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Sizing up the sluggers and odds for the 2014 MLB Home Run Derby
By JASON LOGAN
Monday marks a dark, dark day in sports betting.
The World Cup is over, football season is still more than a month away, and with the MLB on hiatus for the All-Star break, the only thing to wager on is how many balls some guys can hit over a fence. Hell, the WNBA and MLS aren’t even around to save us.
Better make the most of this.
The MLB All-Star Home Run Derby steps up to the plate Monday night, wowing baseball fans for a few rounds before Chris Berman’s voice eats through our brain like a parasitic worm. But, like sprinkling bacon bits on a boring salad, throwing down some coin on who can hit the most home runs makes the Home Run Derby tolerable. And there’s always the mute button for Boomer.
Here’s a look at the field and their odds to win the 2014 MLB All-Star Home Run Derby:
Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins (+250)
Stanton is the overall favorite to win the derby, coming in with 21 home runs on the year, however he hasn’t gone yard since June 26. On top of that, the Marlins’ are currently shopping their slugger which could have Stanton focused more on his future than the derby.
Yasiel Puig, Los Angeles Dodgers (+450)
This is strictly a popularity contest here. Puig opened at +550 to win the derby and has been bet up to the second overall choice. The bat-flipping phenom has just 12 dingers and just one home run in his last 43 at-bats this month.
Jose Bautista, Toronto Blue Jays (+500)
“Joey Bats” is the captain for the American League squad and brings 17 long balls to Target Field. Bautista actually rocked a home run in his last stop in Minnesota back on April 17, but hasn’t posted a HR since July 2.
Yoenis Cespedes, Oakland Athletics (+500)
The defending Home Run Derby champ is being offered at favorable odds but there hasn’t been a back-to-back derby winner since Ken Griffey Jr. in 1998 and 1999. Cespedes comes in ice cold, not registering a hit in four straight games with seven strikeouts as of Sunday. He cashed in at +600, hitting 32 total home runs in 2013.
Troy Tulowitzki, Colorado Rockies (+650)
The National League captain leads the NL with 21 round trippers – 14 of those coming in the hitter-friendly thin air of Coors Field. Tulo won’t have that pop in Minnesota but does have three home runs in his last three games, as of Sunday. All of which were at home.
Josh Donaldson, Oakland Athletics (+1,000)
The A’s better hope the derby doesn’t wreak havoc on Donaldson and Cespedes’ swings like it has with some contestants in the past. Donaldson has 20 home runs and also put one over the fence at Target Field this year, back on April 10.
Brian Dozier, Minnesota Twins (+1,200)
There is no doubt Dozier will have the home crowd behind him Monday night. Have you seen this Twins fan’s back hair Dozier jersey? *Insert dry heave here* The second baseman has 16 home runs – nine of those coming inside Target Field.
Todd Frazier, Cincinnati Reds (+1,200)
Frazier upped his home run total to 18 with a bomb against the Pirates Saturday night – his first homer since June 22. His brother - Charlie Frazier – is going to be tossing to him during the Derby. Charlie is a former Triple-A player who throws batting practice for his local ball club.
Adam Jones, Baltimore Orioles (+1,200)
The Baltimore slugger has just 16 home runs on the year and got into the derby field because teammate Nelson Cruz passed on the invite from Bautista. Hopefully Cruz and Orioles slugger Chris Davis passed along some pointers.
Justin Morneau, Colorado Rockies (+1,500)
It’s a homecoming for the former Minnesota star. Much like Tulowitzki, Morneau has benefited from the live balls in Coors Field, hitting eight of his 13 home runs at home. He won the 2008 Home Run Derby with 22 total dingers at +320 – even though Josh Hamilton hit 35 total HRs but ran out of steam in the final.
Odds courtesy of CarbonSports.ag.
Stats prior to Sunday's schedule. -
StatSystemsSports
MLB Betting News and Notes - Week #16
Monday marks a dark, dark day in sports betting. The World Cup is over, football season is still more than a month away, and with the Major League Baseball on hiatus for the 2014 All-Star break, the only thing to wager on is how many balls some guys can hit over a fence. Hell, the WNBA and MLS aren’t even around to save us. “Better make the most of this!”
The 2014 MLB All-Star Home Run Derby steps up to the plate at Target Field in Minneapolis, (home turf of the Minnesota Twins 8:00 PM EST) on Monday night on ESPN. Wowing baseball fans for a few rounds before Chris Berman’s voice eats through our brain like a parasitic worm. But, like sprinkling bacon bits on a boring salad, throwing down some coin on who can hit the most home runs makes the Home Run Derby tolerable. And there’s always the mute button for Boomer.
StatSystemsSports Systems Analyst Larry Hertner look at the field and their odds to win the 2014 MLB All-Star Home Run Derby:
•Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins (+250) - Stanton is the overall favorite to win the derby, coming in with 21 home runs on the year, however he hasn’t gone yard since June 26. On top of that, the Marlins’ are currently shopping their slugger which could have Stanton focused more on his future than the derby.
•Yasiel Puig, Los Angeles Dodgers (+450) - This is strictly a popularity contest here. Puig opened at +550 to win the derby and has been bet up to the second overall choice. The bat-flipping phenom has just 12 dingers and just one home run in his last 43 at-bats this month.
•Jose Bautista, Toronto Blue Jays (+500) - “Joey Bats” is the captain for the American League squad and brings 17 long balls to Target Field. Bautista actually rocked a home run in his last stop in Minnesota back on April 17, but hasn’t posted a HR since July 2.
•Yoenis Cespedes, Oakland Athletics (+500) - The defending Home Run Derby champ is being offered at favorable odds but there hasn’t been a back-to-back derby winner since Ken Griffey Jr. in 1998 and 1999. Cespedes comes in ice cold, not registering a hit in four straight games with seven strikeouts as of Sunday. He cashed in at +600, hitting 32 total home runs in 2013.
•Troy Tulowitzki, Colorado Rockies (+650) - The National League captain leads the NL with 21 round trippers – 14 of those coming in the hitter-friendly thin air of Coors Field. Tulo won’t have that pop in Minnesota but does have three home runs in his last three games, as of Sunday. All of which were at home.
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•Josh Donaldson, Oakland Athletics (+1,000) - The Athletics better hope the derby doesn’t wreak havoc on Donaldson and Cespedes’ swings like it has with some contestants in the past. Donaldson has 20 home runs and also put one over the fence at Target Field this year, back on April 10.
•Brian Dozier, Minnesota Twins (+1,200) - There is no doubt Dozier will have the home crowd behind him Monday night. Have you seen this Twins fan’s back hair Dozier jersey? *Insert dry heave here* The second baseman has 16 home runs – nine of those coming inside Target Field.
•Todd Frazier, Cincinnati Reds (+1,200) - Frazier upped his home run total to 18 with a bomb against the Pirates Saturday night – his first homer since June 22. His brother - Charlie Frazier – is going to be tossing to him during the Derby. Charlie is a former Triple-A player who throws batting practice for his local ball club.
•Adam Jones, Baltimore Orioles (+1,200) - The Baltimore slugger has just 16 home runs on the year and got into the derby field because teammate Nelson Cruz passed on the invite from Bautista. Hopefully Cruz and Orioles slugger Chris Davis passed along some pointers.
•Justin Morneau, Colorado Rockies (+1,500) - It’s a homecoming for the former Minnesota star. Much like Tulowitzki, Morneau has benefited from the live balls in Coors Field, hitting eight of his 13 home runs at home. He won the 2008 Home Run Derby with 22 total dingers at +320 – even though Josh Hamilton hit 35 total HRs but ran out of steam in the final.
Note: Stats prior to Sunday's schedule. Odds courtesy of CarbonSports.ag.
