Espn Insider listed Stanton as the 30th best free agent.
Espn Insider listed Stanton as the 30th best free agent.
“And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith
“And when finally they sense that some position cannot be sustained, they do not re-examine their ideas. Instead, they simply change the subject.” Jamie Galbraith
Here's hoping Stanton will have more left in the tank than Chris Hammond did
Never overlook the obvious
I am jumping off the Krivsky bandwagon until further notice. The Reds didn't need this. Isn't this why they went and got Bray and Cormier? Stanton is washed up and will get killed in GABP.
"My mission is to be the ray of hope, the guy who stands out there on that beautiful field and owns up to his mistakes and lets people know it's never completely hopeless, no matter how bad it seems at the time. I have a platform and a message, and now I go to bed at night, sober and happy, praying I can be a good messenger." -Josh Hamilton
This was on the Free weekend preview.
Click here: ESPN.com - MLB - Law: Top 40 free agents (21-30)
30
Mike Stanton
POSITION: Relief Pitcher
AGE: 39 | BATS: L | THROWS: L
2006 TEAM: San Francisco Giants
STATUS: Unsigned
2006 SEASON STATISTICS
GM IP W L BB K ERA
82 67.2 7 7 27 48 3.99
Stanton may have done more for his market value this fall than any other non-Cardinals pitcher in baseball. While it's unlikely that any team will see those eight saves and think of Stanton as a closer -- unlikely, but not impossible -- Stanton showed that not only is he still relevant, but he has value as a setup man rather than as only a lefty specialist.
Stanton's pitching plan is simple: get ahead with the fastball and/or cutter, then finish hitters off with the curve middle-out or down (for lefties) or changeup middle-out to outside (for righties). He cuts most of his fastballs, throwing them at 85-86 mph and touching 88, trying to stay away from solid contact while getting ahead in the count. His curve is slow and has a big break, at 69-71 mph, with good depth; he controls that pitch better than any of his other pitches, and will go for the swing and miss on a curve down when he's ahead of a left-handed hitter. His changeup is a little easier to pick up as he slows his arm, but it has some late fade, and makes him more effective against right-handed batters than a lot of lefty relievers today.
Of course, Stanton turns 40 in June, so this could all go south quickly, but a short-term commitment here should pay off nicely.
In November most teams bench sucks.
They are generally filled by FA signing of the fringe players and AAAA guys.
Right now we have Denorfia, Ross, Valentin, Castro and ???
That's not a bad start. Getting a Craig Wilson type player to platoon with Hatteberg would make it look much better.
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