined to be a power hitter.
If Barmes would look at himself in the mirror and realize that if he learns to hit the ball the other way and foul pitches off that he can’t drive, he would be one of the best second basemen in baseball.
Instead, he finds himself striking out too much and being dead weight at the bottom of the lineup.

Ian Stewart – D
The third baseman seems more concerned with updating his Twitter account than reaching his potential.
Less than an hour after the Rockies lost to the Giants in a must-sweep series in Denver, Stewart was raving about his new phone on Twitter.
While players have their own lives and have to put games behind them and go on with their lives, telling fans about how cool your phone is while they are still sick about the loss is not a good way to gain respect, especially when your season was as poor as Stewart’s.
The former first-round draft pick was one of the young talents that the Rockies were anticipating would take the next step forward.
It didn’t happen. In fact, Stewart went backwards.
When Troy Tulowitzki was quoted in the Denver Post as saying that there were guys who needed to step it up and be more concerned with baseball than “how many vacations they took” in the offseason, the common feeling was that he was referring to Stewart.
The problem for Stewart stems from frustration. He has all of the tools to be an All-Star. He can hit the ball a mile and possesses the talent to be a gold glove third baseman and a middle-of-the-lineup guy for years to come.

One thing to keep in mind with Stewart is that he is still very young. At just 25 years old he still has a chance to find a sense of urgency in the big leagues and hit his stride.

 

Chris Iannetta – F

At this point, his 2008 numbers seem more like the fluke than the rest of his seasons. He is another player who simply can’t find a way to take it to the next level.
When he isn’t striking out, he is hitting weak pop flies to the second baseman. When he was sent down to Colorado Springs in May, his attitude could not have been more opposite of Fowler’s.
When I talked to him when I covered the Sky Sox for the Gazette, I asked him what he was working on. He responded, “I’m not working on anything. My swing is fine. I have never felt more comfortable at the plate. I don’t know why everyone keeps saying there is a hole in my swing, I wish people would stop saying that.”
Look no further for a reason why Iannetta hasn’t become a star. He already thinks he is one, despite hitting .197 with nine home runs and 27 RBI.
Iannetta fans continue to believe that he should be the everyday starter, but the fact is, he continues to get beaten out by the likes of Yorvit Torrealba and Miguel Olivo. When those two faltered, Iannetta was never able to put his foot down and take the job.
It would be great to see Iannetta take the next step forward, but the fact is, it might need to happen somewhere else.
So let me hear it…what do you think? What did I miss? Where was I wrong?
For more on the Rockies visit RockiesReview.com

This article is also featured on INDenverTimes.com

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Major League Baseball Playoff Scheduling Makes No Sense

Congratulations to the New York Yankees for sweeping the Minnesota Twins and moving on to the American League Championship series.

What do the Yankees get for their efforts?
How about six days off.
That’s right, Major League Baseball, along with their postseason partners TBS and FOX, have decided to start the ALCS when they think that the most fans will be sitting in front of their TVs.
Hitters lose their timing and pitchers lose their sharpness. It is as simple as that.
Even if both AL series went all five games, even with days off for travel, the ALCS match up would be set by Tuesday at the latest. So why start the series on Friday? One day off is obvious, but why does a team that won in five games need to be rewarded with two days off?

In fact, why should there be an off day after game four of a five game series? These are players who routinely played 15 or 16 days in a row. Now they have a day off every third day.

The other issue with the scheduling is the attempt at allowing fans to watch every single pitch of every single game.
TBS was touting it all week as the playoff triple header. Starting at about noon mountain time, the action began. So, while Major League Baseball makes sure that no game is being played at the same time, they trip over their own feet, because most Americans are busy working during a random Wednesday at noon.
Worse is the fact that the Rays and Rangers (Rockies in their two recent postseason appearances) were forced to play the awkward day game both days.
Great job Major League Baseball. Two cities, one in which hasn’t been to the postseason since most fans were worried about whether the world would turn inside out when the clock struck midnight on Y2K, were not able to watch their teams play in the playoffs.
The fact is, most fans are sick of watching the same teams in the postseason every year. Baseball fans are interested in watching a Rangers team that played on national television exactly one time all season. Fans want to see the Rays, who have found a way to win in the mighty AL East.
The solution is simple. If TBS is serious about broadcasting the playoffs, then they need to do what they do when a game goes long. Scrap the day game. Start the game that is being played on the east coast at 5:00 eastern time, then start the other two games at 8:00 eastern. Play one game on TBS and the other on TNT.
Most fans, sitting at home wishing their team was in it, would rather flip back and forth between the games anyway. Fans of the teams would leave it on one station, not concerned with the other series anyway.
That would allow fans to watch every pitch that they want to watch. Fans in Tampa and Arlington wouldn’t have to call in sick two days in a row to watch their team play for a championship.
The reality is, even huge baseball fans don’t have the time to watch three straight games that last much longer than the average baseball game because the station has sold an extra commercial during every single break.
At some point, Major League Baseball needs to quit disenfranchising their fans by trying to make every single one of them happy.

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