Top News:
Sports Illustrated:
Former Mets employee busted in raid — Pleads guilty to distributing steroids to MLBers — Since last summer, Sports Illustrated reporters Luis Fernando Llosa and L. Jon Wertheim have been investigating an alleged illegal steroid distribution network that has implicated pro athletes.
Discussion:
baseballtoaster.com
RELATED:
Amy Shipley / Washington Post:
Former Mets Employee Distributed Steroids — A former employee of the New York Mets admitted to distributing a variety of performance-enhancing drugs, including anabolic steroids and human growth hormone, to dozens of Major League Baseball players over a 10-year period beginning in 1995 …
ESPN:
Report: Ex-Met trainer pleads guilty in steroid case — SAN FRANCISCO — A former personal trainer for the New York Mets has pleaded guilty to distributing steroids and human growth hormone to dozens of major league players between 1995 and 2005, several media outlets are reporting.
Curt Schilling / 38 Pitches:
Ignorance has its privileges — Take Gary Thorne, John, Jack Joe or whatever his first name is, Heyman, Karen Vescey, Woody Paige, CHB, Jay Marriotti, Bill Plaschke, and a host of other people that litter the media landscape, and put them all on an island somewhere. — Does anyone stop reading their newspapers?
Baseball Prospectus:
Lies, Damned Lies: The PECOTA Top 100 by Nate Silver — This is my favorite column of the year to write, perhaps because there's relatively little actual writing involved. Let's bring the PECOTA Takes on Prospects series to its long overdue conclusion. — Below is PECOTA's …
Discussion:
Brew Crew Ball
Sports Illustrated:
Heirs to the throne? — Dolan family has keen interest in buying Yankees — Also in this column: — With age creeping up on George Steinbrenner and his team's succession plans seeming unsettled, it was only a matter of time before someone surfaced with interest in buying the Yankees.
Yahoo! Sports:
Griffey diagnosed with pleurisy (AP) — PITTSBURGH (AP) — Ken Griffey Jr. remained out of the Cincinnati Reds' lineup for a second day Friday with pleurisy, an inflammation in the lining of a cavity surrounding the lungs. — Griffey was held out of Thursday's game in St. Louis with soreness in his chest.
Joe Cowley / Chicago Sun Times:
No longer a gone-slinger — Odds aren't that great, but at least Buehrle's departure doesn't seem inevitable anymore — There's a memorable scene at the end of ''The Good, the Bad and the Ugly'' in which ''Blondie,'' played by Clint Eastwood, lets everyone know who's holding all the cards.
Amalie Benjamin / Boston Globe:
Lineups, etc. — There's a whole lot of standing around going on in the Red Sox clubhouse, so I decided to bow out to give you all a peak at the lineups for tonight. I also have some news of note from Terry Francona, and the update that "Talladega Nights" was bringing down the (club)house.
Joe Sheehan / Baseball Analysts:
That Sinking Feeling — This week I wanted to look more in-depth at the aerodynamic fingerprints of different pitches, particularly sinkers. A sinker is a two-seam fastball that drops as it approaches the batter and is frequently pounded into the ground by a hitter.
Discussion:
Friar Watch
John Fay / Reds Insider:
Reds have to do something — It's only one man's opinion — mine — but the Reds have to make a move before the open the series in Pittsburgh tomorrow. You can blame Thursday's 7-5 loss to the Cardinals on the fact that Kyle Lohse suddenly went from lights out to lit up.
Discussion:
Bucs Dugout
David O'Brien / Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Chipper stresses Braves need consistency — Denver — The spike in optimism that accompanied the Braves' 7-1 start has been tempered by a subsequent 6-7 stretch marked by inconsistency and concerns with the pitching staff and lineup. — It's the sort of things Chipper Jones was referring …
Discussion:
MetsBlog.com
Associated Press:
Israeli league team drafts Koufax as tribute — NEW YORK — Forty-one years after he retired from baseball, Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax was the final player chosen in the draft to stock the six teams for the inaugural season of the Israel Baseball League.
Ben Shpigel / New York Times:
For Wright, One Bad Swing Can Often Lead to Another — All his teammates had left by the time David Wright emerged from the showers late Wednesday afternoon. He dressed quickly, without a sound, and as he put on his wireless earpiece, he looked up to notice the reporters who had converged on his locker.