-The Angels may have just looked at strike three. Rumors had the Rangers, not their division rival Angels, getting third baseman Adrian Beltre in a big multiyear deal. According to the same rumors, however, Monday and Sunday were two very different days in these negotiations. Now they appear to be much farther away from a deal than was originally thought. Folks, this one could take a while.
-The Rangers signed Brandon Webb, meaning the Cubs didn't. However, the search for veteran middle-of-the-rotation starters continues for the Cubbies, as this is possibly our biggest need remaining.
-The Pirates signed Garrett Atkins. Now I know I trashed Pittsburgh's signing of Lyle Overbay a couple weeks ago, but this makes things interesting. If they could get a sample of the production Atkins used to come up for Colorado, Atkins and Overbay could be an effective combo. It's a shame to see two formerly great veterans struggle to fall out of relevance like they have, but that's baseball and they should be glad to have a new opportunity in the Steel City.
-In today's biggest news, the Rockies gave Carlos Gonzalez a big extension for 7 years and $80 million. The first thing that came to my mind was, wow, smart move by the Rockies. Then I wondered, wait, now they've signed two (Troy Tulowitzki) franchise players to huge extensions? That's nearly unheard of especially for a team like the Rockies who have signed big contracts (Todd Helton, Mike Hampton), but haven't done two in the same offseason. Also, I'm pretty sure the Rockies wanted this extension done right now before he has another elite season because his stock will raise and he would probably demand more by then. As far as contract extensions go, the Rockies successfully pulled off a nice little, but huge, budget shopping deal.
-The Padres signed Brad Hawpe. This may be surprising based on his high strikeout totals and somewhat funky batting stance and swing, but Hawpe, until 2010, has been a great average hitter his whole career. Also, excluding 2010 again, he has been very consistent in the power numbers. Somewhere in the mid-20s in his homer range and mid-80s in his runs batted in range.
-The Blue Jays signed Chad Cordero, a name you may have forgotten. Cordero was an elite reliever from 2004-2007 closing games from 2005 onward and could arguably be called the best player during the Nationals' three-year stay at RFK Stadium. When the Nats moved to Nationals Park in 2008, he sort of was left behind. A surgery and recovery complications limited him since and he has not been good at all in the very limited time he has pitched in the last three years. The Blue Jays, watching their division improve around them, need to stack up as many moves as they can to keep up. This is a good piece to the puzzle.
-The Jays didn't stop there, getting the veteran reliever Octavio Dotel in a free agent signing as well. Besides being one of the most overrated players on the video game series MLB: The Show, Dotel is 36 and didn't have a great 2010 between three teams. Interestingly though, Dotel still has the strikeout stuff that made his career owning a career 10.9 K/9 ratio. In 2010, that ratio was 10.5 K/9, just a tick below. Remember the Jays lost elite setup man Scott Downs in free agency, but could have a short term replacement right here.
-The Reds signed a
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