Tag: Edinson Volquez

In a Season Full of Elbow Injuries, Pittsburgh Pirates Keeping Arms Healthy

Over the last few seasons, we have seen the emergence of a number of young pitching prospects in Major League Baseball.  

Unfortunately, 2014 has been the year of torn ulnar collateral ligaments, resulting in season-ending Tommy John surgery for a lot of those young stars.  

According to Bob Nightengale of USA Today Sports, 18 pitchers have had the procedure done on their arms in 2014, and commissioner Bud Selig is calling it an “epidemic.”

The Pittsburgh Pirates were one of the first teams affected by the procedure in 2014 when top pitching prospect Jameson Taillon underwent the operation in early April. At the major league level, however, the Pirates have been blessed with healthy arms.  

According to a report on Fox Sports, Pittsburgh has had just one player, reliever Stolmy Pimentel, land on the 15-day list with an arm injury. Pimentel was placed on the shelf on May 2 with right shoulder inflammation.  

Other than that, the Pirates have not been burdened by arm problems at the major league level in 2014.

In fact, Pittsburgh has seen how the surgery can positively affect a pitcher’s ability to pitch again.  

Starting pitcher Edinson Volquez had the best year of his career in 2008 when he went 17-6 with a 3.21 ERA for the Cincinnati Reds. The following season, he found himself in the operating room after tearing the ligament in his throwing arm.  

Volquez has never returned to his old form, but he has shown in 2014 that he looks completely healthy, giving the Pirates a solid No. 5 starter.  

Now, it goes without being said that the Pirates have had their fair share of injuries early on, but luckily those injuries did not concern pitchers’ arms (with the exception of Pimentel).  

The Pirates are very fortunate that they have not been bitten by the injury bug considering they are off to a slow 17-23 start to the season.  

According to Anthony Castrovince of MLB.com, when asked about staying healthy, Volquez said “We just have to to do it all season long, for the team and for myself.”

As long as their pitchers stay injury-free, the Pirates should get hot, as they certainly have enough talent to make a run at one of the wild-card spots.

 

*Statistics Courtesy of Baseball Reference

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Atlanta Braves: Starting Pitchers the Braves Should Be Targeting

With less than 72 hours remaining before the trade deadline, the Atlanta Braves are not having much luck when it comes to adding a starter to their rotation. They thought they landed Ryan Dempster from the Cubs, but Dempster was able to veto that deal. Since then Zack Greinke and Wandy Rodriguez were each dealt and Matt Garza got hurt.

That leaves high-priced options like James Shields and Josh Johnson as the top pitchers on the market, and both of those guys have been struggling this year. Francisco Liriano is even more unpredictable and wouldn’t be much of an upgrade over the guys the Braves want to replace in the rotation.

This article takes a look at three guys the Braves should consider adding as a “plan B” after being unable to land one of the big guns without mortgaging the future. None of these guys will front a playoff rotation, but all would be an upgrade over the current back end of the rotation and will offer some consistency.

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San Diego Padres: The Not-so Lovable Losers of the NL West

I have not had good experiences with fantasy baseball in the past.

First and foremost, I was terrible at it. I would say that I could identify a comfortable 95 percent of current players by name, but that doesn’t mean I know how to fashion them into a successful fantasy franchise.

Your initial instinct is to grab the biggest names you can find. You want the Pujols’s, the Hamiltons, and the Cabreras. But that’s not how it works. It’s all about variety, depth, and value. You want all your bases covered, forgive the awful pun.

It’s more important to have guys who excel in different areas. You need a home-run guy, sure—but not eight of them. You also want a batting average guy, an on-base guy, a steals guy, etc. There are too many factors and I have no patience for that.

It also requires constant attention due to staggered schedules and an overwhelming number of “day-to-day injuries.” There are baseball games every day (excluding the All-Star break) from early April to early October. It is a grueling fantasy season.

It is no secret that I love fantasy football, but baseball is a drastically different monster. Football only has one “round” per week, for 17 weeks. It is much more manageable.