The 85th All-Star Game will be televised nationally on July 15 by FOX, in Canada by Rogers Sportsnet and RDS, and worldwide by partners in more than 200 countries via MLB International's independent feed. ESPN Radio and ESPN Radio Deportes will provide national radio coverage of the All-Star Game. MLB Network and SiriusXM will also provide comprehensive All-Star Week coverage.Comment
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All-Star HR Derby Odds
Odds to win 2014 All-Star Home Run Derby (7/14/15)
Giancarlo Stanton 5/2
Yasiel Puig 9/2
Jose Bautista 5/1
Yoenis Cespedes 5/1
Troy Tulowitzki 13/2
Josh Donaldson 10/1
Brian Dozier 12/1
Todd Frazier 12/1
Adam Jones 12/1
Justin Morneau 15/1
How to read the Odds:
Ex. Bet $100 on Giancarlo Stanton (5/2) to win $250
Ex. Bet $100 on Jose Bautista (5/1) to win $500Comment
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Burnett on trade talk: Phillies are my team
By Todd Zolecki
PHILADELPHIA -- Changes are almost certainly coming for the Phillies.
A franchise-record payroll has not translated into postseason contention this year. The Phillies reached the All-Star break on Sunday with a 42-53 (.442) record, their second-lowest winning percentage at the break since 1997, when they went 24-61 (.282).
Phillies closer Jonathan Papelbon made it perfectly clear last week that he would like to play on a contending team, and his limited no-trade clause will be no obstacle for the Phillies. If he can play for a winner, he will happily go.
"Some guys want to stay on a losing team?" he said. "That's mind-boggling to me."
Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins and Cole Hamels have said they have no desire to leave Philadelphia, although each has acknowledged in some way that things can change. The Seattle Times reported Sunday that the Mariners have had serious discussions with the Phillies about outfielder Marlon Byrd, who it said was willing to waive his limited no-trade clause. CSNPhilly.com reported last week that he had the Mariners, Royals, Blue Jays and Rays on a four-team no-trade list.
A.J. Burnett also has a limited no-trade clause. He should have value to a contending team needing starting pitching help. He is 6-8 with a 3.83 ERA in 20 starts this season, including a 2.94 ERA in his past seven starts.
"I signed here to play here," Burnett told a reporter after Sunday's 10-3 loss to the Nationals. "I'm not a guy who looks for an out or wants to get out because things aren't going the right way. If that happens, then it happens, but I'm not looking to move on. This is my team. I understand how things work, but I'm trying not to worry about it. I just try to go about my business and enjoy my teammates."
So Burnett doesn't know what he would say if Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. approached him about a trade?
"I have no clue what I would say," he said.
No clue at all?
"I guess it depends on what he says," he said. "I wouldn't know until it's brought to me."
A lot might be brought to Phillies players before the July 31 non-waiver Trade Deadline. Papelbon has said he would go. Cliff Lee, who rejoins the rotation July 21, has said in the past he wants to play for a winner. Byrd is unlikely to stand in the way of a trade. Burnett sounds open to it, though he isn't campaigning for it, either.Comment
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Angels trying to trade for Padres pitchers Street, Kennedy
Ken Rosenthal
Three of the top five teams in the American League are in the AL West --€“ and the intensity of their competition is increasing off the field, too.
The Oakland Athletics stunned the baseball world on July 4 by acquiring right-handers Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel, two of the best starting pitchers on the trade market.
The Los Angeles Angels, trailing the A's by 1-1/2 games, are trying to counter their division rivals by targeting both Padres All-Star closer Huston Street and right-hander Ian Kennedy, according to major league sources.
The teams have discussed Street, but their talks have yet to include Kennedy, sources say. In addition, a package deal might be difficult to complete with the Padres controlling both Street and Kennedy through 2015.
The Padres likely will trade their potential free agents, third baseman Chase Headley and outfielder Chris Denorfia. They are taking offers for both Street and setup man Joaquin Benoit. But they are "lukewarm" on moving Kennedy, sources say.
Street, named to the National League All-Star team on Sunday, would give the Angels a potentially dominant bullpen, enabling them to move right-hander Joe Smith back to a setup role.
Kennedy would fortify a rotation that includes several pitchers with scant major-league experience and currently is without left-hander C.J. Wilson, who went on the disabled list Thursday with a sprained right ankle.
The Angels' farm system ranked last in the majors in Baseball America's most recent talent rankings. For general manager Jerry Dipoto to land both Street and Kennedy, he might need to trade pieces off the team's major league roster.
