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Baseball Brunch: Nation's Unemployment Woes Extend to Baseball Stars, Too

Luis Gonzalez Marlins Dan UgglaBack in early February, Luis Gonzalez was all set to fly from his Phoenix-area home to San Diego to meet with the Padres.

And then the phone rang.

"There's no need for you to come," the Padres told Gonzalez and his agents. San Diego had signed Cliff Floyd.

Gonzalez is still waiting for the next call.

Like Pedro Martinez, Frank Thomas and others, Gonzalez is a veteran who wants to play yet can't find a job.

MLB Playoff Debates: Rays vs. White Sox



Every four years, Major League Baseball's postseason intersects with a presidential election. This is one of those years. In the spirit of the season, we here at MLB FanHouse have divided the playoff teams up for a series of debates. Tom Fornelli and Eamonn Brennan discuss the ALDS between the Rays and White Sox.

Eamonn and I took a look at this series and broke it down into six key areas: Starting rotation, Bullpen, Defense, Lineup, Bench, and Manager. Then for good measure we throw in our five-star lock of the week predictions, because we're psychic mediums in our spare time.

All of the debating goodness after the jump.

Report: White Sox Sign Octavio Dotel

There have been many great love affairs throughout history, whether real or fictional. There was Romeo and Juliet, Homer and Marge, Marc Antony and Cleopatra, and of course, the Chicago White Sox and Kansas City Royals relievers. In the past few years the White Sox have taken their fair share of Royals relievers and brought them to Chicago. Mike MacDougal and Andrew Sisco come to mind as two recent examples.

And although Octavio Dotel spent only one season in Royals blue, it appears it was long enough for him to catch Kenny Williams' eye. From the Chicago Sun-Times:
The White Sox are no strangers to pursuing relievers who recently wore the powder blue of the Kansas City Royals, but as of Friday afternoon, the club was keeping mum on reports that it had agreed on a two-year, $11 million contract with Octavio Dotel.
Neither Dotel's agent or Kenny Williams will confirm the report, but I'm guessing that due to his injury history, the White Sox would like Dotel to pass a physical first before making anything official.

If the reports are true, and Dotel does join the Sox bullpen, he'll be the second major addition to the unit this offseason. Earlier this winter the White Sox added Scott Linebrink to the back of their bullpen.

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.

White Sox Shake Up Their Bullpen

Ozzie Guillen finally reached his boiling point after his bullpen blew another lead in yesterday's 4-3 White Sox loss to the Blue Jays. After seeing Mike MacDougal and David Aardsma struggle yet again, the Sox have sent both relievers down to Charlotte.

On Monday morning, following Sunday's 4-3 loss to Toronto, the Sox announced they had sent relievers David Aardsma and Mike MacDougal to their Triple-A team. The team purchased the contracts of pitchers Ryan Bukvich and Bret Prinz from the Knights.

The move was expected, and both players deserve the demotion. In May and June, Aardsma had an ERA of 12.00 while MacDougal had a more "respectable" 11.88 ERA during the same time period.

Though it's not like the news has introduced any optimism from White Sox fans when it comes to their bullpen. Take this analysis from South Side Sox.

Oh yeah, Brett Prinz and Ryan Bukvich our your call-ups. Congrats, guys. You hit the lottery. You found the right team willing to carry a host of AAAA players. Hell, if you want more playing time, tell them you can play outfield.

Bukvich has spent a total of 46.2 innings at the major leagues, accumulating an ERA of 6.94 with the Royals and Rangers. Hey, he'd fit right in. He has posted some good strikeout numbers in Charlotte this season, but nothing compared to that of '06 Boone Logan or even '05 Jeff Bajenaru. I wouldn't count on him fixing anything.

Prinz pitched 41 effective innings for the 2001 Diamondbacks (championship experience, YES!), but has pitched in only 52 major league games since, posting a Masset-like line with a 6.61 ERA. His ERA in Charlotte is a microscopic 0.56, but 9 walks in 16 International League innings doesn't translate well to the majors.

I can't say I disagree with that analysis at all, but at this point it will be easier to watch some new faces blow leads for the White Sox. Got to keep things fresh, you know?

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