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MLB Free Agency: Cliff Lee, Carl Crawford and The Early Hot Stove

Baseball’s offseason hot stove continues to heat up as MLB’s annual winter meetings in Orlando, Florida roll right along.

As always, super agent Scott Boras has landed some monstrous deals for his clients, with outfielders Jayson Werth and Carl Crawford each garnering seven-year deals worth well over $100 million.

And with former Cy Young winner Cliff Lee yet to sign on with a club (i.e. the Yankees), Boras’ busy winter is far from over.

Of course, Boras isn’t the only agent with clients on the move. He just so happens to be the most powerful.

Either way, there’s still plenty of action yet to take place and plenty of mega-millions yet to be wasted…errr…spent before the start of spring training. In that spirit, let’s have a look at the biggest deals of the offseason so far and the most intriguing ones yet to be made.

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New York Yankees Nick Swisher Gives B/R Exclusive: Baseball in Movember

The 2010 baseball season may be over, but for major leaguers like New York Yankees outfielder Nick Swisher, the work never stops.

I had a chance to sit down with Nick at the Art of Shaving Shop and Barber Spa in Glendale, California, where he was getting a clean shave to promote Movember, a month-long moustache-growing event to raise awareness and money for men’s health charities.

We talked baseball, shaving, and the best moustaches in the game.  Read on to see what Swish had to say.

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Jose Bautista: Toronto Blue Jay’s Big Season Raises Steroid Questions For MLB

Last night, Jose Bautista became the first player in the Majors to hit 50 home runs this season, and, with only a week remaining in the regular season, he may be the last as well.

Wait…what? Who? Huh?

That would be the standard reaction from most baseball fans, spanning from the casual observer to the most diligent follower.

The first question to consider, of course, is, who in the world is Jose Bautista?

Before his breakout performance this season, Bautista was most notable for being the first and only player to be on five different Major League rosters in a single season–the Orioles, the Devil Rays, the Royals, the Pirates, and the Mets.

To be fair, he only ever played for four of those teams that year, as he was traded to Pittsburgh by New York before he ever set foot in Shea Stadium after being acquired by way of Kansas City.

Complicated, perplexing, but impressive nonetheless.

Such goes for his play in 2010 as well.

After hitting only 59 homers in six previous seasons, Bautista is now far and away the Major League leader in round-trippers this season.

Some would say they could see it coming, if not to this extent.

 

Bautista had long been a highly-regarded prospect among professional baseball scouts, many of whom predicted he could be something of a power hitter if he ever learned to make contact more consistently.

The 29-year-old from the Dominican Republic showed glimpses of his true potential toward the end of last season, when he was given a spot in the starting line-up following the departures of Scott Rolen to Cincinnati and Alex Rios to Chicago. Bautista finished the season with a modest 13 home runs, but 10 of those came in September, while he was playing every day.

Carry that performance over to this season, and perhaps Bautista‘s breakout shouldn’t be quite the surprise it has turned out to be.

Such a surprise, in fact, that it’s difficult for anyone who has followed baseball in the so-called “Steroid Era” not to wonder whether Bautista‘s spike in performance can or should be attributed to performance-enhancing drugs.

His statistically meteoric rise resembles that seen in the career of Luis Gonzalez.

Before joining the Arizona Diamondbacks and becoming one of the most popular players in the short history of the club, Gonzo spent eight years with three different teams, establishing himself as a solid hitter (a batting average of .300) who lacked the power needed to man a corner outfield spot (15 home runs in those eight seasons).

 

Like Bautista, Gonzalez started to show glimpses of power in the years leading up to his breakout season, smacking 31 homers while hitting .336 in 1999, a performance which he closely replicated in 2000.

Gonzo had his big year in 2001, when he hit 57 dingers, which fell far short of Barry Bonds’ 73 that year but still ranks as the ninth most ever by a National League player.

Though Gonzalez has never been directly accused of or admitted to steroid use, he’s still been linked to the cause, thanks to the inclusion of former teammate Jason Grimsley in the Mitchell Report and his alleged inclusion on the infamous “secret list” of positive tests from 2003.

Even without any actual evidence of PED use by Gonzo, it’s difficult to ignore the uptick in his performance, especially in an era of baseball tarnished by rampant steroid use and abuse.

Which brings Jose Bautista back into the discussion. He, like Gonzo, is a journeyman ballplayer who showed glimpses of potential for years before busting out with a 50-homer season that far outpaces any of his previous performances.

Of course, Gonzo had been a line-up regular before his 2001 anomaly while Bautista had never starting consistently over an entire season until this year.

Add to that the fact that Bautista is just now in the prime of his athletic life and that he’s not the only Blue Jay who’s mashing this season (Vernon Wells, Aaron Hill, Adam Lind) and perhaps the potential for tarnish begins to wear off.

But even so, in this day and age of seeming calm following the storm that sprung from MLB‘s Steroid Era, it’s difficult, perhaps even irresponsible, to ignore the possibility that Jose Bautista‘s landmark 2010 season just another one among a mountain of potentially fraudulent performances.

For the sake of Jose Bautista, the Toronto Blue Jays, and the entire sport of baseball, one can only hope that’s not the case.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Manny Ramirez and Los Angeles Dodgers: A Microcosm of MLB’s Steroid Era

With a long history rich with tradition and ceremony, baseball is, more than any other sport, conducive to story-telling and folklore. Baseball has also, more than any other sport, been a subject of the Hollywood movie landscape, with plenty of classics like The Natural, Bull Durham, and Field of Dreams.

Ironic, then, that Hollywood (or should I say “Mannywood”) should be the setting for baseball’s latest, and perhaps most relevant, made-for-the-silver-screen storyline.

The Steroid Era.

It’s no secret now that Manny Ramirez was among the perhaps hundreds of major league baseball players who, throughout the 1990s and into the first decade of the 21st century, used performance-enhancing drugs like steroids to gain an on-field advantage over their opponents and hasten recovery from injury. 

Just last season, Manny became the first big-name player to be suspended 50 games for the use of a banned substance which, in Man-Ram’s case, was a hormone therapy supplement intended to restore his body’s chemistry to normal levels following steroid use.

While Manny is far from alone in his status as a superstar whose accomplishments have been tainted by the use of PEDs (Alex Rodriguez, Roger Clemens, and Barry Bonds come to mind), what makes his case particularly noteworthy is the short time-frame in which Manny has managed to play out the typical three-act script of a steroid star falling from grace, in just two seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Act I: A Star Is Born

Once upon a time, at the start of August 2008, Manny Ramirez arrived in Chavez Ravine to an outpouring of fanfare. Acquired at the non-waiver trade deadline from Boston in a three-way deal for Andy LaRoche, Manny was greeted with open arms by a team struggling in its first year under legendary manager Joe Torre and by a rabid fan base of Angelenos tired of watching their punchless Dodgers whittle away yet another summer amidst the misery of triple-digit heat.

Lo and behold, Manny took Southern California by storm, hitting .396 with 17 home runs and 63 runs batted in over the final 53 games of the season to lift the Dodgers to the NL West Division title in a notably down year for National League baseball in the West.

The Dodgers would continue into the postseason, where the boys in blue swept the 100-win Chicago Cubs in the first round, only to lose to the eventual-World-Series-champion Philadelphia Phillies in the league championship series.

Nonetheless, Manny had done his job exceedingly well and earned a devoted following in the process.  Before the season was out, Dodger fans were donning dreadlock wigs and snapping up seats in a left-field section dubbed “Mannywood” by Dodger management.  It seemed as though Manny could do no wrong, until…

Act II: A Fall From Grace

As was the case with his precocious PED-pushing colleagues, Manny couldn’t keep his “secret for success” a secret for very long.  Barely a month into the 2009 season, Manny was suspended by MLB for 50 games after testing positive for hCG, a women’s fertility drug banned for its use by ballplayers to restart testosterone production after a cycle of steroid use.