Dipoto already has made two additions to his bullpen, left-hander Joe Thatcher and righty Jason Grilli. Triple-A second baseman Taylor Lindsey, the Angels' top prospect according to BA, likely would be one Padres target. The Angels also are deep in young relievers who could supplement any trade.
The Padres, meanwhile, are in the middle of a front-office transition. They fired general manager Josh Byrnes on June 23, and assistant GM A.J. Hinch currently is the point man in trade talks, with input from club executives Omar Minaya and Fred Uhlman Jr.
The bigger obstacle to deals, rival clubs say, is that Padres ownership might not be eager to part with talent because of its desire to rebuild quickly. The Pads entered the All-Star break with a 41-54 record, leaving them in third place in the National League West, 12 games behind.
Ownership signed one trade candidate, outfielder Seth Smith, to a two-year, $13 million extension shortly after firing Byrnes. The team holds a $7 million option on Street and could bring Kennedy back in his final year of arbitration for $9 million to $10 million. In addition, the Padres could make Kennedy a qualifying offer after the 2015 season, ensuring that they would receive a high draft pick if he departed.
Street, one of the top closers on the trade market, is 24-for-25 opportunities this season with a 1.09 ERA. Kennedy has a 3.47 ERA in 20 starts, with 133 strikeouts and 34 walks in 124-1/3 innings.Comment
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Orioles midseason report: On top and trending upward
By THE SPORTS XCHANGE
BALTIMORE -- With a season-best, four-game lead in the American League East at the All-Star break, the Baltimore Orioles are optimistic about their chances of playing October baseball.
The Orioles dealt with a number of hurdles in the first half, but they overcame most of them and landed on their feet. That is why they are the team to beat in the division.
The troubles came in many different forms, starting with the loss of All-Star catcher Matt Wieters for the season due to Tommy John surgery, a devastating blow. However, rookie Caleb Joseph and veteran Nick Hundley are pairing up to give the Orioles adequate cover behind the plate.
Right-hander Tommy Hunter couldn't do the job as closer, but left-hander Zach Britton stepped right in and was solid.
First baseman Chris Davis is stuck in a long slump that dropped his average to .199 at the break, but designated hitter/left fielder Nelson Cruz picked up the slack. Cruz, signed to a one-year deal late in the offseason, has 28 homers and 74 RBIs at the break, second in the majors in both categories.
Third baseman Manny Machado missed the first month due to knee surgery, then started slowly. However, he is on a tear of late, hitting as he did last year and moving his average up to .270.
Also on the plus side, left fielder/DH Steve Pearce came out of nowhere for a career half-season with 11 homers and 31 RBIs plus a .316 average at the break.
Orioles manager Buck Showalter said his team isn't making playoff plans just yet and knows there is lots of work left to be done, which he is looking forward to.
"We may be in first place right now, but we still feel like we're hunting something, as opposed to somebody (hunting) us," Showalter said. "There's a lot of unknowns. It's going to be quite a journey. It's not going to be boring."
The Orioles began posting better results when the rotation settled down in early June. The starters pitched effectively over the past month, taking a lot of pressure off the bullpen. Showalter is juggling something of a six-man rotation, which gives the team extra depth, and it worked well in recent days.
The Orioles could have a chance to pull away from the rest of the division, especially because so many of their rivals are riddled with injuries.
Showalter also said he knows how well the other teams in the division played in stretches during recent seasons. The Tampa Bay Rays went 19-9 heading into the break, and if they decide not to trade left-hander David Price, they still could be a force in the second half. The Toronto Blue Jays led the division for much of the first half, and the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox can never be counted out to their deep pockets.
Still, there is no question that the Orioles are very happy with where they are right now. Not many expected them to even be in first, much less hold a four-game lead.
"We wanted to kind of control our own destiny," Davis said. "We're definitely in the driver's seat right now, and hopefully we can keep it going."Comment
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Yankees midseason report: Treading water won't cut it
By THE SPORTS XCHANGE
For the New York Yankees, another non-playoff season appears to be a strong possibility.
At least it does if the offense cannot pick it up consistently to support a pitching staff missing 80 percent of its projected rotation while using rookie starting pitchers in 45 games.
