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BALTIMORE ORIOLES

Acquired RHP Pete Smith from San Diego for RHP Eric Estes; designated RHP
Richie Lewis for assignment. [6/9]


When he’s going good, Pete Smith has a lot in common with Scott Kamieniecki:
adequacy. He’ll enter to Orioles rotation, moving Sid Ponson back to the
bullpen. That still won’t be enough to really shore up this team or resolve its
offensive, defensive, or bullpen problems, but Estes isn’t a great prospect.
Its a nice, slight improvement, which, given how shallow the Orioles farm
system is, may be as good as it gets before they have to sell off the geezers
and start over.


CHICAGO CUBS

Activated RHP Kevin Foster from the DL; optioned RHP Kennie Steenstra to Iowa;
activated OF Robin Jennings from the DL, and optioned him to Iowa; optioned
LHP Earl Byrne and INF Tim Unroe from Iowa to West Tennessee (AA). [6/9]


Foster finally enters the pen, three weeks since they’ve cut loose Telemaco to
make room for him. Is he a more useful pitcher than Telemaco? Not particularly.
The organization is congratulating itself for having “seven starting pitchers,”
but Foster and Mulholland aren’t much better than most people’s fifth starters,
and Mark Clark has been smacked around for much of the season. That “strength”
hasn’t really translated into an effective bullpen, either.


CINCINNATI REDS

Announced that RHP Curt Lyons of Chattanooga (AA) was placed on the disabled
list, retroactive to 6/10. [6/11]


Just a mention, since it’s a good cautionary example of how quickly one of the
game’s best pitching prospects of two years ago may have to be sent to the glue
factory. Lyons left the game cradling his arm in just his third start with the
Lookouts, and his career may be over.


CLEVELAND INDIANS

Claimed OF Matt Luke off of waivers from Los Angeles. [6/8]

Added OF Matt Luke to the 25-man roster; designated LHP Rick Krivda for
assignment. [6/9]


I tend to rail on teams that keep twelve pitchers, but this might be a
situation where the Indians didn’t help themselves any. Luke is an infinitely
replaceable journeyman who’s only real notable skill note is that he bats
lefty. He had a nice start with the Dodgers (.286/.313/.494) which is basically
in line with his career averages in the minors (.271/.330/.457), but is that
worth giving up a useful left-handed pitcher? Krivda, despite his usual
wildness, put up a 3.24 ERA, and would be a fine fill-in for the rotation if
Ogea and Gooden don’t get straightened out, whereas Luke is, at best, another
warm body to shuffle through left field until Brian Giles comes back. If Giles
were out for longer, then the Tribe could resolve their LF situation internally
with better options, like Jimmy Sexson or Alex Ramirez. If Ogea keeps going
down or Gooden struggles, what are the Indians going to do? Turn to Jason
Jacome? Or give up talent to get somebody else? Basically, the Tribe just cost
themselves talent to enter a waiver claim on a replaceable player.


COLORADO ROCKIES

Acquired INF Kurt Abbott from Oakland for a PTBNL and cash; designated RHP Dave
Wainhouse
for assignment. [6/9]


The Rockies’ level of tolerance for the struggles of both Neifi Perez and Mike
Lansing is obviously been used up. Although they didn’t give much up to get
Abbott, he’s enough of a defensive liability that putting him in for either
won’t merit whatever limited offensive gains they think they’ll get from him.
As if Rox hurlers needed this sort of “help”…


DETROIT TIGERS

Signed 1998 draft pick SS Keith Law. [6/9]


Sheesh, you’d think the Tiggers would draft some really famous stathead as long
as they were picking one, but Keith’s young, and has outstanding tools:
projectable sarcasm, fundamentally sound diction, and a high potential up-side.


HOUSTON ASTROS

Signed RHP Lee Smith to a minor-league contract and assigned him to New
Orleans. [6/8]


I’m as big a fan of what Larry Dierker can do with pitchers as anyone, but in
Lee Smith, we’re talking about somebody not even Felipe Alou could turn around
(in ’97). The Astros are reasonably concerned about the right-handed relief
situation, but I’d take a long look at Mike Grzanich or break Scott Elarton in
as a middle reliever before I’d go fiddling around with shufflin’ Lee Arthur
Smith.