And despite all the stigmas, very few people obsess over it all week long. I check maybe once a day to make sure that Tom Brady still has all his required ligaments or that some Cincinnati Bengal hasn’t been arrested for public indecency. Plus, given the short season, every game is important and players aren’t just going to take a day off on you. I would hardly categorize the schedule as grueling.

But still, I was left with an empty spot where fantasy football usually resides, and I thought maybe baseball was a fitting suitor.

Yes, despite all noted evidence, I considered fantasy baseball in 2012.

But I decided against it in the end, for one reason, which I at least had the foresight to recognize. And that reason currently has a 5-13 record.

 

I grew up in a small coastal California town called Encinitas, half-an-hour north of downtown San Diego. My allegiances have never strayed from the Chargers in the NFL or the Padres in the MLB. But every man has his limits, and the Padres are fast approaching mine.

I vaguely remember the 1998 World Series, in which the Padres faced the Yankees. I can also vaguely recall not caring all that much. I mean, I was seven years old, yet to reach diehard fan status.

It has been 14 years now, and the Padres have gone from World Series contender to league laughingstock. They won the NL West division in both 2005 and 2006 (perhaps only due to how bad the division was those years, as they won only 82 and 88 games respectively), but lost both times to the Cardinals in the first round of the playoffs.

But at least there had always been stars. There was always one guy who you could point to and say “That’s our best player, that’s who I want to pay to see.”

For a long while it was Mr. Padre himself, Tony Gwynn, and his pursuit of 3,000 hits. Or it was Trevor Hoffman, walking out to “Hells Bells,” lights-out for so many years. In the early 2000s, it was Jake Peavy, the fireballing righty from Mobile, Alabama. And until 2010, it was Adrian Gonzalez, with one of the prettiest swings you will ever see.

These players kept the Padres afloat, even through 66-98 seasons. And now, with the Padres setting a pace that wouldn’t even see them reach 66 wins, that player is…

Nonexistent.

No Padre with legitimate playing time is batting over .300, and only two players break that mark (barely) even when removing that restriction (Andy Parrino is 7-of-23 for .304, and Chris Denorfia is 9-of-30 for .300).

The only offensive bright spot thus far has been Chase Headley (.293, 4 HR, 13 RBI), who I have seen strike out in big moments too often to get excited about.

They have scored a scant 60 runs and just marked their first two-game win streak of the season, 18 games in. (Thank goodness for the Pirates, who have somehow managed to cross the plate just 30 times in 15 games—if you’re wondering, the record for fewest runs in a season belongs to St. Louis with 372 in 1908, a record the Pirates are on pace to obliterate.)

 

As far as the pitchers go, Cory Luebke has been pleasantly decent, putting up a 1.16 WHIP and 2.52 ERA in four starts. Plus, he accounts for 40 percent of the team’s wins, so that’s dandy.

Unfortunately, opening day starter Edinson Volquez is already up to a 4.30 ERA and has yet to get a win. Promising up-and-coming Clayton Richard has given up 12 earned runs in 18 innings, and I’m not sure who the other starters are.

I’m honestly not sure if Bud Black knows who they are.

Although they are probably going to overshoot the 6-45 mark I set for them for the first third of the season, all of these wins are meaningless. The Padres organization and the MLB as a whole have deeper-set issues. It goes deeper than just a bad team full of bad players.

It is an organization that doesn’t care about product, and a league that doesn’t care about market discrepancies. Not to make it out to be a conspiracy, it’s not like the league is fixing anything (directly), but I honestly believe that MLB would like to see the same five or six teams in the World Series hunt every year. It’s just best for business.

So this is why you won’t talk me into fantasy baseball: because my connection to the game has already been lost after two weeks. I’m already on the Clippers’ and Kings’ bandwagons—let’s hope I don’t move to LA and start rooting for the Dodgers.

Matt Kemp does have one of those lovable faces, doesn’t he?

