Top News:
Tim Brown / Yahoo! Sports:
A's sign shortstop Cabrera for $4 million — Buzz up! — PHOENIX - Shortstop Orlando Cabrera has signed a one-year $4 million deal with the Oakland Athletics. He will replace the light-hitting Bobby Crosby, who is still on the roster but apparently out of a job.
RELATED:
MLB:
Sources: Oakland Athletics, shortstop Orlando Cabrera agree to deal — Free-agent shortstop Orlando Cabrera has agreed to a one-year, $4 million contract with the Oakland Athletics, who also are closing in on a deal with veteran infielder Nomar Garciaparra, sources told ESPN The Magazine's Buster Olney on Monday.
Jonathan Mayo / MLB.com:
Cabrera, A's agree to contract — Free-agent shortstop signs one-year, $4 million deal — The A's signed free-agent shortstop Orlando Cabrera to a one-year deal Monday. — Cabrera, who played with the Chicago White Sox in 2008, agreed to a $4 million contract.
Adam Rubin / NY Daily News:
For Reyes, goal made to order — PORT ST. LUCIE - Jose Reyes now has added incentive for the Dominican Republic to advance far in the World Baseball Classic. Jerry Manuel said Sunday that a lengthy absence from camp, such as reaching the March 23 finals at Dodger Stadium …
RELATED:
Bart Hubbuch / New York Post:
METS ORDER THEN CANCEL MRI FOR SANTANA
METS ORDER THEN CANCEL MRI FOR SANTANA
Discussion:
MLB FanHouse, MetsBlog.com, Kranepool Society, NY Daily News and The Mets Are Better Than Sex
Roger Angell / New Yorker:
Joe Torre's “The Yankee Years.” — Joe Torre will be back in town on Tuesday, July 7th, reassuringly on view behind the batting cage at Citi Field as he prepares his Los Angeles Dodgers for a three-game series against the Mets. Last year, he took the Dodgers into the National League Championship Series …
Discussion:
Baseball Musings
RELATED:
Bill Madden / NY Daily News:
Johnny Damon feels Joe Torre's book is just not write about 2007 season
Johnny Damon feels Joe Torre's book is just not write about 2007 season
Discussion:
Sliding Into Home
Dan Steinberg / D.C. Sports Bog:
The Nats' New Mascot — Suggested ledes for tomorrow's newspaper story about the moments-ago unveiling of the Nats' new mascot Screech, which was, by far, the highlight of my week. — * First the Washington Nationals got rid of the turkey. Now they've done away with the chicken.
RELATED:
Bill Madden / NY Daily News:
Ex-Yank pitcher Sturdivant dies at 78 — Tom Sturdivant, a control artist and stalwart starting pitcher who won a combined 32 games for the 1955 and 1956 Yankee championship teams, has died. — Sturdivant, who died Saturday in Oklahoma City, was 78. — Before an arm injury in 1958 hampered …
RELATED:
Amy K. Nelson / MLB:
Alex Rodriguez's compliant cousin — First cousin has done everything for A-Rod, perhaps even injecting him with steroids — A few years ago, Roger Ball called his good friend Yuri Sucart about getting tickets to a Texas Rangers game for a female friend.
Gordon Wittenmyer / Chicago Sun Times:
No, Cubs, no? Peavy saga not over yet — Righty denies singing song, but trade status subject to change — PEORIA, Ariz. — Jake Peavy spent three innings of a spring training game Sunday shoving what-might-have-beens in the Cubs' faces. — Then he started preparing to switch teams.
Discussion:
Hardball
RELATED:
Peter Abraham / The LoHud Yankees Blog:
Spring Game 6: Yankees at Astros — YANKEES (2-3) — Pitching today: Chien-Ming Wang followed by Tomko, Jackson, De La Rosa, Dunn, Claggett, Kontos. — ASTROS (1-4) — Matsui 2B — Bourn CF — Berkman 1B — Lee LF — Blum 3B — Pence DH — Erstad RF — Kata SS
Chico Harlan / Nationals Journal:
For Now, Kasten Is In Charge — Team President Stan Kasten greeted a few media members just before lunch today by saying, “I'm here at the advice of my advisors.” Those would be his PR guys, Mike Gazda and John Dever, who notified Kasten of the Fourth Estate's collective desire to chat.
Rich Lederer / Baseball Analysts:
MLB Payroll Efficiency, 2006-2008 — The Commissioner's Office released the final baseball payrolls for 2008 in late December. Not surprisingly, the New York Yankees spent $75 million more than the next highest team (Boston Red Sox) and $126 million over the average MLB team.
Matt Eddy / Baseball America:
Minor League Transactions — Boston Red Sox — The slick-fielding, switch-hitting Ochoa made his big league debut last July 12, as the Giants searched for someone—anyone—who could provide more offense than Brian Bocock. Ochoa, who had signed as a minor league free agent, fit the bill, even in batting .200/.244/.267.
Thomas Boswell / Washington Post:
For All His Hard Work, Bowden Needn't Look Elsewhere for Blame — Jim Bowden was never going to be the Nationals' ultimate general manager, the man who, the franchise hoped, would oversee a potential champion. His methods were too suspect, his moods too unpredictable, his reputation too checkered …
MLB:
Minnesota Twins' Joe Nathan, Toronto Blue Jays' B.J. Ryan pull out of World Baseball Classic — FORT MYERS, Fla. — Team USA is minus two closers. — Joe Nathan of the Minnesota Twins and B.J. Ryan of the Toronto Blue Jays are skipping the World Baseball Classic, leaving the United States without a pair of first-rate relievers.
Adam Kilgore / Boston Globe:
It's the going rate — Several key Sox depart for WBC — FORT MYERS, Fla. - Trash talk already had begun flying in the Red Sox locker room yesterday, which is what one would expect from any competition including Dustin Pedroia. As players leaving for the World Baseball Classic packed …
RELATED:
Michael S. Schmidt / New York Times:
Baseball Investigators Interview a ‘Cooperative’ Alex Rodriguez — Officials for Major League Baseball interviewed Alex Rodriguez on Sunday night for two hours about who provided him with performance-enhancing drugs and whether that person had access to major league clubhouses.
Discussion:
YFSF
RELATED: