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Major League Mongering: Reggie Sanders to the Red Sox

Reggie SandersMajor League Mongering will look at players rumored to be on the move between now and the July 31st pseudo-trade-deadline.

Why does this need to happen? Because Reggie Sanders is 39 years old and in the last year of a two-year contract. I mean, seriously, the Royals are in the middle of a youth movement, have been vying for the worst record in the league since Opening Day, and are still giving at-bats to someone five years shy of middle aged?

Besides, it's no secret that Sanders wants to be dealt to the Red Sox -- in fact, he's outright campaigning for it. From the Boston Herald:
"No, not at all," Sanders said when asked if he would be adverse to a trade to the Red Sox. "It's a great group of guys over there. I have never played there, but I have felt like I have just because of the way they embrace everybody."

Sanders has relished his role of elder statesman on this ultra-youthful Royals team for the past 1 1/2 seasons. But he also has heard about the euphoria that can come with playing in Boston from his friend Curt Schilling. And there is also the prospect of making a fourth World Series appearance.

"I think so," Sanders said when asked if the Red Sox would be among the teams at the top of his list, if traded. "(Schilling) is probably over there trying to make it happen right now."
Sanders certainly wouldn't be anything more than a fourth outfielder for the Sox, but it's not like he's racking up the playing time in KC -- he's played in just 18 games, missing two and a half months with a torn hamstring.

Maroth Shaky But Tigers Get A Win

It was Mike Maroth's first regular season start since last May when elbow surgery robbed him of a season, even if it wasn't very pretty. In the end Maroth knows it's the win that counts, and that's precisely what Maroth got as Detroit beat Kansas City 6-5.

"[I] did enough to win," Maroth said. "I wouldn't say that I pitched real well, but we scored more runs than they did, and that's what counts."

His teammates spotted Maroth a 4-1 lead early, but he let the Royals tie the game up in the third inning after Reggie Sanders smoked a two-run homer to left field. Fortunately for Maroth, his counterpart Gil Meche wasn't nearly as sharp as he was on Opening Day, and the Tigers offense didn't miss their chances.

After Kansas City tied the game at 4, Ivan Rodriguez led the fourth inning off by lining the first pitch he saw from Mech over the wall in left field. Curtis Granderson would then add a solo shot in the fifth inning to provide the Tigers with all the runs they'd need.

Meche lasted seven innings, but allowed all six Tigers runs that included the solo homers to Rodriguez, Granderson, and Gary Sheffield. Afterwards Meche talked about not having the same command of his pitches that he had when he beat the Red Sox earlier this week.

"I never felt like the weather was bothering me," Meche said. "I just couldn't find a rhythm on the mound with my offspeed pitches, and I kept falling behind. The other day, it seemed that everything that came out of my hand was a strike, and today, it seemed like I was trying to find it pretty much every inning. I couldn't get it to where I wanted to be."

The two teams will meet again in the rubber match on Sunday afternoon as the Tigers send Jeremy Bonderman to the mound against Brandon Duckworth.

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