Brandon Webb Yet to Throw Off Mound

The Rangers are being very careful with righty Brandon Webb, restricting him to long toss every three days until his arm strength is at a sufficient level.

Analysis: The 2006 NL Cy Young Award winner has not pitched in a big league game since April of 2009, and his rehabilitation from shoulder surgery has been an arduous process. Because of this, noone should be surprised that Texas is handling Webb with kid gloves. It should not be a shocker either that pitching coach Mike Maddux has stated that Brandon may not be on the active roster come Opening Day against Boston. With the offseason loss of Cliff Lee, the Rangers are depending on Webb to give them a respectable number of starts this year. The last thing they’re going to do is rush him along.

Projection: Although this news should not be unexpected for someone who hasn’t seen a Major League mound in almost two full years, it is still disheartening to Fantasy owners who have their eye on Webb. Aside from mild soreness, he said that he feels fine following his long toss sessions thus far in camp. This is a good sign, but until Webb faces live hitters it is tough to speculate where he really is. His surgery was serious, but so were his numbers prior to being shelved. A 22-game winner in his last full season, Webb averaged 33 starts a year between 2003-08, twice leading the NL in games started. The three time All-Star also finished runner-up in Cy Young voting the following two seasons after he took the award home. Before surgery, Webb was one of the best pitchers in the game on a consistent basis. The Rangers would be happy with him being half the man he used to be, and Fantasy owners looking for a bargain are doing the same. In a well-informed league, Webb will be far from a sleeper pick. However, because of the obvious risk involved, he may not hit the board for a while. Monitor his progress throughout the next several weeks, and keep his name in your back pocket in the meantime.

Carlos Gonzalez Is Not A Top Ten Pick

After a .336 AVG, 34 HR, 26 SB year the hype machine just won’t stop with CarGo and almost all experts are tagging him as a top ten pick.

Analysis: Gonzalez hit .380 and hit 26 of his 34 homers at home last year. That stat alone should raise the red flag on his consistency issues. His BABIP was an unsustainable .384 and should come down at least thirty points to even out his average to about .300. Gonzalez’s plate discipline is also a concern, he’s swinging at 37% of pitches outside of the strike zone. To put this into perspective, Alfonso Soriano’s career O-Swing percentage is 35%. The bottom line is CarGo isn’t a top ten player due to an inflated batting average and an unsustainble output at home in 2010.

Projection: Gonzalez is no doubt a top 12-15 player because he’s a five category stud but the batting average and power numbers will take a hit this year. Expect a .295 AVG, 28 HR, 22 SB at a relatively deep outfield position in 2011.

Blake Griffin’s bounce-pass dunk from freshman-rookies game

Blake Griffin won the slam dunk contest last night, but his best dunk was from the freshman-rookies game.

Analysis: With the fantasy season put on hold for a few days, enjoy Blake Griffin and the rest of all-star weekend. Griffin is quickly becoming one of the best fantasy players in the league, and this during his first full season as a Clipper. Be glad you got your hands on him this season in the middle rounds of your draft because next year he will surely be much tougher to get your hands on him.

Mark Teixeira will not waive his no trade clause

Talking to reporters on Saturday, Mark Teixeira told Andrew Marchand that he will not be waiving his full no-trade clause, trying to put rumors to rest in the unlikely hood that Albert Pujols could end up a Yankee.

Analysis: “I’m not going anywhere,” Teixeira said as Yankees position players reported on Saturday. “I got that no-trade for a reason. I’m going to be buried in these pinstripes. You know what, I would be disappointed if the fans of New York weren’t looking to make our team better, but they’ve just got to know I’m not leaving.”  While thats all fine and dandy, the real question is which Teixeira will appear during the first half of the season.  As we all know, Teixeira put up horrible numbers and didn’t break out of the slump until around 2/3rd of the season was already over.

Projection: Tex is safe to draft in all formats, and his hamstring sounds like it won’t be a problem.  Teixeria should put up some solid numbers for the Yankees in 2011 that we are used to seeing from him.

Pick Up Curtis Glencross

Left Winger Curtis Glencross is one of the hottest players in the NHL right now as he continues to power the Flames into a playoff berth.

Analysis: You cannot ignore 9 goals in 12 games this deep into the fantasy season and with Glencross only being 0wned in just over twenty percent of fantasy leagues now is the time to act. His ice time is up over two minutes above his season average these last few weeks and his power play minutes have risen as well. If you’re in need of goals and a stable plus/minus rating Curtis Glencross is what you’re looking for at the left wing position in deeper leagues. He’s definitely going fast so if you have a hole at left wing you need to act immediately and pick Glencross up.

Projection: Expect about 18 minutes of ice time a game, 7-10 goals, over 60 shots on goal and 20 penalty minutes the rest of the season. He’s a sneaky good scorer who racks up penalty minutes, something fantasy hockey owners can’t get enough of. Glencross seems a safe bet to provide multi category support as the season heads into the home stretch.