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Early Standouts You Must Pick Up

With the first week of the Major League Baseball season almost coming to a close, it is time to check your waiver wire and pick up that potential bench player who will soon be a fantasy must-start. 

This first player has been amazing in minor leagues and even better in spring training this season, hitting nearly .391. He also just happens to be  the No. 2 bat in the Kansas City Royals’ lineup: center fielder Lorenzo Cain.

Now I know what you are going to say: spring training is nothing. However, this 25-year-old will provide a right-handed bat between leadoff man Alex Gordon and No. 3 hitter Eric Hosmer, both lefties. This will skyrocket Cain’s fantasy value as he will not only receive more at-bats but he would be on base in front of more accomplished hitters. 

Cain also has a ton of upside in terms of power, speed and can hit for a high average as well. He’s projected to hit 15 home runs this season and has potential to get 20-plus stolen bases and a .280 batting average. He has had seven successful seasons at the minor league level with a career batting average of .295.

Even in the major leagues, Cain didn’t sweat: He had a batting average of .306 with seven stolen bases in just 43 games playing for the Milwaukee Brewers in 2010.

Kansas City is giving Cain a full-time gig now and he will get playing time everyday. More importantly, he is owned in just 39 percent of ESPN Fantasy Leagues. 

The second player of today’s must-pick-up fantasy stars happened to play 134 games, had over 464 at-bats, hit 16 home runs, drove in 51 RBIs, and had a batting average of .259 while battling hand and wrist injuries all throughout last season: Texas Rangers first baseman Mitchell Moreland.

This power hitting lefty was on fire in the early part of last season before fading down the stretch due to the hand and wrist ailments mentioned above.

Moreland had surgery in the offseason to repair those injuries and is back to 100 percent and will look forward to getting a ton of at-bats this season. 

The trouble with Moreland is, because he is left-handed, he struggles against left-handed pitching: In his career against lefties, he’s hitting just .229 with one home run and 13 RBI in 131 at-bats. So be prepared to play him on a match-up basis.

That was evident when Rangers manager Ron Washington took Moreland out of the lineup this past Friday because the Chicago White Sox were starting left-hander John Danks, and Washington said he wanted as many right-handed hitters in the lineup as possible.

Moreland is a worthy pickup, especially against right-handed pitching and is owned in 81 percent of ESPN leagues. He is also the third most-added first baseman this past week. 

Next on our list, and least-owned (available in 95 percent of ESPN leagues) is San Diego Padres starting pitcher Edinson Volquez.

Baseball fans might remember Volquez from his days as a Cincinnati Red when he was selected to represent the NL in the 2008 MLB All-star game. That season, Volquez was 17-6 with a 3.21 ERA, striking out 206 batters in only 196 innings. Since then, he has been battling injuries, failing to put together a full, healthy season.

The right-handed Volquez came to San Diego in an offseason trade for Mat Latos and moved right into the Opening Day role after Tim Stauffer was placed on the DL. In his first start this past Thursday, Volquez gave up three runs on three hits, but struck out seven batters and was stuck with the loss. 

However, it was a solid performance and the move to San Diego’s Petco Park makes this high-strikeout righty worth a look in all formats. Petco Park is a pitcher’s ballpark, and as long as Volquez remains healthy he will be a solid starter to add to your rotation.

Stop whatever it is your doing and get on your laptop or cell and immediately pick up one of these fantasy gems. If you are at a family event or church for Easter, just excuse yourself to use the bathroom and then just add, drop and these players will take care of the rest. 

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Mat Latos to Cincinnati: What This Trade Means for the Reds

There are times when Major League Baseball’s propensity for showcasing all things Red Sox, Yankees, Cubs, Phillies and Cardinals make sense. 

There are also times when it becomes painfully clear that some teams just don’t get the same recognition they deserve.

If the New York Yankees had traded a top hitting prospect as part of a package for a very talented potential No. 1 or 2 starter this afternoon, there would be news bulletins everywhere. 

Instead there was just moderate attention given to a fairly significant five-player deal completed between the Cincinnati Reds and San Diego Padres Saturday.