While the likes of A-Rod and David Ortiz, Manny’s sidekick with the Red Sox, were being outed by anonymous sources and “insiders” for allegedly testing positive for PEDs during a preliminary round of confidential tests administered by Major League Baseball in 2003, Manny was caught in the act, once the rules had already long been in place to punish those who jeopardized the integrity of the game by using banned substances. 

The same hubris that had Manny holding out until spring training to sign a two-year, $45 million deal—when the Dodgers were the essentially bidding against themselves—also led him to continue his use of PEDs, despite the presence of random drug testing and severe penalties for those who tested positive.

Like that of his crest-fallen compatriots, the integrity of Manny’s accomplishments came under intense scrutiny by the national sports media. 

However, unlike others in his position, Manny made little, if any, attempt to apologize for his actions or proclaim innocence, choosing rather to neglect his teammates and, perhaps more importantly, his fans, who had elevated him to the status of SoCal sports icon in less than half-a-season’s-worth of games played.

While Manny remained idle in placating the organization, the fans, and the media, his lengthy suspension prevented him from regaining his place amongst the good graces of the baseball gods through positive on-field contributions.  Rather, Manny was forced to bide his time before he could begin his arduous climb back to respectability on the diamond.

Act III: A Shot At Redemption…

While some ‘roid ragers, like Rafael Palmeiro, fled for early retirement, others, like Manny, have kept on playin’ ball, for money as well as pride, though one can never underestimate the power of the dollar in anyone’s decision-making process, particularly that of a professional athlete.

Like clockwork, Manny returned to his place in the Dodgers lineup after the suspension, with the team having held remarkably steady during his absence.

Manny performed admirably, though not nearly as torridly as he had in his first two months in Dodger blue, finishing the season with a .290 batting average and 17 home runs in just over 100 games while battling through a variety of nagging injuries—quite possibly the kinds of injuries that steroids may have helped to heal—once again helping the Dodgers reach the NL Championship series, where they fell victim to the Phillies for a second consecutive year.

To almost no one’s surprise, the Mannywood faithful welcomed their hero back to left field with open arms, seemingly choosing to ignore his transgressions as just another case of “Manny being Manny,” with the Dodgers’ success serving as a convenient blindfold.

Fast-forward to this season, and Manny’s campaign to rebuild his image on the field has taken a considerable step backward. 

While A-Rod has spent the summer chasing (and reaching) the 600 home run milestone and Big Papi has worked his way out of an early-season slump, Manny has spent a significant portion of the schedule nursing his wounds (and his ego) on the disabled list while his teammates have struggled to play consistently solid baseball while maintaining a tenuous position of relevance in a division race chock-full of capable competitors. 

The recently-passed trade deadline saw fans and journalists alike calling on Dodgers GM Ned Colletti to dump Ramirez as a late-season rental to another contender in exchange for some valuable pieces, to help now and/or in the future. Not exactly the universal approval Manny might’ve hoped for.

Where Manny’s career goes from here is anybody’s guess.  There is little doubt that, whether by trade or contract expiration, Manny’s time as a Dodger will soon come to a somewhat tragic close. Once that time comes, the baseball community will have plenty of opportunity to cast judgment on Manny’s brief tenure in Los Angeles. 

Of all the many noteworthy observations to stem from the Mannywood experiment, perhaps most intriguing is how Manny and the Dodgers managed to write the perfect, if sullen, screenplay to match baseball’s 20-or-so years of steroids abuse–from the home run frenzy of the late ’90s and early 2000s, to the exposure of the specter of cheating in the mid-2000s, to the subdued return to normalcy of the present day.

In essence, Manny’s story is, for better or worse, a rather tidy encapsulation of the trials and tribulations of baseball’s latest generation of superstars and future legends, though, while set in “Tinseltown,” it concludes with anything but a Hollywood ending.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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