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Former pitcher Frank Castillo dead at 44

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Former MLB pitcher Frank Castillo passed away after drowning while swimming in a lake near Phoenix, Ariz., on Sunday, his family announced (via the Chicago Tribune). He was 44.

Castillo pitched in the big leagues for 13 seasons, last for the Florida Marlins in 2005. He posted a 4.56 ERA in 297 career appearances, most of which came with the Chicago Cubs in the early- to mid-1990s. Castillo also pitched for the Colorado Rockies, Detroit Tigers, Toronto Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox.

Castillo's former Cubs teammate Brian McRae was somber about the news in an interview with the Chicago Tribune:

"You don't expect to see your teammates' name on the bottom scroll of ESPN saying he drowned at 44 years old. Frank was a quiet guy, didn't say a whole lot. I hung out with him a lot, so I knew him at a different level than some others. He just went about his business and got the most out his ability, spent parts of 13 years in the big leagues and had some success - a good dude and a good teammate."

Castillo is the third member of the Cubs' 1997 squad to pass away. Kevin Foster died in 2008 after a six-month battle with renal cell carcinoma, and Geremi Gonzalez also passed away that year as a result of being struck by lightning.

The Cubs and Red Sox held a moment of silence in his honor prior to their games on Monday.

More from SB Nation:

Yasiel Puig hits first career walk-off homer

Phillies sign Cuban RHP Miguel Alfredo Gonzalez

Albert Pujols out for up to a year

Minor League Ball: Early 2014 draft rankings

Yankees ownership overruled Cashman on Soriano trade


Tuesday BBB Links: Thorough Shellacking Edition

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Just another typical game where the Jays fall way behind early and are never really in it. Yawn.

JAYS LINKS

Toronto Blue Jays at Oakland Athletics - July 29, 2013 | MLB.com TOR Recap
3 homers does not a win make.

Are Jays getting screwed by umps? Yes and no - Sportsnet.ca

"The Jays have had their share of run-ins with umps of late and a study of the strike zone over recent seasons conducted by sportsnet.ca and Bloomberg Sports shows there's been reason to be upset."

Stoeten Answers Griffin’s Mail Bag – 07/29/13 | Drunk Jays Fans | Blogs | theScore.com
I think you all know how this one works by now

Blue Jays’ Rajai Davis unworried about running for a rival | National Post
" His manager says Rajai Davis is unstoppable on the base paths. Rival clubs probably have noticed too"

MLB: Blue Jays’ grays are worst performing uniforms in baseball | Toronto Star
The Star is slow on the uptake.

Edwin Encarnacion Is Not Your Typical Slugger | FanGraphs Baseball
Blake gives an account of the no-K, all Dingers type hitter Encarnacion has become for Fangraphs.

AL EAST LINKS

Orioles trade rumors: Dylan Bundy said to be available, but he probably isn't - Camden Chat
'Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports reports that the Orioles are "willing to move"Dylan Bundy for "the right return" at the MLB trade deadline. Is he really going to go anywhere? Probably not.'

Confessions of an A-Rod sympathizer - Pinstriped Bible
"If Alex Rodriguez is history's greatest monster, then I can't be too far behind"

CC Sabathia, Justin Verlander, and the ever-vanishing fastball - SBNation.com
"Are Sabathia and Verlander breaking, or has access to information just clouded our judgment?"

Rays Land Jesse Crain for Something | FanGraphs Baseball
The Rays aren't normally ones to pay for bullpen talent, but boy did they need some. Good pick up

Orioles GIFs of the Week - Camden Chat
"Another week. Games were played. GIFs were made. Some of the GIFs were of the Orioles."

THE REST OF THE BASEBALL UNIVERSE LINKS

MLB Trade Deadline: Are the Phillies being stubborn with Cliff Lee? - Baseball Nation
"The Phillies are asking for a lot for the veteran left-hander. Are they asking for too much?"

Stock Watch: Pence boosts OF deadline market; Peavy price rises - CBSSports.com
"With the Giants in full sell mode, Jon Heyman says 2012 deadline pickup Hunter Pence is a find in a thin OF market. Meanwhile many suitors see starter Jake Peavy's price rise."

Tigers Acquire Jose Veras | FanGraphs Baseball
Thought they would have been a nice landing spot for Casey...

Rangers Think About Buying While Selling | FanGraphs Baseball
Interesting/excellent idea on the Rangers' part.

Braves Acquire Scott Downs For Basically Nothing | FanGraphs Baseball
Hey! Cory Rasmus ain't nothing. He's a Rasmus boy.

NON-BASEBALL LINK OF THE DAY

Dune May Doom "Star Wars" Set
"Scientists say a fast-moving sand dune will soon bury a set built for Star Wars: The Phantom Menace in the Tunisian desert." Noooooooo

SaberSphere 7/30: Trade Deadline, Josh Gibson, & CC Sabathia

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Tuesday's SaberSphere has everything you want to know from the last few days in the baseball world.

Previously on Beyond the Box Score

It's no secret, the Yankees"ace" has been subpar, verging on bad, in his recent outings. Sabathia has been a workhorse for the Yankees, but if they have any chance of pushing into the playoffs, it will revolve around Sabathia and fellow righty Hiroki Kuroda. Alex gives us the skinny on Sabathia from a PITCHf/x point of view.

The trade deadline is this Wednesday, and with names flying all over the SaberSphere, as well as other internet-based mediums of baseball news and knowledge, it's important not to get too flustered trying to comprehend each move made. That's where Ken picks things up, giving us a clean look at who switched teams yesterday, how it happened, and most importantly why the deal got done.

Speaking of the trade deadline, the last week in July allows for more speculation across the baseball world than at any other time throughout the year. Some speculation comes with the added bonus of legitimate knowledge, but not all. The Cubs have proven busy recently, getting deals done many days prior to the deadline, but does that mean they're done? If not, who could be the next piece to fall?

Around the Sabersphere

For those of you who know Blake from BTBS, he's now writing for Fangraphs as well, and he never stops putting out solid content. In this short yet poignant piece, Blake looks into Edwin Encarnacion, the former Red and now Blue Jays slugger, who has had quite the impressive season, for last place Toronto in the AL East.

