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Fantasy Baseball Preview: The Padres

Fantasy baseball draft season is coming, so you best be prepared by delving through every major player on each team. Fantasy FanHouse is here to help with a quick once-over.

Meet the ...
Worst team in baseball. Much like the 2008 incarnation, there are very few bright spots on the 2009 San Diego Padres. Jake Peavy is obviously awesome (although he does have a lot of mileage already), Adrian Gonzalez has been quite consistent the past few years, Chase Headley is dreamy if you're one of those folks that are obsessed with prospects (/raises hand), and Heath Bell might be able to save some games ... if the Pads can get him a lead.

Trevor Hoffman First to 500, Saves Still Overrated

It's become headline news across all sports outlets, primarily because Hoffman is the first to do it. You know what? Justin Miller became the first known pitcher to get the words "Billy Koch" tattooed on his bum, but that doesn't mean it should be splashing headlines across the nets. Randy Johnson passing Roger Clemens for second on the all-time strikeouts list is much more significant, but that only warranted a few sentences, eight paragraphs down in the game recap on Tuesday night. Why should the news of Hoffman reaching 500 saves be as important as it's been made out to be? Was someone else going to beat him to the punch? I thought the big deal was last year when Hoffman passed up Lee Smith. Did I miss something?

The simple truth is that saves are an overrated statistic -- one of the most overrated stats in baseball. Here's all you need to know about saves: Armando Benitez has 289 of them, Danny Graves 182, some guy named Jose Jimenez grabbed 41 in a year, and it made an All-Star out of Danny Kolb and Mike MacDougal. I can name five pitchers in the Padres bullpen who have all been more effective than Hoffman this year -- Kevin Cameron, Heath Bell, Justin Hampson, Doug Brocail, and Scott Linebrink. But none of them get any recognition because you don't stamp an "S" next to their name in the boxscore. Moreover, any pitcher who can't get three outs before they allow three runs (which is all it takes to earn a save) doesn't belong in the big leagues. You follow me?

The fact that Trevor Hoffman has 500 of them tells me two things -- he's been closing for a long time, and done a very good job of it. And the fact that nobody else has done it reminds me that closers only became a serious part of the game around 25 years ago. That's it. I can still name you another reliever I would've preferred in my bullpen for every year he was in the majors. When you break it all down, Trevor Hoffman is a very good player whose only measuring stick is a vastly overrated, and highly insignificant statistic. I am impressed that Hoffman has been able to perform at such a high level for such a long period of time, especially when other relievers are blowing out arms or losing mental stability left and right. But it still doesn't change the fact that saves are an overrated statistic.

Dodgers Outlast Padres in Marathon Game

San Diego set an attendance record for a three game series over the weekend, meaning just over 44,000 people were on hand to witness an excellent pitchers duel. While they probably didn't receive the outcome they would have liked, nobody can say they didn't get their money's worth. The Dodgers stranded 15 runners in the 17 inning contest that lasted a Petco Park record 4:55, which is also currently the longest game of the year.

The Dodgers went ahead in the top of the 17th on an RBI double by Brady Clark. Clark drove in Wilson Valdez who reached on a bunt after first baseman Pete LaForest (generally the backup catcher) dropped the throw at first. The Dodgers got the win after reliever Chad Billingsley shut San Diego down in the bottom of the 17th, for a 5-4 final score. The Dodgers' pen went 10 and two thirds of scoreless ball, while the Padres bullpen produced 11 scoreless innings before Justin Hampson finally gave one up in the 17th. What adds insult to injury is losing a game after burning so many pitchers in your staff. Maybe a sign that it was LA's night was Jeff Kent (pictured) and Luis Gonzalez hitting back-to-back home runs, which was quite an improbable feat considering the team had only 12 home runs entering the game. The victory helped the Dodgers take two of three in the intra-divisional series.

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