The Reds acquired one of the better pitchers in the National League, Mat Latos, in exchange for a very nice set of young players who will likely play major roles in San Diego both this season and the future. 

The Reds had to part with Edinson Volquez, Yonder Alonso, Yasmani Grandal and Brad Boxberger.

The trade signals that the Reds are going to try and take full advantage of the total chaos their division’s hierarchy has plunged into since the 2011 season ended.

The World Champion St. Louis Cardinals have lost both their future Hall of Fame manager Tony LaRussa and their future Hall of Fame first baseman Albert Pujols.

The Milwaukee Brewers, the defending division champs, are highly likely to lose their prolific power-hitting first baseman Prince Fielder in free agency, and there is very legitimate concern that they could lose the reigning National League MVP Ryan Braun for the first 50 games of the 2012 season due to a positive initial test for a performance enhancing drug.

That leaves a real power vacuum at the top of the NL Central standings. The Cubs are in a rebuilding mode, the Pirates will be a tough team but seem somewhat unlikely to compete at the top of the division, and the Astros may lose over 100 games.

That gives the Reds a big opening and this trade is a strong signal that they intend to try and take full advantage of it.

Latos will pair with Johnny Cueto at the top of an increasingly solid rotation. Starting pitching was a major problem for the Reds last season, but with those two anchoring the rotation it looks much stronger. Now, the Reds don’t have to worry as much about the performances of Bronson Arroyo, Mike Leake, Travis Wood or Homer Bailey.

Having strong starters also takes pressure of the bullpen. Being able to count on a couple of back-to-back starts in which the starter can go seven innings and keep the team in the game means less appearances for the middle relievers and shorter appearances for the late-inning guys as well.

What this deal really signals though is that the Reds fully intend to sign the 2010 National League MVP Joey Votto to a contract extension.

The inclusion of highly touted first base prospect Yonder Alonso means that the guy who would have been faced with the daunting task of replacing Votto is now in San Diego. If the Reds were intending to shop Votto in lieu of his free agency in 2014 then one would think they’d have held on to a player of Alonso’s caliber.

The rest of the package the Reds dealt is solid as well. Edinson Volquez has struggled with injuries the past few seasons but it was only two seasons ago when he put together an impressive 17-win season with a 3.21 ERA and 206 strikeouts.

The other two minor leaguers are both well regarded too. Yasmani Gradal was the Reds’ first-round pick in 2010 and could be a solid major league catcher. Brad Boxberger was one of the Reds’ first-round picks in the 2009 draft and may end up as a solid starting pitcher.

The Reds were willing to part with all of that potential talent in exchange for some that has already been realized at the major league level.

Mat Latos is already on the cusp of bona fide “ace” status and he’s not even 24 years old yet. He’s not a free agent until 2016 and last season, playing for a Padres team with an absolutely awful offense, he managed to finish with a flourish.

Latos started the season off with a few bouts of inconsistency but in the second half of the season he really seemed to find his groove when he had an ERA of 2.87 and a whip ratio of 1.000; as well as 92 strikeouts in 94 innings pitched. 

The Reds clearly see a pitcher on the verge of really coming into his own and it appears that mirrors their view of the team as a whole. Is “The Big Red Machine” back? Not yet but it’s heading in a very positive direction.

 

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Reds Acquire Mat Latos: Was the Trade Worth It?

At 12:34 the Cincinnati Reds announced today via Twitter that they had completed a deal with the San Diego Padres, acquiring right-handed pitcher Mat Latos. Was what they gave up for him really worth it?

The Reds gave up four players in this deal: Yonder Alonso, Edinson Volquez, Brad Boxberger, and Yasmani Grandal. I can understand getting rid of the first two, but all four is puzzling to me.

Alonso and Volquez are both very good players, but if you look at their situation, it makes sense. Alonso has been forced to play left field due to the fact that Joey Votto is the starter in his natural position of first base. With Volquez, his run was nearing an end in Cincinnati one way or the other. He’s been so inconsistent numbers wise, along with being suspended 50 games for violating the MLB‘s rules of performance-enhancing drug-use. Not to mention his attitude hasn’t been the best in his time there either. 