Baseball Prospectus likes to put themselves in the shoes of others, and rarely has it not turned into a great series or singular article. The site's series of mock arbitration hearings alone should pull you towards reading a piece like this one in which the staff divvies up parts in the play that is the trade deadline, and attempts to make a deal for White Sox pitcher Jake Peavy.

Remember the many articles written about Tommy Hanson, the once well thought of righty for the Braves, concerning a mechanical failure that led to a scary drop in velocity. It turned out that his performance suffered, but according to Kyle, things may be changing for Hanson, and this time in a more positive direction.

Around SB Nation

MLB Network remains fairly green in the grand scheme of sports coverage, but due to their vast resources the channel has kept baseball fans informed on all aspects of news, and has even dipped into the Sabermetrics of the game from time to time. In this piece, Steve looks at how the network covers the trade deadline, maybe it's more of a frenzy there than in front offices.

Josh Gibson was one of the best baseball players ever. Rob and his friends made a stop in Pittsburgh to see the great catcher's grave, pay homage, and obligatorily discuss the what-ifs involved in Gibson never playing in the Major Leagues due to his race. Rob picks up the story from there.

Trades, especially at this time of the year, often involve a veteran going one way and young prospect going another. The Royals are no strangers to such deals, having made a significant one this past offseason. With the team still struggling to play even above .500, Clark take a look at the idea of trading prospects from a Royals point of view.

Outside the Sabersphere

·Airports are the Next Big Battleground in the Sharing Economy by Tomio Geron – Forbes.com

Everyone takes planes, and that inevitably brings about the question of getting to and from the airport. Options include public transit, asking a friend to drive you, or maybe driving yourself. Also important is how one is to get around having arrived at one’s destination. Rental car companies are an important business, and prove a necessary service. What’s the future hold for them?

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Alex Rodriguez tops the Pat Gillick All-Stars

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Last week I took Bill James' old idea of doing All-Star teams for managers -- essentially a position by position greatest hits -- and applied it to Royals general manager Dayton Moore. The results were predictably depressing. This time out, we head to the other end of the spectrum with the Hall of Fame general manager Pat Gillick. A winner of World Series rings with the Blue Jays and Phillies, he also had notable stops with the Orioles and Mariners. Gillick was notable for building deep offensive teams that didn't take a lot for granted -- if a hitter was weak against same-side pitching, he found him a platoon partner rather than live with it.

Gillick's World Series-winning Blue Jays were that organization's last postseason teams; his 2001 Mariners won 116 games and were that organization's most recent postseason team; his 1996 and 1997 Orioles were the last postseason teams before a 15-year hiatus.

Gillick had a few bad teams, but rarely tolerated bad players. His teams were so good that his All-Star team is hardly representative; we could do second- and third-string teams that would stand a fair chance of reaching the postseason.

Want more on the Blue JaysOriolesMariners andPhillies? We've got that!

A note on the selections: One criticism of the Moore team was that I credited him for players he inherited from previous general managers. It seems to me that, while acknowledging certain restrictions such as long-term deals and no-trade clauses, a general manager should get credit for a player being on his team. Perhaps a previous general manager drafted and developed a player, or acquired him in trade, but the succeeding general manager should get credit for not acting. Choosing to do nothing and keep a player is a choice, even if doing so is blindingly obvious. There are players whose contracts are so onerous, out of line with the player's actual value, or restrictive, that trading them is virtually impossible, but such contracts are more the exception than the rule. As such, it seems to me that the right thing to do is to say that in almost all cases if a player is on a team it's because the GM wanted him there and didn't package him in a deal for Ken Phelps.

The only thing we can't control for is mad owners -- were I to do a Brian Cashman All-Star team (and I might) -- it could be legitimately argued that this authority is so muddled by overly intrusive ownership and upper management that it is very hard to know which deals really reflect his input and which do not. To some extent this is a problem with all general managers in the same sense that the auteur theory of film directing fails to account for the factory style of filmmaking in the first half of the 20th century. As with the directors, the hope is that as we do more of these All-Star teams a distinctive style emerges for each GM.

Pos

Player

Year

G

R

HR

RBI

BB

SB

AVG/OBP/SLG

WAR

C

Ernie Whitt

1983

123

53

17

56

50

1

.256/.346/.459

3.4

1B

John Olerud

1993

158

109

24

107

114

0

.363/.473/.599

7.8

2B

Chase Utley

2008

159

113

33

104

64

14

.292/.380/.535

9.0

3B

Kelly Gruber

1988

158

75

16

81

38

23

.278/.328/.438

5.2

SS

Alex Rodriguez

2000

148

134

41

132

100

15

.316/.420/.606

10.3

LF

George Bell

1987

156

111

47

134

39

5

.308/.352/.605

5.0

CF

Lloyd Moseby

1984

158

97

18

92

78

39

.280/.368/.470

7.3

RF

Ichiro Suzuki

2001

157

127

8

69

30

56

.350/.381/.457

7.7

DH

Paul Molitor

1993

160

121

22

111

77

22

.332/.402/.509

5.7

Still popular in Toronto, Ernie Whitt was a late-bloomer who was an excellent platoon player from age 31 through 37. Olerud was never as good again as he was in 1993, but he was a tremendous hitter who came closer to being a Hall of Fame-level talent than was generally acknowledged at the time. Gruber was a flash-in-the-pan who had about three good years, and I'm disappointed I can't list longtime Toronto platoon third baseman Rance Mulliniks here. Moseby, another Toronto player, was one of the best all-around outfielders in the game for a brief period before injuries wore away his skills.

If you want to make a completely different team that is nearly as good as this one, you can swap out Olerud for Fred McGriff, Utley for Brett Boone or Roberto Alomar, A-Rod for Jimmy Rollins, Moseby for Devon White, Suzuki for Jesse Barfield, and Molitor for Edgar Martinez.

Pitcher

Year

W-L

SV

IP

H

BB

SO

ERA

WAR

SP Dave Stieb

1984

16-8

0

267.0

215

88

198

2.83

7.9

SP Jimmy Key

1987

17-8

0

261.0

210

66

161

2.76

7.4

SP Doyle Alexander

1984

17-6

0

261.2

238

59

139

3.13

6.1

SP Jamie Moyer

2002

13-8

0

230.2

198

50

147

3.32

5.6

SP Mike Mussina

1997

15-8

0

224.2

197

54

218

3.20

5.5

RP Mark Eichorn

1986

14-6

10

157.0

105

45

166

1.72

7.4

Gillick had more traditional closers, such as Tom Henke, but Eichorn had one of the great single-season relief performances of all time in 1986. On a similar note, the season by Dave Stieb listed here is one of four seasons he had that vastly exceeded anything Jack Morris accomplished in one year.

