In this tale of two third basemen, Dan sorts out which one’s the genuine article: the old Mark Teahen, or the new terror of the American League.
Steven notes that the wages of confrontation in the clubhouse don’t always pay.
Jim has an emotional realization about the wild card, explores a year of rookie pitchers, and sounds off about the AL Cy Young race.
Boston already has a Big Papi, and now they have a Big…Papel? Nate has some thoughts on whether Jonathan Papelbon’s destination should be the rotation.
This week, Marc takes a look at the growth of an Age-27 season posterboy.
The contract signed by Roy Oswalt yesterday sets a new market for starting pitchers.
The more controversy in Toronto, the higher the Jays climb on our Hit List, as this week they leapfrog the suddenly anemic BoSox.
Will clarifies his praise for Minnesota’s Brad Radke, and has injury news on David Ortiz, Jon Lester, Carl Pavano, Jim Thome, and more.
The AL West is a far cry from where it was a few months ago. The Rangers take on the Athletics in your Game of the Week.
He may be a veritable man-beast, a titanic slugger just entering his prime in one of the toughest places to play in baseball–but he’s no MVP.
The Blue Jays keep finding themselves in the newspapers, players identify ways to cope without amphetamines, and John Smoltz is not a happy camper right now.
The upcoming roster expansion will mean the loss of a key piece of information in injury analysis. Will also provides updates on Carl Pavano, Jon Lester, Bobby Crosby, and others.
Dubbed a two-player race by most, the National League MVP race actually has three runners.
Jeff Conine heads north to Philly, a Royal sticks around for more in Kansas City, Scott Kazmir heads back to the DL, and more.
The Marlins have a chance to do something only one team in history has ever done: field an all-rookie lineup.
Stuck in an airport, Will finds a way to file a mini-UTK that includes Quick Hits on five different Red Sox, Hideki Matsui, Tom Glavine, and others.