The fact that the Yankees are within striking distance in the American League East is because that while they've treaded water, no one ahead of them has become consistently hot.
However, no team can rely on that factor and eventually the Yankees will have to develop a hot streak. It will have to be one that goes beyond last month's four-game winning streak and stretch of 10 wins in 14 games.
If that is going to happen, the Yankees will need to hit better than a team that barely hits over .250 and improve on their struggles in many clutch situations.
That means Brian McCann will have to do better than the .239 average he has produced so far. It also means than when Carlos Beltran returns he will need to do better than the underwhelming .216 average.
To achieve all of that, the Yankees will also have to play better at home. They have won 18 of their first 41 home games, start the second half with an 11-game homestand and play a major league-leading 40 home games after the break.
Getting all those components to click is their mission and if the Yankees are going to be a playoff team, it must happen.
"It's a little surprising," hitting coach Kevin Long said. "Certainly you expect some of these guys in this lineup to perform and at the end of the day, at the end of the year you hope that those numbers are going to be where they should. I can tell you they're doing everything in their power to try and correct it and I'm doing everything in my power to try to correct it and we're just going to stay at it. There's no simple plan. The work is positive and we're working in the right direction. It's just been tough."Comment
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Blue Jays midseason report: Contenders or pretenders?
By THE SPORTS XCHANGE
The Toronto Blue Jays had a brilliant May, going 21-9. The American League East is surprisingly weak.
They are two reasons that Toronto is still in serious contention for its first postseason appearance since 1993, in the pre-wild card era, when they won the World Series championship for the second year in a row.
After surging through May and winning their first five games in June to go to 38-24 and stand atop the AL East, the Blue Jays have sputtered at 11-23, including a 2-8 trip to lead into the All-Star break. Yet, surprisingly, they will return to competition within striking distance of first in the division. But first they must play much better than they have.
Their starting pitching, which lacks depth, must continue to be better than expected. The bullpen, a major disappointment, must make better use of the fastball instead of hanging sliders in situations in which even a good breaking pitch doesn't make sense. The hitters must find a way to solve left-handed pitching. The players must eliminate as many as possible of the silly mistakes that have infested their play.
"We've been within striking distance in a lot of games but we just haven't played good enough, that's the bottom line," right fielder Jose Bautista said. "I haven't played good enough and other guys, if you ask them, they'll probably tell you that they haven't played good enough. We haven't done what we did earlier on and that's why we've lost some of these games."
There have been injuries that have put such players as third baseman Brett Lawrie, first baseman Edwin Encarnacion and designated hitter Adam Lind on the disabled list. The Blue Jays plucked outfielder Nolan Reimold from the Baltimore Orioles on waivers, but after a quick start, he suffered a strained calf that put him on the DL. That's the way things have been going, but the slide started before the injuries.
There has been a tendency to blame recruits from Triple-A Buffalo for some of the mistakes. But the Blue Jays were playing well in May when center fielder Colby Rasmus was on the DL with a hamstring injury and Anthony Gose and Kevin Pillar platooned in his place. Gose made some vital catches Rasmus likely would not have made.
There were just too many examples of careless play from players who are supposed to be stars. Shortstop Jose Reyes has made some astonishing throwing errors. He also has let some ground balls get past him and, in one case, between his legs. He says he has a bit of a sore shoulder, but his footwork also could use some work on his throws.
Catcher Dioner Navarro, who was lauded early for his game calling, seems to have a tendency to call too many breaking balls when fastballs would be better.
Despite all this, the Blue Jays have a chance. And Bautista does not feel it is necessary to make a big trade to fortify the team.
"It would definitely help but I don't think it's a must," he said. "I don't think it's the only way we can become contenders. ...We managed to get up to first place and stay there for a while. We can definitely get back there. We just have to play the good baseball that we."Comment
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Rays midseason report: Murphy's law in first half
By THE SPORTS XCHANGE
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- The first half had been nothing short of an abject disappointment for the Tampa Bay Rays, picked by many to contend for the American League pennant and selected by others to at least play in, possibly even win, the World Series.
The Rays fell victim to what executive vice president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman has repeatedly called an "imperfect storm" in the season's first couple months, with the starting pitching not performing up to its capabilities, the lineup failing to produce runs at its expected level and even the usually reliable defense showing cracks in the armor.
In short, everything that could go wrong went wrong for the Rays.
But lately, they've seemingly turned it around. Will it be enough?
The Rays have kept their hopes alive for the second half with a 20-11 record since June 11. But to make up for the ground they lost in the first 97 games, the Rays have to be on top of their game the rest of the way. They believe it's possible if they fully play up to their potential, however.
"We knew that we were capable of it. It just wasn't happening. We knew it couldn't last forever. It just lasted longer than we expected," Rays second baseman/right fielder Ben Zobrist said. "Now that it's going well, we can't look at the past and focus on that. We're just going to focus on the games that we have left and the fact that we're still close enough, within striking distance of the division."
"There's no letting up right now," said Rays manager Joe Maddon. "We have to keep winning series, there's no doubt."
The Rays enter the break with a 44-53 record, almost 10 games behind the first-place Baltimore Orioles in the AL East. It's a winnable division with no one dominant team, which plays in the Rays' favor, but it's still going to be a steep uphill climb. In reality, it may be impossible.
It might become even more difficult if the Rays lose their ace.
Left-hander David Price has been the subject of intense speculation since last year's July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, and the Rays' dreadful start only intensified those rumors. His $14 million salary is high for Tampa Bay's low-budget operation, and he's only going to get more expensive in 2015, his final year of arbitration. Tampa Bay built its current roster primarily through shrewd trades, and Friedman undoubtedly recognizes the kind of haul he might get for a young star like Price, a former AL Cy Young Award winner who says he's pitching better than ever.
So, the biggest question for the Rays as they head into the All-Star break is the future of their ace. Will they deal him? What will they get? Can they contend without him?
That all remains to be seen. For now, the Rays will keep fighting to stay alive in the AL East, refusing to believe a playoff berth is out of the question until they are mathematically eliminated.
"You've got to believe that we're going to have a really good rest of the year here as far as the way that we've been playing for the last three or four weeks here going into the break," Zobrist said. "I definitely believe this team is capable of coming back."Comment
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MLB
'At the Break!'
The Oakland Athletics finished the first half with MLB’s best record (59-36, .621). The only other team in the Majors with a better than .600 winning percentage, the Los Angeles Angels checking in at 57-37 (.606). Over in the N.L., the Los Angeles Dodgers currently own the senior circuit's best record at 54-43 (.557). Milwaukee Brewers in a tail spin losing seven of eight are now trailing Dodgers with a 53-43 (.552) mark. We'll close with the most important categories for sports bettors, the moneyline standings. MLB’s biggest moneymakers at the break, A's (+$1436), Halos (+$1380), Orioles (+$1260). The 'Big Losers' heading into the second half, Rays (-$2230), Rangers (-$2254), Red Sox (-$1981), D-Backs (-$1532), Rockies (-$1512), Padres (-$1482). What-2-Watch-4 when the second-half resumes. Yankees have a 1-9 (-$798) skid as home underdogs, Rangers have a 1-13 ($1189) slide as home pooches, Padres are 3-10 (-$823) as road chalk, Braves 6-0 'Under' at home following a 1 run loss, Dodgers 9-0 'Under' on the road after a 1 run defeat, Twins 0-4 away off a 1 run win, D-Backs 1-6 home off a 1 run victory.Comment
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MLB
Monday's six-pack
-- David Price is 4-0, 1.41 in his last four starts; if the Rays want to trade him, the tab keeps going up.
-- Padres lost three of four in Dodger Stadium this weekend; they scored one run in the three losses. How does their hitting coach keep his job?
-- Orioles are 9-20 when they don't hit a home run, 43-22 when they do.
-- Brian Harman won Quad Cities Open, 6th Georgia alum to win this year.
-- One quick way to improve Home Run Derby on TV; get rid of Chris Berman.
-- If baseball playoffs started today:
NL-- Wash/Atl, Milwaukee-Dodgers. Wild Card: Giants/Wash-Atl loser
AL-- Baltimore-Detroit-Oakland. Wild Card: Angels-SeattleComment
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Art Aronson
National League vs. American League
1* Free Play OVER 8 +115 in the All Star Game.