Since Gillick has retired, this team is more of a retrospective exercise than the Moore team was, but I thought it would be instructive to see what the best a contemporary GM could offer would look like. Gillick had a great deal of speed and power without making a fetish of either. If there is a Gillick style, it might be the flexibility to accept excellence regardless of the form in which it came.

Next time: The Brian Sabean All-Stars.

More from SB Nation:

Yasiel Puig hits first career walk-off homer

Phillies sign Cuban RHP Miguel Alfredo Gonzalez

Albert Pujols out for up to a year

Minor League Ball: Early 2014 draft rankings

Yankees ownership overruled Cashman on Soriano trade

Blue Jays trade rumors: Emilio Bonifacio, Melky Cabrera on the block

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The Toronto Blue Jays have been quiet to this point on the trade market, but might look to sell a couple of veterans within the next 24 hours. According to Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports.com, the most likely Jay to be dealt is Emilio Bonifacio, and Bob Nightengale of USA Today says that the team is also looking to move Melky Cabrera.

Bonifacio is hitting .214 with 2 HR and 15 RBI in 84 games on the year, and is under team control through next season. The 28-year old's speed and versatility may make him attractive to teams looking for a bench player on the trade market. The Royals are known to be looking for a second baseman, but have their sights set on higher-level players than Bonifacio.

Cabrera may be suspended due to his connection to the Biogenesis scandal, so he is unlikely to be attractive to teams. The 28-year old has hit .281 with 3 HR and 30 RBI in 86 games on the year.

The Blue Jays are unlikely to move pending free agent Josh Johnson due to his poor performance so far this season and perceived low value. Big bats Edwin Encarnacion and Jose Bautista have drawn interest from teams like the Rangers, but Toronto has yet to indicate interest in moving either.

In terms of adding players, the Jays have been linked to Bud Norris, but do not appear to be involved anymore. They could look to add a starter before the clock strikes 4 tomorrow.

More from MLB Daily Dish:

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St. Louis Cardinals trade Marc Rzepczynski for Indians shortstop Juan Herrera

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For those of us who were dumbfounded, at the time, by the Colby Rasmus trade, Marc Rzepczynski was basically the only consolation on offer. He’d struck out a batter an inning (in the DH league!) as a starter, and while the St. Louis Cardinals seemed to have no interest in returning him to the rotation after a half-season as the Blue Jays’ lefty reliever, the very possibility of it was the only long-term benefit the Cardinals stood to gain from the deal.

Turns out, maybe, that we were too optimistic about Rzepczynski and not optimistic enough about Octavio Dotel. Rzepczynski’s struggled to succeed even in relief ever since, and on Tuesday the best the Cardinals could do in trade for their erstwhile Rasmus ballast was Juan Herrera, a 20-year-old shortstop who should make his full-season debut next year.

Let’s Go Tribe, at a glance, doesn’t seem too worried by it, but if he's a real shortstop Herrera is a perfectly fine return for a malfunctioning reliever—good plate discipline, non-zero power, a smooth transition out of the Dominican Summer League. (Here's Future Redbirds' quick take on it.) That said, he’s a more impressive season—and some kind of calling card—removed from appearing on the average Top 20 list. (The Cardinals have a high-contact, low-power, 20-year-old middle infielder of their own, Breyvic Valera, currently manning second in Peoria.)

This is just the nature of relievers—and what makes a career like Randy Choate’s so unusual. If Rzepczynski had been a starter all this time his decline would have played out in the open, in Lance-Lynn-sized rotation-controversy bursts. Instead it was hidden inside increasingly brief, increasingly rare appearances, and perfunctory demotions to Memphis. He could well have something left, but the Cardinals were never going to be in a position to figure that out.

Melky Cabrera not in the Blue Jays starting lineup and here's the reason why

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Melky Cabrera is not in the Blue Jays starting lineup and here's the reason why: HE CANNOT RUN. Or he's being traded, but I don't think anyone would want him, really. He looked pretty pathetic jogging after a Yoenis Cespedes gapper last night, turning it into a triple. If he keeps looking as bad as he did last night, the Jays might be served best placing him on the disabled list for a while. Maybe they'll do that when (or if?) they activate Sergio Santos (deadline to decide whether to activate him is this Friday, I believe).

Lineup

  1. Jose Reyes SS
  2. Maicer Izturis 2B
  3. Jose Bautista RF
  4. Edwin Encarnacion 1B
  5. Adam Lind DH
  6. Colby Rasmus CF
  7. J.P. Arencibia C
  8. Brett Lawrie 3B
  9. Emilio Bonifacio LF

Maicer Izturis will be batting in the second spot, something that he hadn't done all year even though he was slotted there 13 times last season. Izturis has really turned it around since his horrid start. Arbitrarily, since June 1 he is hitting .275/.337/.356. Not what one would want to see from a second hitter, but meh, the Blue Jays have better things to worry about. It's really too bad that John Gibbons has ended is experiment with batting Jose Bautista second.

Emilio Bonifacio emerges from the woods and will be making his first start since the last game against the Orioles before the All-Star Break, earning it after batting 1.000/1.000/1.500 since the break in two at bats. According to Ken Rosenthal, the Blue Jays are trying to move him, although I have no idea what kind of player they will get back. Probably a small amount of cash, or a fictional low-A player.

Adam Lind is still DHing, which may hint that his back is still problematic. Not playing the field allows Lind to do things like work on his best Gibby-hand-in-pants impression. (Protip: leave pants fastened)

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Only Edwin Encarnacion, Brett Lawrie, and Colby Rasmus have faced Athletics starter Dan Straily.

Game starts at 10 pm Eastern. Let's see if it'll make me go to bed by 11.

Bud Norris trade rumors: Diamondbacks, Pirates, Orioles interested with deadline looming

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After being scratched from his start for the Houston Astros today, right-hander Bud Norris is waiting in limbo to see what his future holds. According to Brian McTaggart of MLB.com, the Diamondbacks, Pirates and Orioles are all involved in trying to acquire him.