After that though, if you take a look at what Boxberger and Grandal have done thus far throughout their Minor League careers, you have to stop and wonder if this trade was really a good deal or not. Boxberger, a RH pitcher, split time between AA Carolina and AAA Louisville last year and posted a 2.03 ERA and averaged 13.5 SO/9. Grandal, a rare switch-hitting catcher, spent his time last year on each level at High A Bakersfield, AA Carolina, and AAA Louisville. Overall he batted .305 with 14 HR and 68 RBI while posting a .401 OBP. Those are extremely solid numbers from both prospects. 

Now don’t get me wrong, Mat Latos is an excellent pitcher in his own right. He will be one of the best in the league for years to come. He’s been a victim of a poor offense so his W-L isn’t so pretty, but a career 3.37 ERA and 413 K’s through 72 starts is very impressive. As impressive as it is though, I can’t bring myself to understand what the Reds were thinking by giving up so much talent for one player.

On the other hand, the Padres are big winners and this is a big step in their rebuilding process. 

 

All stats are from www.baseball-reference.com

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Phantom Double Play: Umpires Get it Right in Reds-Pirates Game

Umpire Lance Barrett worked his first MLB regular season game in 2010, joining the likes of fellow umps Vic Carapazza, Cory Blaser, John Tumpane, Alan Porter, Mark Ripperger, Manny Gonzalez and David Rackley as the so-called Class of 2010, now into their second season of big league games.

Like all AAA call-up umpires, Barrett is trying to set himself apart so he can get a full-time job at the MLB level.

Sometimes, proving yourself to the MLB brass involves making a big-time call in a potentially confusing situation. Last season, the Class of 2009’s Dan Bellino won over many Umpire Ejection Fantasy Leaguers as well as MLB Supervisors with an ejection following a confident and correct obstruction call in Washington. Bellino was hired by MLB prior to the 2011 season.

Barrett’s Bellino moment may have come in Pittsburgh tonight. In the top of the fifth inning of the RedsPirates game, with one out, runners on first and second, and the possibility of an infield fly fresh in all of our minds, Reds batter Drew Stubbs lined a Jeff Locke fastball to Pirates shortstop Ronny Cedeno.

While Cedeno fielded the ball on a short-hop, baserunner R2 (and pitcher by trade) Edinson Volquez, mistakingly believing the ball had been caught, stepped back onto second base as Cedeno threw to second baseman Neil Walker. Walker caught the ball and stepped on the second base bag, resulting in an out call from Barrett.

Walker subsequently tagged Volquez, who was standing on second base. This resulted in a safe call from Barrett.

Fairly straightforward: R1 Brandon Phillips was forced out on the tag of second base, which took the force off of R2 Volquez, who now legally and safely occupied second base. Batter Stubbs safely arrived at first base. One out, two on.

Not so fast… Phillips, as confused as anyone, and perhaps adding to the confusion himself, began running frantically between first and second base, drawing a throw from Walker. The bewildered Pirates infield quickly trapped the already-retired R1 Phillips in a rundown between first and second before unnecessarily tagging out Phillips for a second time.

Either way, Barrett once again gave the out call so there would be no confusion this time. Unfortunately, there was confusion – lots of it, for everyone except perhaps Barrett, crew chief Mike Winters, and umpires Mike Everitt and Chris Guccione… or maybe for them as well.

For you see, the umpires determined that Phillips was out, as expected. Batter Drew Stubbs would be placed on first base, also as expected. But Volquez, who had taken off for third base in the pandemonium which ensued while Phillips was in a rundown between first and second, was sent back to second base.

To understand why Barrett, Winters and the other umpires ruled the way they did requires an analysis of MLB Rules 7.09(e) and 9.01(c).

Rule 7.09(e) states, in part, it is interference when “any batter or runner who has just been put out, or any runner who has just scored, hinders or impedes any following play being made on a runner.” Rule 7.09(e) Comment additionally states, “If the batter or a runner continues to advance after he has been put out, he shall not by that act alone be considered as confusing, hindering or impeding the fielders.”

Rule 9.01(c), as all umpires know, is the so-called elastic clause, which gives an umpire the “authority to rule on any point not specifically covered in these rules.”

Putting the two together allows for an explanation of why the umpires ruled the way they did. Phillips’ post-put out actions were not enough on their own to be considered interference. This is clearly specified in Rule 7.09(e) Comment. However, the Phillips rundown clearly did confuse the fielders and allow Volquez to advance toward third base.

In the end, Winters correctly invoked Rule 9.01(c) to deliver a fair and just judgment: Phillips was out, Stubbs was safe at first, and Volquez would also be ruled safe, but fairly returned to second base.

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Have the Cincinnati Reds Thrown in the Towel or Was That the Fat Lady Singing?

At the time of this writing the Reds are nine games out of first place, pending what the Milwaukee Brewers do later. They have just lost the series to the upstart Chicago Cubs and try (I hope) to avoid a sweep tomorrow afternoon.

When your ace blows up you know it is not your day. That is what happened today to Johnny Cueto. After looking like one of the best pitchers in all of baseball, he was shelled for seven hits and five earned runs in less than four innings.

The Cubs who are on a seven-game win streak looked anything but doormats for the rest of the NL Central Division. Carlos Zambrano, (9-6) picked up the win and belted a home run in the 11-4 trouncing of the defending Divisional Champions.

The only bright spot I saw in the game was the continued hot heating of Yonder Alonso who hit his first MLB dinger today, becoming the 17th Reds player to hit their inaugural home run in Wrigley Field.

As for Alonso, if anybody was ever made to be a designated hitter it is he. He absolutely looked pitiful in left field today, but the entire team looked like a comedy of errors. Todd Frazier, Edgar Renteria and Alonso all made errors in what certainly looked like a team just finishing out the year.

All-Star second baseman Brandon Phillips left the game in the fourth inning after spraining his right ankle in a collision with outfielder Drew Stubbs.

The S.O.S. Stubbs continued to disappoint striking out twice, and looking nothing like the defensive player he is.

The game smelled like September, with so many different players at positions they are not normally seen. Miguel Cairo had to spell Phillips, Frazier played third, and Alonso was in left field.

It is hard to imagine how this team could possibly bounce back and become a factor in the division. Even if they became white hot, they would have to depend upon the Brew Crew to grow tired of winning in order to climb the latter.

They have just lost a series to both teams lower in the standings than themselves. That will not get the job done. It would be hard to imagine that Dusty Baker and GM, Walt Jocketty aren’t having some back office meetings.

There is so much wrong that it becomes difficult to see where the malignancy actually started. Guys are having problems pitching, guys can’t hit and strikeout in crucial situations, and now the injury bug is starting to creep in.

With so much wrong on a team widely seen as very talented, the trigger could be pulled at the top, with Baker looking for a new gig or sliding back into the booth at ESPN. I haven’t heard any winds but the timing would be right.

You may feel free to continue in hopeful bliss, but this writer has seen enough to call it a year. I think it is time for a fire sale. The Reds should start playing people they expect to start in 2012, seeing what deals can be made with dead weight players like Coco Cordero and Edinson Volquez.

They should throw Aroldis Chapman into the deep end of the pool. If he swims, praise the Lord. If he doesn’t then he becomes fodder for the trade mill. Either let him start games now or mold him into a closer. Middle relief is where pitchers go to die.

There is always next year, but hey let us at least see what we have on the farm. Is something wrong that Billy Hamilton can’t be promoted? He is playing a tad over high school ball in Dayton. Low Single A, come on, if he is an untouchable start implementing him into the system.

It is time for all of us to cinch up the old apple sacks and face reality. It’s over.