KANSAS CITY ROYALS

Placed LHP Chris Haney on the 15-day DL (hamstring); recalled LHP Jamie Walker
from Omaha. [6/8]


Haney has been a disaster as he tries to pitch himself back into shape (7.45
ERA, 67 hits and 10 HRs in 48.1 IP), so having him out of the rotation isn’t
bad news. Although the Royals initially anticipated returning Hipolito Pichardo
to the rotation, he’s gotten his teasing bout of effectiveness out of the way
already, and has gone back to getting hammered. That probably means that Walker
will step into the rotation; at Omaha, he’s put a 2.70 ERA, but allowed 57 hits
in 46.2 IP, while walking 11 and striking out 21. In other words, he isn’t a
good bet to hold onto the slot.


MILWAUKEE BREWERS

Activated 1B John Jaha from the DL; outrighted UT Eric Owens to Louisville.
[6/8]


Jaha’s return puts the Brewers in a bit of a fix as far as how to distribute
playing time between Dave Nilsson, Geoff Jenkins, and Jaha between first and
left. Clearly, this is a better problem to have than choosing between Marc
Newfield and Darin Jackson, but it does leave them with only one reserve
infielder in Mark Loretta to back up at short, third, or second. In this
situation, Jaha will not get to play every day, which means he’ll probably ask
for a trade and/or head elsewhere after this season as a free agent.


MONTREAL EXPOS

Placed LHP Trey Moore on the 15-day DL, retroactive to 6/7 (tendinitis). [6/10]

Activated RHP Marc Valdes off the DL. [6/11]


Overall, Moore was making progress: he was settling down as far as his control,
but was still hittable. In his absence, Miguel Batista will return to the
rotation as the fifth starter, with Valdes taking his spot as long reliever out
of the pen.


NEW YORK METS

Traded UT Shawn Gilbert and a PTBNL to St. Louis for OF Wayne Kirby; designated
CF Rich Becker for assignment. [6/10]


Either they’re going to get something good for Becker, or they’ve made a
serious mistake. Despite his .190 average, Becker was getting on base (.331)
and slugging (.360) almost as well as Brian McRae. There is nothing that Wayne
Kirby does better than Rich Becker, so why make this tradeoff? To put the fear
of god into somebody? Who? John Olerud? Leaving yourself with Brian McRae as
your only option in center simply isn’t a good move.


NEW YORK YANKEES

Recalled OF Shane Spencer from Columbus; assigned RHP Scott Brow to Columbus.
[6/9]

Placed CF Bernie Williams on the 15-day DL (sprained knee); recalled OF Ricky
Ledee
from Columbus. [6/11]


You can thank the perils of the running game to Bernie’s latest injury, and
here’s hoping the Yankees show a bit more sense about letting him run in the
future. Williams isn’t really a great basestealer or even a good percentage
basestealer, and what he does at the plate and in the field is considerably
more important than the occasional tactical advantage of swiping an extra base.
Fortunately, the Yanks have Chad Curtis ready, as always, to fill in at center,
and they’ll get to broaden their selection among LF and DH beyond Strawberry
and Raines to include Ledee (.291/.381/.545, 13 HRs at Columbus) and Spencer
(.298/.380/.559 at Columbus). They may fall off that .760+ pace for winning
percentage, but not enough for even the second-place Red Sox to notice.


OAKLAND ATHLETICS

Traded INF Kurt Abbott to Colorado for cash and a PTBNL; recalled INF Mark
Bellhorn
from Edmonton. [6/9]


As Gary points out in today’s Prospect Focus, Bellhorn has about six weeks to
make a lasting impression, or he won’t get to in green and gold. Obviously,
Tejada is now the everyday shortstop, which gives the A’s four rookie regulars
(Tejada, Grieve, Christenson, and Hinch), with Eric Chavez in the pipe, and
Ramon Hernandez in case they tire of Hinch. Spiezio and McDonald broke in last
year. That’s progress, folks.


PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES

Recalled RHP Carlton Loewer from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre; optioned RHP Mike Grace
to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. [6/9]


An ex-first round pick, Loewer can finally shelve his griping for a callup.
He’s finally earned the shot: at Scranton, he put up a 2.87 ERA, allowing 89
hits in 94 innings with only 22 walks and 69 strikeouts. He was 7-3, and
allowed only 5 balls to leave the yard. He’ll immediately step into the
rotation in Grace’s spot. Expectations are high, but excessive. It’s reasonable
to expect him to be better than Tyler Green. This is another way of saying he
can be the second-best starter in their rotation, not that that’s a tremendous
accomplishment when the competition is Mark Portugal, Green, and Matt Beech.
Expectations were also high for Grace, who finally had consecutive healthy
months, only to pitch badly (5.65 ERA, with baserunners a’plenty).


ST. LOUIS CARDINALS

Traded OF Wayne Kirby to the Mets for UT Shawn Gilbert and a PTBNL. [6/9]

Activated UT David Howard from the DL; optioned SS Luis Ordaz to Memphis. [6/9]


I guess it’s interesting to wonder who the PTBNL will be, but the deal doesn’t
do much for the Cardinals or Memphis. David Howard’s return may put Tony
LaRussa at ease in his bench usage.


SAN DIEGO PADRES

Traded RHP Pete Smith to Baltimore for RHP Eric Estes. [6/9]

Signed OF Mike Devereaux to a minor league contract; purchased the contract of
LHP Roberto Ramirez from Las Vegas. [6/9]


Ramirez is the semi-mysterious Mexican League veteran that the Pads spent
months agonizing about whether to sign or not. Working in Las Vegas’ pen, he
only logged twelve innings, but managed 16 strikeouts; he was the ace of the
Mexico City Reds team that lost to Monterrey in the ’96 championships. Trading
Smith was probably premature: do the Pads really want to count on the rubber
bands and duct tape holding Mark Langston’s left arm on? He’d given them about
what you could expect in ten games: a 4.78 ERA, some useful starts. Unless
they’re intending to work Ramirez into the rotation or to bring up Matt Clement
this season, they’re going to have to worry about pitching as long as Joey
Hamilton continues to struggle.


SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS

Placed 2B Jeff Kent on the 15-day DL (sprained knee); purchased the contract of
1B Jeff Ball from Fresno. [6/10]


Well, this should make for interesting argument about the effect of
“replacement level” players. Rey Sanchez’ entire career has been devoted to
replacing better offensive middle infielders, and now he’ll have to take on
Kent’s playing time. He’s no asset as a regular, which is why the Giants are
making noises about moving Bill Mueller to second to get Charlie Hayes into the
lineup. That’s probably an even worse idea than having to play Rey Sanchez,
since Hayes isn’t a very good regular, and because Mueller would be at risk
playing second. Given how critical his hitting in the top of the order has been
to the Giants, they can scarcely afford to lose another important offensive
player to a takeout slide. In the meantime, Jeff Ball will probably get some
spot duty at first against lefties.


SEATTLE MARINERS

Activated RF Jay Buhner from the DL; optioned 1B/OF Dave McCarty to Tacoma.
[6/11]


Buhner pushed his rehab more quickly than anyone expected, and he’s been rather
frank that he won’t be able to go all out in the outfield. Watching the Rangers
and Angels pull further ahead while barely fighting off Oakland for the cellar,
the Mariners are desperately trying to build Rome in a day, and it isn’t going
to make things much better.


TORONTO BLUE JAYS

Designated RHP Erik Hanson for assignment; recalled RHP Luis Andujar from
Syracuse. [6/10]

Announced that LHP Ben VanRyn cleared waivers, and outrighted him to Syracuse;
outrighted C Dave Morgan to Dunedin (A). [6/11]


Well, it isn’t really a surprise that Hanson’s been cut loose, and given his
salary, he’s probably going to wind up on waivers. Carpenter will remain the
fifth starter, and Robert Person inherits Carpenter’s long relief role. Andujar
has been enjoying success as the closer at Syracuse (29 baserunners in 34 IP),
and he’s going to get the opportunity to become Randy Myers’ top setup man.
He’s throwing with better velocity than he did in ’95-’96, when he drew
attention as a Sox prospect, and his elbow woes may not come to the fore now
that he’s a reliever. Overall, this means the Jays are coming to terms with
certain realities: Paul Quantrill isn’t a great guy to bring in with men on
base, and Bill Risley has problems pitching on consecutive days. Since both
Almanzar and Escobar have flopped in their trials this season, bringing in
Andujar seems like a good idea.

Thank you for reading

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