A deal involving Norris to the Pirates was speculated as a strong possibility as of this morning, but the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Bill Brink now says that it is unlikely. The Pirates are relatively content with their current rotation, and have not been big players for Matt Garza or Jake Peavy.

MASN's Roch Kubatko reports that the Orioles are still trying to work out a deal for Norris, but that the Astros' price on Norris remains high. Jason Vargas is another possibility for the O's, and Kubatko says that the pair are two of the most likely targets for Baltimore to pursue. As of this morning, the Orioles had not made an offer for Norris, but were still interested.

The D-Backs are known to be one of the frontrunners in the Jake Peavy sweepstakes, and are also actively shoppingpitcher Ian Kennedy. While Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports.com reports that he is getting "mixed signals" on the team's interest in Norris, I speculate that the team may view the Astros' hurler as a backup plan in case they are unable to meet the White Sox' high price for Peavy.

As I wrote this morning, the Red Sox, Braves, Phillies, Giants, Dodgers and Blue Jays have also shown interest in Norris over the last few weeks. Atlanta is reportedly no longer involved and the Phillies have resorted to selling, so those teams can be ruled out. San Francisco, Boston, Toronto and Los Angeles may swoop in late and nab Norris if the three leaders are unable to meet Houston's demands.

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Blue Jays 5 A's 0: Jose Bautista and Emilio Bonifacio homer

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Blue Jays 5 A's 0

That was a lot more fun.

I'm having internet connection troubles at my hotel so this will be short.

Jose Bautista homered in the top of the first and we decided to enjoy the lead, because it might be short lived. But then, Mark Buehrle pitched great. 7 innings, just 5 hits, no walks with 2 strikeouts. He is so much run when he is on. Get the ball, throw the pitch. He didn't give up an extra base hit and only once did a runner get to scoring position.

Steve Delabar came in to pitch the 8th and struck out the side on 9 pitches. Man that was fun. He's the first Blue Jay ever to do that and just the 48th pitcher in MLB history.

Darren Oliver pitched the 9th and, of course, had to give us some drama. Jed Lowrie doubled and Yoenes Cespedes beat out an infield single. Or at least the first base umpire said he did, I thought he was out, and I had a much better view from my seat on the third base side than the umpire did. That got Casey Janssen warming up in the pen. But, Brett Lawrie started a great 6-4-3 double play and Oliver got another ground ball to short to end the game.

On offense, we got our second run in the 4th off consecutive singles from Edwin Encarnacion, Adam Lind and Colby Rasmus.

Emilio Bonifacio started the 5th inning with a home run, and the Jays took advantage of a Adam Rosales error to help themselves to two more runs. Nice to see the other team have troubles for a change.

Jays of the Day are Buehrle (.263 WPA) and Rasmus (.125). I'm going to give an honorable mention to Bautista and Bonifacio.

If you ever go to a game in Oakland, bring a warm coat, it is cold here in the evenings.

MLB trade rumors: Tigers, Blue Jays talk relief pitchers

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The Tigers have checked with the Blue Jays about relief pitchers, according to Danny Knobler CBS Sports. No details beyond that were given.

If it's left-handers the Tigers are interested in -- they checked with the Giants about Javier Lopez, though his asking price is said to be pretty high -- Darren Oliver is the likely target with the Jays. He's pitched in the postseason during seven of his years, appearing in 13 series.

He is now age 42, in his 20th year in the league, and with his ninth club. He spent half his career in Texas and has been with the Jays since last season. Batters are hitting .252/.314/.763 off him this year. He's no LOOGY, though. He's been especially though on righties, who have a .171/.256/.263 slash line, exactly opposite of what you might have expected. Strangely left-handers are hitting like Babe Ruth off him. The opposite split has been routine for Oliver the past few years, though never as dramatic. (In fact, I keep looking at it over and over, convinced I'm messing something up here.)

The Blue Jays are 14.5 games out of first in the AL East, a disappointing year for the club after it went so hard after the playoffs in making moves this offseason. However, they're not expected to be heavy sellers. Outside of possibly moving Oliver and two position players, they may not even make a move, TSN reported earlier in the week.

GM Alex Anthopoulos told TSN:

"We do have depth, and that is an area that we can afford to trade a reliever and still be fine," he said Wednesday. "We're not close to doing anything. As I sit here today I don't think we're trading a reliever. The only free agent in that group is Darren Oliver. So any reliever deal, it can happen now or we can take it into the off-season and make a deal there. I wouldn't rule it out because of that depth."

Brett Cecil and Steve Delabar were both All-Stars this year. But Aaron Loup, Casey Janssen and Juan Perez all have had great seasons as well. Still, there's no reason the Jays need to make a move, making it hard to see any of their names come up.

Anthopoulos told TSN it's hard to make a deal for a reliever:

"By themselves, a team needs a reliever but the flip side (is), 'Well, I only want to pay so much to get a guy (to) pitch 40 innings, especially for the last two months,"' he said. "And it's so difficult to equate just on a one-on-one deal, and that's why it's easier to make them part of a larger deal."

With the deadline under an hour away, we'll know soon whether or not the teams found a deal to agree on.

More Roars

Trade deadline 2013 coverage

Tigers GIFS | On Twitter:@TigersGIFS

Tigers minor league scores and coverage

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Orioles acquire Bud Norris from Astros

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The Baltimore Orioles have acquired right-hander Bud Norris and $213,000 in international signing bonus money from the Houston Astros in exchange for outfielder L.J. Hoes, left-handed pitcher Josh Hader, and a competitive balance draft pick, according to an announcement from the league.

Norris, 28, has been one of the hottest names on the pitching market in recent weeks, drawing interest from the Diamondbacks, Braves, Pirates, Blue Jays, Red Sox, Giants and Rangers.

He is the third pitcher that the O's have acquired this month, joining starter Scott Feldman and reliever Francisco Rodriguez. In 21 starts on the season, Norris is 6-9 with a 3.93 ERA, 6.4 K/9, and 3.1 BB/9.

He is under team control through the 2015 season, and should be a solid piece in the middle of Baltimore's rotation.

Hoes, 23, was ranked by Baseball America as Orioles' sixth best prospect prior to the season. The left-fielder has spent the season with Triple-A Norfolk, hitting .304 with 3 HR and 40 RBI in 99 games, and was recently called up to the majors. The 2008 3rd round pick is known for his ability to hit for average and run well, and will likely join the Astros in the major leagues immediately.

Hader, 19, is considered to be the prize of the package for the Astros. After being thought of as a steal in the 19th round of last year's draft by the Orioles, he has pitched to a 3-6 record and 2.65 ERA in 17 starts with Single-A Delmarva on the season. The Baltimore native is known as a high-ceiling young pitcher who throws his fastball in the 89-93 mph range and has good command of his curveball, slider and changeup. He joins an Astros system filled with promising young arms that have been acquired in trades for veterans.

By bolstering their pitching staff with the additions of Feldman, Norris and Rodriguez, the Orioles have signaled to the baseball world that they are going to be aggressive in their playoff push this year. The team gave up two of their top six prospects to make deals this month, and hope that the their three new pitchers will be worth it down the stretch.

The Astros, who were expected to be busy at the deadline, only moved Norris and outfielder Justin Maxwell on Wednesday. By acquiring two young high-ceiling prospects like Hoes and Hader, they are able to continue their rebuilding process as they look towards contending sometime in the near future.

Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports first reported that the two sides had reached an agreement for Hoes and a Competitive Balance pick (Twitterlinks). Dan Connolly of the Baltimore Sun reported that Hader was involved in the deal (on Twitter).

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What Does Grant Green Mean for the Angels?

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Going Green? Looks like the Angels got a good start.

In addition to drafting Hunter Green last month, Jerry Dipoto has flipped the oft-overlooked Alberto Callaspo to division rival Oakland in exchange for AAA infielder (and top prospect) Grant Green.

What does Green mean for the team?

Green is going to be under club control for six years. That means for him to be here, someone ELSE will have to go, unless he absolutely falls flat and rides pine until he's forgettably non-tendered.

Yeah, right.

Green is having a KILLER season thus far in AAA Sacramento. I took the liberty of adjusting his stats to Anaheim (thank you, Minor League Equivalency calculator) over the spread of 144 games (a full PCL season). Here's what it yielded:

641 AB, 89 R, 182 H, 39 2B, 4 3B, 14 HR, 67 RBI, 34 BB, 125 K, .284/.327/.422

Ladies and gentlemen, we have acquired a second Howie Kendrick, except this one is cheaper and under our control longer. Thus meaning the old model could very well be on his way out--but not necessarily.

I have heard Green compared to Ben Zobrist, in that he is versatile. He is capable of playing second base, shortstop and third base, and some have even hypothesized a first base move in his future if his power improves. But for now, let's examine what happens if Green cements himself at either 2B, SS or 3B:

IF GRANT GREEN GOES TO SECOND BASE

Howie Kendrick is a guarantee to be on the move. This winter, when teams throw briefcases of money at Robinson Cano and Chase Utley, Howie Kendrick will be the team-friendly alternative, and the Angels will be able to rake in the prospects. The Royals, Orioles, Blue Jays and Dodgers were all connected to him this deadline, and all could be players for him this offseason.

IF GRANT GREEN GOES TO SHORTSTOP

Kendrick stays, but Erick Aybar will be the hot commodity in trade talks. The shortstop market is almost perpetually thin both in free agency and in trade, so Aybar's availability will make demand for him EXTREMELY high. The Angels could be in position to demand a top prospect from any team he goes to. The Cardinals, Red Sox and even the Athletics once again could be in pursuit of Aybar, and names like Mike Wacha, Allen Webster and Sonny Gray (respectively to their teams) could ALL be in play.

IF GRANT GREEN GOES TO THIRD BASE

Then we are no longer sellers, and here is why: Kendrick and Aybar are more likely to stay. However, our top two minor league third basemen, Luis Jimenez and Kaleb Cowart, are blocked. Both become trade chips--and big ones. Grant Green at third base puts us in prime position to use the likes of Jimenez, Cowart and Cron to bag a top pitcher in trade. Green at third very likely puts us right back in buy mode. Rightfully so? Maybe not, as our system is still thin. However, Cowart becomes a very big trade chip, unless the team simply shifts Grant to shortstop or second base once Cowart is ready.

Poll
What position will Green play when he lands in Anaheim?

  428 votes |Results

Blue Jays Trade No One To Nowhere, Get Nothing

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In the interest of not burying the lede, the Blue Jays made no trades today at the deadline. There was a point where something gained traction that was never mentioned in the media, but it fell apart and never came back together.

Not all hope is lost though as there is still the possibility of waiver trades after the deadline and deals to be picked up and finished in the off-season:

As you can imagine, Alex Anthopoulos is intent on making trades to better this team before taking another run at the postseason next year:

The two areas that the team wanted to strengthen through trade, as expected, were the second base position and the starting rotation:

The issue of why no relievers were traded was brought up and Anthopoulos side stepped the question a bit and said the market was pretty quiet:

So there's another trade deadline in the books, a extremely quiet one on the Blue Jays front. Around the league, Baltimore acquired Bud Norris from Houston and the Padres traded for Ian Kennedy from Arizona. Aside from the Peavy three team-trade last night, not many game-changing players were moved leading to most contenders heading for the stretch run with the same pieces they had when they started the year.

How do you feel about the trade deadline for the Blue Jays?

Hat tip to Minor Leaguer for the title idea.

Poll
How do you feel about the Blue Jays lack of trades at the deadline?

  415 votes |Results

Recap: Sun not enough help, A's fall 5-2

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For once, this was a battle of the bullpens that the A's did not win. After R.A. Dickey and Bartolo Colon both racked up pretty significant pitch counts over each other's 6 innings, each team would trot out its relief corps to attempt to bring this one to the house. It wouldn't be the A's day, though, as after Ryan Cook, Sean Doolittle, and Grant Balfour pitched a perfect 7-8-9, Jesse Chavez and Jerry Blevins would combine to let the Blue Jays blow the game open in the 10th inning. Those three runs proved to be the difference.

On the starting side, Bartolo Colon clearly did not have his best stuff today. He uncharacteristically walked 3 batters, and seemed to be living in the mid-to-high 80s with his fastball all afternoon. Amazingly, however, he powered through 6 innings and continued his team record streak of going at least six innings and allowing 2 or fewer runs. He got through innings 1 and 2 with a single and double allowed, respectively, recording his only K to end the second. In the third, however, he would wriggle out of a second-and-third and one-out jam, almost literally. After a Brett Lawrie walk and Jose Reyes bunt single, Maicer Izturis sacrificed himself to move the runners over, and left the actual hitting to Jose Bautista. He would lineout sharply to Jed Lowrie for the second out. In stepped Edwin Encarnacion for the Jays, who laced a sure hit up the middle were it not for Colon's body. His deflection to Lowrie ended the inning and kept the game scoreless.

Again, were it not for some Yakety Sax Blue Jays moments today, the A's would have been shutout again. One of those happened in the third, when Eric Sogard would reach on a single. He would score on a massively airmailed throw by Bautista on a single by Lowrie, also sending Lowrie to third. Another moment came in the fifth, when Dickey simply let a ball drop, again putting Sogard on. I don't know how this works exactly - elf magic, something - but apparently Sogard's mere presence on the field makes defenders drop the ball. Perhaps it's his steely good looks. In either case, those distractions would bring him around to score again, as with Brandon Moss batting with two outs, Maicer Izturis dropped a routine pop up to tie the score at 2-all.

After that, the game ceased being amusing. The A's offense would be quieted by Dickey, Aaron Loup, and Steve Delabar. Their only real threat came in the eighth, when with one out, Josh Donaldson and Seth Smith would reach on Loup. Enter Delabar, the All-Star, who came on to strike out Chris Young and Stephen Vogt. Grant Balfour would come in to strike out the side in the 9th, and then left, leaving the horrible realization that the only guys left in the bullpen were the B team relievers. No matter, of course, as the A's would pie their way to victory in the bottom of the 9th.

Except they didn't. Casey Janssen came on for a 1-2-3 ninth inning to send this game to free baseball territory. And when it did, and Jesse Chavez came in, it was a quick end. A single and another passed ball by Vogt led to a run-scoring double by Bautista. After an IBB to Encarnacion, Jerry Blevins came in to give up a walk to Mark DeRosa and a bases-loaded single to Colby Rasmus to push the advantage to 5-2 Jays. The meringue pie that was this game's comeback hopes would collapse with the B team bullpen. Only Pat Neshek's quiet two outs would keep this game from being an embarrassment.

Despite the solar power today, the A's couldn't muster enough offense or pitching to top the Jays. Nevertheless, the team will surely enjoy an off-day tomorrow before starting a pivotal series against Texas at home. In the meantime... Go Angels?!?

Biogenesis scandal: MLB preparing lifetime ban for Alex Rodriguez

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Major League Baseball is preparing to ban New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez for life due to his connection to the Biogenesis scandal, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today. Nightengale also notes that about eight other players will be suspended before the weekend, which means that impact players like Nelson Cruz (Rangers), Jhonny Peralta (Tigers) and Everth Cabrera (Padres) will likely be handed 50-game bans.

While most of the other players involved with the scandal plan on accepting their 50-game suspensions without appeal in order to return before the postseason begins, Rodriguez will appeal any suspension that the league levies upon him, according to Nightengale. Because the 38-year old is accused of purposefully lying to Major League Baseball and trying to sabotage their investigation, his suspension will be more severe than those of the other players involved.

In addition to Rodriguez, Cruz, Peralta and Cabrera, Francisco Cervelli (Yankees), Fautino de los Santos (free agent), Fernando Martinez (Yankees), Jesus Montero (Mariners), Jordan Norberto (free agent), and Cesar Puello (Mets) are all expected to be suspended as a result of the investigation. Bartolo Colon (Athletics), Yasmani Grandal (Padres) and Melky Cabrera (Blue Jays) are unlikely to be suspended due to their previous suspensions caused by testing positive for a banned substance.

The investigation had a profound impact on the trade market in July, causing teams to anticipate needs based on the pending suspensions. The Tigers found a long-term replacement for Peralta by acquiring Jose Iglesias from the Red Sox, and the Rangers were in search of offensive replacements for Cruz for much of the month.

Brewers' outfielder Ryan Braun, who was also implicated in the league's investigation into Biogenesis, was suspended last week for the remainder of the season (65 games).

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Jose Bautista brings in winning run in extras as Blue Jays beat Athletics 5-2 despite four errors

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My confession: I did not watch most of the game. I only joined in after the seventh, but the Blue Jays and the Athletics were nice enough to extend the match into extra innings. Good news is that I saw the good part of the game when the Blue Jays batters came up clutch against Athletics relievers, and when Blue Jays pitchers shut down the Athletics offense to secure the game and series victory.

The game did not start out very well, with the A's scoring two runs on fielding errors. In the third inning, the A's scored the first run of the game with Eric Sogard at first and Jed Lowrie at the plate. Lowrie lined a single to right field, and Jose Bautista inexplicably tries to throw Sogard out at third. Bautista's cannon of an arm was misaligned and the throw flew over everyone's head and hopped into the seats to score Sogard. R.A. Dickey didn't expect that throw to even happen so he was't backing up third base--but on replay it showed that the throw was so off the mark that it wouldn't have mattered anyway.

In the bottom of the fifth, Sogard popped-up to the centre of the diamond. Dickey, while shielding his eyes from the sun, and was backing off the mound to try to catch the ball, but then trips and falls. At the same time, Brett Lawrie, who was charging in from third, stumbles on Dickey and the pop-up fell safely onto the green infield grass. Two batters later, Brandon Moss popped up to shallow right field. Second baseman Maicer Izturis ran out, but had trouble with the sun, causing another pop-up to be dropped. With two outs, Sogard was running full steam from second, and scored easily to notch another unearned run on Dickey's line.

Speaking of the line, Dickey had a decent game, throwing 95 pitches over six innings, giving up six hits and a walk while striking out three. His defense was not good, making four errors in total.

The Blue Jays scored two runs in the top of the fourth against Bartolo Colon. The first came courtesy of three singles by Adam Lind, Colby Rasmus, and then Brett Lawrie to bring in Rasmus. Lawrie has been looking much better at the plate lately, perhaps all he really needed was time to get into a rhythm. After a Jose Reyes walk to load the bases, A's catcher Stephen Vogt missed Colon's first pitch to Izturis, allowing Rasmus to score from third when Colon wasn't able to run fast enough to beat Rasmus to home.

