| QUOTE (Edgar For Mayor @ Oct 30 2007, 12:57 PM) |
| Kyankgrrl....A-Rod in no longer a Yankee...time to change the old sig. |
| QUOTE |
| Heading to market this winter are Jeremy Affeldt, Elmer Dessens, Josh Fogg, LaTroy Hawkins (option), Matt Herges, Jorge Julio, Rodrigo Lopez, Kaz Matsui (unless he's signed to an extension), Ramon Ortiz, Mark Redman and Yorvit Torrealba. Colorado catchers in 2007 combined to hit just .240 AVG/.320 OBP/.364 SLG, so that's a concern going forward. The hope is that 24-year-old Chris Iannetta will be ready to produce at the highest level. Even in his struggles this past season, Iannetta was as useful as Torrealba at the plate, so letting the latter walk won't measurably hurt the team. As for Matsui, Colorado doesn't have any in-house options, and there's not much to be found among the ranks of free agents (Luis Castillo is perhaps the least unappealing possibility). So bringing back their incumbent second baseman is likely the wisest tack. In the rotation, Ubaldo Jimenez and Franklin Morales are ready for permanent roles. There's no reason to bring Fogg back, what with Jason Hirsh set to be healthy. Provided he and Aaron Cook stay off the disabled list, the Rockies' rotation could be one of the best in the NL. As for the bullpen, it's going to take some work. Affeldt, Hawkins and Herges combined for 163 innings and a 3.31 ERA. That's a lot of quality relief to replace. The Rox should certainly re-sign the 28-year-old Affeldt, and Herges can probably be brought back on the cheap. Hawkins thrived this season because he posted an inordinately high groundball-fly ball ratio — one that was wildly out of step with the rest of his career. As such, he's a prime candidate to regress in 2007, so it's perhaps wise to let some other team pay his tab. To replace his innings, the Rockies can turn to youngster Juan Morillo, who should be ready. For both teams, it's mostly a matter of locking down talent already in place and making a few tweaks at the margins. So the Red Sox and Rockies can likely return to the postseason without spending wildly this winter. Boston, of course, must fend off the Yankees once again, and the Rockies toil in what's becoming baseball's toughest division. However, the talent in both cities is in place to make 2008 as memorable as 2007. |