Top News:
Washington Post:
Tejada Charged With Lying to Investigators — Former Baltimore Orioles shortstop Miguel Tejada was charged today with lying to congressional investigators about the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball. — Federal prosecutors accused Tejada of making misrepresentations …
Discussion:
Hardball Times, Yahoo! Sports, SPORTSbyBROOKS, Sports Pros, MLB Rumors, MLB FanHouse, Mr. Irrelevant, Deadspin and 24 Hours From Suicide
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Jim Baumbach / Newsday:
Cummings wants A-Rod to talk to Congress — Alex Rodriguez soon might have to repeat his steroid admission on Capitol Hill. — Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) plans to recommend to the head of the congressional committee that has previously hosted baseball players that A-Rod receive an invite …
Discussion:
Newsday, My Pinstripes, Sliding Into Home, River Avenue Blues and BBTF's Baseball Primer …
Andrew Perloff / Sports Illustrated:
SI's Selena Roberts tells her side of the A-Rod story — Selena Roberts joined the show after Alex Rodriguez claimed she was stalking him yesterday on ESPN. — “I can tell you that long list of things he alleged were a complete fabrication,” Roberts said.
Discussion:
Deadspin, SPORTSbyBROOKS, New Jersey Online, OuttaThePahk, NY Daily News, YanksBlog.com and The LoHud Yankees Blog
Bob Raissman / NY Daily News:
Raissman: Gammons fails test with A-Rod … When word started spreading Sunday night that Alex Rodriguez would do a TV interview, a Major League Baseball official was asked if the Yankees' third baseman, outed by Sports Illustrated as a steroids user, would do the spot on the MLB Network.
T.R. Sullivan / MLB.com:
Hicks ‘betrayed’ by A-Rod's steroid use — Rangers owner Tom Hicks said he feels personally “betrayed” and “deceived” by Alex Rodriguez's use of steroids while with the club in 2001-2003, which Rodriguez admitted to in a nationally televised interview on ESPN on Monday.
Discussion:
It's Mets For Me
George Vecsey / New York Times:
Facing Up to Some Truth Is a Start for Rodriguez
Facing Up to Some Truth Is a Start for Rodriguez
Discussion:
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre …
Henry Schulman / San Francisco Chronicle:
Minor-league deal for Aurilia — (02-09) 17:33 PST — Rich Aurilia rejected minor-league offers from the Cubs, Phillies and Blue Jays to accept one from the Giants, he said Monday just before the team formally announced the deal. Aurilia will earn $1 million if he makes the team.
Discussion:
MLB Rumors
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Bart Hubbuch / New York Post:
REHABBING SANTANA DECLINES WBC INVITE — PORT ST. LUCIE - Johan Santana will throw off the mound here today for the first time since having off-season knee surgery, but he won't be following that up with a stint in the World Baseball Classic. — Santana yesterday told The Post he plans …
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Joe Strauss / St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
St. Louis Cardinals release second baseman Adam Kennedy — St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Adam Kennedy can't handle a ball hit by Milwaukee Brewers' Bill Hall. Kennedy was released by the Cardinals on February 9, 2009. (Morry Gash/AP) — ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
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C70 At The Bat
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Anthony Rieber / Newsday:
Posada makes about 140 throws, feels good — TAMPA, Fla. - Under the brilliant Florida sunshine, Jorge Posada stood on the rightfield grass at the Yankees' minor-league complex yesterday morning and did something that had to feel as good as anything he's done in nearly a year. — He played catch.
JSOnline:
Looper agrees to one-year deal — By Tom Haudricourt of the Journal Sentinel — Unsure what the shopping list might look like down the road, the Milwaukee Brewers moved in to scoop up the best remaining arm on the free-agent market Monday. — The Brewers reached agreement on a one-year deal …
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Cameron Smith / Philly.com:
Phillies keep relief options open — Now that Ryan Howard is signed to a three-year deal and the team's payroll is above $130 million, the Phillies are done dealing, right? Not necessarily. — As the team's quest to add a righthanded-hitting bench player continues, so, too …
Cameron Martin / Comcast SportsNet New England:
Baseball Prospectus picks Sox to finish first, Yanks second, Rays third — Here's a screen grab of Baseball Prospectus' MLB team projections for 2009. BP guru Nate Silver nailed the 2008 presidential election, so his word seems to be gold these days. Still, the projections are simply grist …
Discussion:
Baseball Musings, Bugs & Cranks, Mack Avenue Tigers, Tiger Tales, MetsBlog.com, Deadspin and Beyond the Box Score
Chicagosports / Hardball:
White Sox sign Broussard to minor league deal — The White Sox signed first baseman-outfielder Ben Broussard to a minor league contract. — Broussard, 32, has a lifetime .263 batting average with 87 home runs over parts of seven major league seasons with Cleveland, Seattle and Texas.
Ken Gurnick / Hot Stove Blog:
Dodgers Sign Jeff Weaver — The Dodgers signed Jeff Weaver to a Minor League contract with an invitation to Major League training camp. Weaver, 32, will receive a $500,000 salary if he makes the club. — Weaver, a starter throughout his Major League career, will vie for a bullpen role.
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Tim Kurkjian / ESPN:
Olney outlasts Stark in six games … So, whom do we root for in this one? Buster Olney, who gets up at 4 a.m. every day to write a blog? Jayson Stark, who has relentlessly and hilariously collected more useless information over the past 30 years than any person in baseball?
David Brown / Yahoo! Sports:
Play-by-play of the A-Rod interview, plus pics and commentary! — If you thought watching A-Rod bare his soul about steroids to Peter Gammons was fun, imagine how much enjoyment watching it over and over while writing down every word must have been. I don't have to imagine it, because I did it last night.
Maury Brown / The Biz of Baseball:
MLBPA Releases Statement Explaining Why “Survey Test” Results Were Not Destroyed — As the revelation that Alex Rodriguez was one of 104 players in 2003 that tested positive during what was collectively bargained between MLB and the MLB Players Association as part of a “survey test” …
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Dan McLaughlin / Hardball Times:
The path to Cooperstown: The catchers (Part 2) — In Part 1 of this series looking at the best catchers of the post-1920 period, I focused on catchers whose prime years ran eight or more seasons. In this followup, I will look at the top catchers whose major league primes were shorter than that.