The game remained tied at 2-2 because of several solid outings by relievers. After Aaron Loup allowed a couple of runners to reach in the eighth, Steve Delabar came in to end the inning with two strikeouts. The All-Star reliever has now struck out five batters in a row. Since July 1, Delabar has faced 41 batters and have retired 18 of them via strikeouts. He has 72 strikeouts on the season, just six fewers than Bartolo Colon, putting him third amongst relievers. In the top of the ninth, Grant Balfour came in to and followed Delabar by striking out the side to keep the score tied.

Wisely, John Gibbons called on Casey Janssen to pitch the bottom of the ninth to prevent a loss rather than to wait for a potential save situation for his closer. Janssen made his manager look smart by getting the Athletics in three up, three down fashion, giving the top of the Jays' order a chance to do damage in the top of the tenth.

And damage they did. Bob Melvin called on the services of long reliever Jesse Chavez, who has actually been a lot better than the way Blue Jays fans remember him last year when he wore Toronto's uniform. Jose Reyes led off the inning with a single, bringing up Maicer Izturis. Izturis tried to put down the bunt several times to move Reyes into scoring position but failed. Good thing Vogt also failed, not being able to handle a Chavez changeup that ended up going all the way to the backstop. Izturis would foul off a bunt attempt then fly out to shallow centre. Perhaps this would remind Gibbons to not bat Izturis second, and to stop calling for bunts as it seems that no one on the team can actually do it well.

Jose Bautista then played hero by lining a cutter down the right field foul line, easily scoring Reyes. Thanks, Jesse, you owed the Jays a couple of wins from 2012. Having scored the go-ahead run, Melvin asked Chavez to intentionally walk Edwin Encarncaion and then replaced him with lefty Jerry Blevins to face Adam Lind. Gibbons countered with Mark DeRosa, who promptly walked. In 20 pinch hit plate appearances, DeRosa has walked seven times, as pointed out by @james_in_to. He is now batting.308/.550/.615 as a pinch hitter. Colby Rasmus, the one without winning baseball instincts, was next. He continued his red-hot July by squeaking a grounder past a drawn-in infield to score Bautista and Encarnacion to add two insurance runs.

Brett Cecil held the Jays' 5-2 lead with an easy 1-2-3 bottom of the 10th to record his first professional save. The win meant that the Blue Jays won their second series in a row, despite the ugly loss to the A's in game one. The series win against the 63-44 Athletics was the Blue Jays' first series win versus a team over .500 since they swept the Orioles at the end of their 11-game winning streak. Who would've thought that they'd pull off a win after making so many defensive miscues to start the game?

Jays of the Day! Colby Rasmus (+.254), Jose Reyes (+.211), Jose Bautista (+.191), Steve Delabar (+.163), Casey Janssen (+.121).

Suckage Jays: Edwin Encarnacion (-.207), Maicer Izturis (-.142), Josh Thole (-.137), Rajai Davis (-.125).

Tom, Carm, and the Blue Jays now head south to Los Angeles for a four-game series against the pretty horrific-looking Angels.

After the game, Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith tweeted out that Sergio Santos will be re-activated from the disabled list tomorrow, with no indication about the corresponding move. Melky Cabrera has not started in two games (although he did come into this one as a pinch hitter and struck out), and we all saw how bad he looked "running" in left field. There is a good chance that Cabrera would be placed on the 15-day DL to make room for Santos on the 25-man roster, and one of Michael Schwimer or Mickey Storey would be designated for assignment to make room on the 40-man. But, we won't know until tomorrow!

Thanks to all in the GameThread who helped fill me in on the game details!

Dustin McGowan placed on the disabled list, Sergio Santos to join Blue Jays

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After a few hours of speculation of what roster move the Blue Jays will make when Sergio Santos comes off the disabled list tomorrow, Shi Davidi tweeted that Dustin McGowan has been placed on the 15-day disabled list after "tweaking" his side on Monday.

This will be eighth time that Dustin McGowan has been placed on the disabled list in his career. His first DL stint came in May 2004 (to September 2004) with "right elbow soreness", then again in July 2008 with "right shoulder soreness" (it will disable him for the rest of the season), then he missed the entire 2009 season with a "torn right labrum", the entire 2010 season with "right shoulder strain", March to September 2011 for "recovery from right shoulder surgery", he was placed on the DL in March with "right plantar fasciitis", then transferred to the 60-day DL in May with "recurring soreness of right shoulder", then he started the 2013 season on the DL with a "sore right shoulder".

I hope that this is a short, 15-day trip to the disabled list for McGowan that is really designed to keep the Jays from having to deal with a roster crunch with the return of Sergio Santos. It is a good thing that the injury has nothing to do with his throwing arm.


W-LGGSCGSHOSVBSIPHRERHRBBKERAWHIP
2013 - Dustin McGowan0-0160000017.0126429172.121.24


W-LGGSCGSHOSVBSIPHRERHRBBKERAWHIP
2013 - Sergio Santos0-16000004.13111162.08.92

The club will still have to remove someone from their 40-man roster to make room for Santos, who is returning from the 60-day disabled list. He was placed on the 15-day DL back in april with a "right triceps strain" and was transferred to the 60-day DL after having surgery to clean up bone chips from his right elbow. After being traded to the Jays in December 2011, Santos has only thrown 9.1 innings for Toronto, missing most of the 2012 season with a right shoulder problem.

A kinder, gentler American League: Logos revisited

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To start the 2012 season the Baltimore Orioles decided that the time had come. It was time to once again place the smiling cartoon bird on their caps. Nowhere have I seen a happier, less intimidating logo. And you know what? Bravo. Good for them. Baseball is a gentleman's game. No need to try to make our logos look so angry. This isn't he XFL. In fact many major league teams have very wussy nicknames. How tough are Sox anyway? While the NFL is intent on adding more black and making their Seahawk or Lion or Eagle look more fierce, MLB takes out the black (in the case of the Mets, anyway) and inserts cartoon birds.

Can we take this trend a little farther? Can we create an even kinder, gentler American League? Let's try.

AL East

Baltimore Orioles

What's the only way to make the cartoon bird less tough? Replace the "O's" cap on the cap on the bird on the cap of the bird with a Lakers cap:

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New York Yankees

Yankees could be really tough if you think of civil war soldiers. Let's not. Let's think about the song Yankee Doodle. Better yet, this pansy kid singing Yankee Doodle

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Boston Red Sox

A red sock is inherently not tough. What could we do to make it even weaker? Frilly, baby socks.