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Josh Hamilton for Edinson Volquez: Three Years In, More Questions Than Ever

July 14, 2008. A night for the history books.

A night for redemption.

In the 2008 Home Run Derby, Hamilton’s escape from darkness seemed to come full circle. Once a high school baseball legend, touted as the best prospect ever, a series of unfortunate events sent Hamilton headlong into a drug-laced wasteland. For three years Hamilton was banished from baseball, alone with his addiction, at the mercy of powers even he couldn’t match.

Yet, miraculously, unthinkably, Hamilton pulled himself from the depths of his own personal hell, launching a crusade that would defy all odds.

It was Hamilton’s first season as a full-time Major Leaguer and there he was, unleashing a flurry of first round moon-shots into the upper decks of America’s most storied baseball monuments.

An assault on The House that Ruth Built, by a man whose every move screamed Mantle.

At one point Hamilton connected on 13 straight, serving notice to the world that if this could happen then, well, anything is possible.

Before an electric New York crowd, in historic Yankee Stadium’s final season, Josh Hamilton stood toe to toe with his demons. With every gargantuan home run, he sawed his way through the record books. With every passing moment, his story became American folk tale. And with every effortless, textbook swing, followed by a carefree smile, Reds fans everywhere wondered the same thing:

“How the *&$# did we let this guy get away??”

As a Cincinnati fan, watching Josh Hamilton as a Red was one of the high points of the decade. Out of nowhere, we had a guy who everyone was talking about; a guy who played like every little leaguer dreams they will.

His natural power was undeniable. His swing was flawless. He patrolled the outfield as if he’d never missed a day in his life, as if he was born on a baseball diamond. He made veterans Ken Griffey Jr and Adam Dunn look like geriatric rhinos, and smiled the whole time. For the first time in years, we had someone to get excited about.

Then, just like that, he was gone.

On December 21, 2007, I got a text from my friend and fellow Reds Nation compatriot, one that will forever burn in my memory.

“We traded Hamilton. Some guy named Volquez. Shoot me.”

At first blush, I was incredulous. Hamilton was a diamond in the rough, a five-tool guy who actually performed. In other words, he was the anti-Red.

Volquez, on the other hand, was known to be erratic and undisciplined, and paired his immaturity with pedestrian numbers.

In short, we lost. We lost BIG.

If it all ended there, it wouldn’t be much of a story. Sure, Hamilton’s recovery from addiction has been nothing short of remarkable. However, baseball-wise, lopsided trades happen all the time. Or, often great players are traded for prospects, and tracking the development and/or outcome of the deal is a process occurring over many seasons. By the time the youngsters begin to blossom, the “stars” are often on their way out.

That’s what was so compelling about the Hamilton deal. Rarely do you see a one-for-one trade of players who are not only expected to start, but also LEAD their new team. A baseball marketplace used to seeing “win-now” exchanged for “maybe later,” the Hamilton-Volquez deal was unique. And, almost immediately, it took on a life of its own.

Hamilton won the American League Player of the Month award two months straight. Volquez, meanwhile, spent April and May wracking up nine wins, 83 strikeouts and a head-turning 1.46 ERA. Both players were selected to the All-Star Game, and as they descended on New York it seemed apparent to all that this deal was a rare “win-win.”

Then, in 2009, things began to unravel.

Following his breakout 17-win campaign, Volquez pitched just nine games in 2009, slowed by elbow pain that would eventually lead to season-ending Tommy John surgery.

Hamilton’s year was just as disappointing.

Hindered by a laundry list of injuries ranging from a bruised rib cage, to abdominal and groin strains, to lower back soreness, Hamilton endured two DL stints and played in only 89 games. His year-end statistics (.268 BA, 10 HR, 54 RBI) left much to be desired, and many began to question his body’s ability to fully recover from the wreckage it once was.

Just as the national media were quick to celebrate the deal in ‘08, a dismal 2009 sent it reeling into obscurity.