While our focus can now turn to the upcoming NFL and College Football season’s until the second half of the MLB campaign gets underway on Friday, for those of you willing to wager on an event like the All Star Game, I do think there is some value to be found this year.
Let’s first look at the starting lineups and rotations:
American League
Salvador Perez, C, Kansas City Royals*
Miguel Cabrera, 1B, Detroit Tigers*
Robinson Cano, 2B, Seattle Mariners*
Derek Jeter, SS, New York Yankees*
Josh Donaldson, 3B, Oakland Athletics*
Mike Trout, OF, Los Angeles Angels*
Jose Bautista, OF, Toronto Blue Jays*
Adam Jones, OF, Baltimore Orioles*
Nelson Cruz, DH, Baltimore Orioles*
Yu Darvish, RHP, Texas Rangers
Max Scherzer, RHP, Detroit Tigers
Felix Hernandez, RHP, Seattle Mariners
Masahiro Tanaka, RHP, New York Yankees
Jon Lester, LHP, Boston Red Sox
Fernando Rodney, RHP, Seattle Mariners
Scott Kazmir, LHP, Oakland Athletics
Mark Buehrle, LHP, Toronto Blue Jays
Sean Doolittle, LHP, Oakland Athletics
Greg Holland, RHP, Kansas City Royals
Glen Perkins, LHP, Minnesota Twins
Dellin Betances, RHP, New York Yankees
Pat Neshek, RHP, St. Louis Cardinals
National League
Yadier Molina, C, St. Louis Cardinals*
Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, Arizona Diamondbacks*
Chase Utley, 2B, Philadelphia Phillies*
Troy Tulowitzki, SS, Colorado Rockies*
Aramis Ramirez, 3B, Milwaukee Brewers*
Andrew McCutchen, OF, Pittsburgh Pirates*
Carlos Gomez, OF, Milwaukee Brewers*
Yasiel Puig, OF, Los Angeles Dodgers*
Giancarlo Stanton, DH, Miami Marlins*
Johnny Cueto, RHP, Cincinnati Reds
Clayton Kershaw, LHP, Los Angeles Dodgers
Zack Greinke, RHP, Los Angeles Dodgers
Madison Bumgarner, LHP, San Francisco Giants
Adam Wainwright, RHP, St. Louis Cardinals
Tyson Ross, RHP, San Diego Padres
Henderson Alvarez, RHP, Miami Marlins
Julio Teheran, RHP, Atlanta Braves
Craig Kimbrel, RHP Atlanta Braves
Aroldis Chapman, LHP, Cincinnati Reds
Francisco Rodriguez, RHP, Milwaukee Brewers
Tony Watson, LHP, Pittsburgh Pirates
Let’s also take a quick look at what has happened over the last five years in The Midsummer Classic:
July 14th, 2009, Busch Stadium: American League won 4-3
July 13th, 2010, Angel Stadium: National League won 3-1
July 12th, 2011, Chase Field: National League won 5-1
July 10th, 2012, Kauffman Stadium: National League won 8-0
July 16th, 2013, Citi Field: American League won 3-0
Now let’s investigate the Park Factor at Target Field (Park Factor compares the rate of stats at home vs. the rate of stats on the road. A rate higher than 1.000 favors the hitter. Below 1.000 favors the pitcher).
Target Field Through July 13th, 2014: 1.124
Target Field is currently ranked as the third best “hitters park” in the league right now and while we’ve seen some fairly low-scoring All Star games over the past five years, I feel the conditions are finally right for a higher-scoring slugfest in 2014.
Consider a second look at the OVER.
AAA SportsComment
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Hondo
Hondo closed out the front nine with a victory Sunday, scoring with Gray and the A’s to lower the accounts payable to 1,250 abbatiellos going into the All-Star break.
Monday: Mr. Aitch will try to stay sharp by offering some horse sense with a selection at Monticello — two units to win on Er Grace in the sixth.Comment
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Mighty Quinn
Mighty missed with Germany (the draw won) on Sunday and likes Stanton (HR Derby) on Monday.
The deficit is 425 sirignanos.Comment

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