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Tampa Bay Rays

The suns rays are actually pretty powerful. Stingrays have the word sting right in their name! Too tough! You know what's wussy? The mathematical idea of a ray. Nothing is worse than geometry. BORING

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Toronto Blue Jays

I accidently saw one episode of The Regular Show and spotted Mordecai Blue Jay, he's described by the show's wikia page as "mild-mannered and laid back. ...He lacks clothing, plays video games, sings karaoke, and drinks copious amounts of coffee and soda." Sounds like the personalities of my least intimidating friends.

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AL West

Houston Astros

WHERE ARE OUR FLYING CARS?!

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Los Angeles Angels of Aneheim

What's softer than an angel? A coloring book angel!

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Seattle Mariners

A mariner is a sailor, a sea farer, an adventurer! Pretty tough, pretty cool. You know what isn't? The psudo-Ford Explorer SUV. This logo features a random 2005 Mercury Mariner I found on craigslist.

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Oakland A's

Oakland's secondary logos feature elephants. No matter how you slice it, elephants are awesome. They are tough, they stomp things, they have no predators. So maybe we could stretch a little and use an elephant seal. Those things look worthless. They are just flabby piles of blubber. Pretty gentle I'd say. (just don't take their bucket)

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Texas Rangers

If you can't control Yogi and Boo-boo you are soft.

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AL Central

Chicago White Sox

What's the only thing less tough than white socks? White Sox in sandals.

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Minnesota Twins

Roger Ebert once described the film Twins as "engaging entertainment with some big laughs and a sort of warm goofiness." Sounds about right.

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Cleveland Indians

Just replace one cartoon native american with another. We're ready for a kindergarten thanksgiving lesson!

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Kansas City Royals

These royals aren't exactly storming Mordor.

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Detroit Tigers

Finally our very own Tigers. To find the most disheartened, wussy logo we only need to go back into our own history. This tiger looks pretty resigned to disappointment and weakness I'd say. What where those people thinking?!

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Series Preview: Toronto Blue Jays

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August 1 7:05pm, August 2 7:05pm, August 3 6:05pm, August 4 12:35pm

Both of these teams are coming into this series way below where they should be. The Angels added Josh HamiltonandJoe Blanton while the Jays added Jose Reyes, Josh Johnson, and Mark Buehrle to the mix once Miami's SatanMarlins owner performed a fire sale. More than twenty-four million dollars separate these two in salaries; however, just one-and-a-half games are between them in the American League Wild Card.

Pitching matchups over the course of this four game set are all over the place. The once great Josh Johnson is now all beat up. He has just one win this season. Toronto's other offseason acquisition faces the Halos on Sunday when Mark Buehrle tries to continue his success against fellow lefty C.J. Wilson. Buehrle is coming off of two dominant starts in which he shutout the Houston Astros (CG) and the Oakland Athletics (7 IP). As for C.J., he was tossed around against the Texas Rangers, despite having solid starts before that. Jered Weaver also gets a start in this series, coming off a another strong game.

Edwin Encarnacion, Colby Rasmus (brother of Halos RHP, Cory Rasmus), and Jose Bautista lead the way for the Jays' offense. The most surprising of that bunch is Rasmus who has finally been able to produce what he never did for the Cardinals. Encarnacion and Bautista continue they're 'swing-for-the-fences' mentality and combine for fifty-four home runs. Unlike them, Josh Hamilton sits with fifteen at the beginning of August. Yes, fifteen.

Despite all of this offense, the Blue Jays are in the same place as the Angels: they both sit way out of their divisions and are on the outside of the AL WC race. If one sweeps the other, and with some help from other losses, they could be just over six games out. Yes, I know that was very far-fetched.

Probable SPs -- Josh Johnson / Garrett Richards, Todd Redman / Tommy Hanson, Esmil Rogers / Jered Weaver, Mark Buehrle / C.J. Wilson

TV Schedule: All games can be seen seen on FOX Sports West and, for you Canadians, Sportsnet. Unfortunately, there are no nationally televised games this week.

Poll
Result of this series?

  54 votes |Results

Minor League Ball Gameday, August 1

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Good afternoon prospect watchers. The trade deadline is passed....and I don't know about you guys, but I thought it was pretty disappointing after all the buildup. I think teams are still getting used to the implications of the new CBA.

***My next major project is to finish up the Top 20 Pre-Season organization reviews. Tentative order will be the Mets, Padres, Blue Jays, Rockies, Royals, White Sox, Marlins, Giants, and Brewers to finish off, though I reserve the right to change that. I also have articles in the work queue for Marcus Semien of the White Sox, Engel Beltre of the Rangers, Victor Black of the Pirates, Michael Choice of the Athletics, Drake Britton of the Red Sox, plus Prospect Retros (all by request) for Marco Scutaro, Jeff Kent, C.J. Wilson, Chris Davis, and LaTroy Hawkins. Off all that stuff, Scutaro and Semien will get done first since I've got the research almost done for those. Stay tuned, in other words, there's a lot coming up here.

***Yesterday's Minor League Ball Gameday discussion.

***San Francisco Giants prospect Roger Kieschnick made his major league debut yesterday, going 2-for-5 with two RBI (and two strikeouts). He was hitting .273/.339/.497 for Triple-A Fresno before his promotion, with 40 walks and 102 strikeouts in 374 at-bats.

Kieschnick was a third round pick out of Texas Tech back in 2008, but his progression through the farm system was slowed by a variety of injuries. A left-handed power hitter, he runs well, has a good arm, and looks like a prototype power-hitting right fielder. Complicating factors: he's already 26, old to just be reaching the majors, he's streaky, and he strikes out a lot. His plate discipline has improved from poor to adequate, but we'll have to see how it holds up against major league pitching. Warnings aside, he's always had power and an age 27 performance surge seems plausible for next year.

***The Rangers promoted infielders Luis Sardinas and Rougned Odor to Double-A yesterday.

***Another outstanding outing for Blue Jays prospect Marcus Stroman: 13 strikeouts in 6.1 innings for Double-A New Hampshire.

***Randy Holt looks at Mets right-hander Matt Harvey and examines how his first year in the major leagues ranks historically.

***Andrew Ball looks at newest Houston Astros outfielder L.J. Hoes.

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