Volquez? Done. Hamilton? Damaged goods. And, for as much as the pendulum of gain had swung first to the Rangers and then back to the Reds, simultaneous injury-marred seasons saw it settle quietly back at center.

However, those that wish to size up the Hamilton-for-Volquez deal three years later undoubtedly will point to what happened next as the decisive measure.

As Volquez used the first portion of the 2010 season to complete his Tommy John recovery (amidst public embarrassment surrounding a controlled substance infraction wherein he claims to have ingested his wife’s fertility drugs), Hamilton began putting together his best year as a pro. 

After starting slow, the Texas center fielder caught fire in June, ending the season batting an unheard of .359, en route to an MVP season and an improbable World Series run.

Again, if the story were to end there, crowning a winner of the 2007 trade would be an elementary task. While Hamilton accumulated hardware, Volquez toiled in rehab, ultimately ending his season by completely bombing in the Reds’ first postseason game in 15 years.

Rangers: 1, Reds: Puke.

Yet, somehow, remarkably, “Volquez/Hamilton” seems to be the debate that just won’t go away.

Today, Hamilton resides (again) in the training room, the victim of a botched slide at the end of a fractured play. Another freak accident, to be sure, but further evidence that there’s only so much strain a drug-worn body can endure.

Volquez, on the other hand, pitches every fifth night for the Reds and has been as maddening as ever. Pairing consistent, inexcusable wildness with moments of absolute brilliance, Volquez’ starts play out like violent, unpredictable concertos. While many pitchers vary in their effectiveness from game to game, Volquez trades Jekyll with Hyde nearly every inning.

In a way, we are back to square one with these two. Sure, Hamilton has made the journey to the World Series and collected the most prestigious award along the way. But, with both players under 30 (Hamilton turns 30 this year, Volquez turns 28), one would have to think that the debate has only just begun.

Questions remain about Hamilton’s overall constitution. At nearly 30 years of age, he’s played more than 133 games in only one season. When does “injury-prone” cease to be a stigma and become a realistic concern?

Likewise, with only one healthy Major League season under his belt (and routinely touching 97 on the gun), Volquez’ prospects for long-term success remain a mystery.

It is entirely possible that over the next several years, one player will distance himself from the other. If Hamilton gets healthy and stays that way, few would deny that he is an elite player, and a perennial MVP candidate.

Volquez, on the other hand, has much left to prove. Yet, he is also two years Hamilton’s junior, and those two years could prove crucial in his development. Bottom line? Ask any Reds fan: to watch Volquez when he is “on” is to witness a savant at work. When at the top of his game, there are few better.

It’s been nearly three years since Hamilton’s firework display in New York City. The feeling in the air that night, the transcendence of history, they were palpable. To this day, it’s a night I remember well. There’s no question that Hamilton became an icon that night, and there is little doubting the remorse that rippled through Cincinnati.

Still, most Cincy fans will tell you that we haven’t seen the best of Edinson Volquez. We’re hopeful he’ll harness his rocket arm. We’re hopeful he’ll learn to pitch, not just throw. And, we’re hopeful both will happen soon.

Until that time, as Hamilton battles back yet again, let the debate rage on.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Cincinnati Reds: 5 Burning Questions Following Opening Weekend

Simply put, it’s a good time to be a Reds fan.

Can anyone remember a better Opening Weekend than the one we just witnessed? Short of a no-hitter or someone hitting for the cycle, the last three Reds games took us on all-stops tour of baseball delicacy, somehow managing to deliver us home safely on Sunday, happy and full.

Between Ramon Hernandez’ walk-off homer on Opening Day, to Travis Wood serving notice to the baseball community on Saturday(“Yo…I’m pretty FREAKING good.”), to Sunday’s lopsided artillery display Sunday(the Reds pounded out 12 runs on 19 hits), the weekend’s action was as diverse as it was satisfying.

While it’s obviously true that three games are, well, JUST three games, we’d be remiss as baseball fanatics if we didn’t break from recharging our batteries to take a quick inventory.

Here are a few questions to ponder as we await the Houston series…

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