Randy Winn Retires

Randy Winn has retired after 13 season in the big leagues, according to Janie McCauley of the Associated Press (on Twitter). The Orioles signed Winn to a minor league this past offseason then released the 36-year-old this week.

Postseason baseball eluded Winn throughout his career and last year was no exception. The Yankees, who made it to the ALCS in 2010, signed him before the season, but designated him for assignment after he struggled. The Cardinals picked him up last summer, only to miss the postseason. Winn also played for the Giants (between their recent trips to the World Series), the Mariners (after their most recent playoff appearance) and the Rays (before they sniffed the playoffs).

Winn retires with a .284/.343/.416 line, 1759 hits, 110 homers and 215 stolen bases. He earned over $42MM in his career, according to Baseball-Reference.

Heyman On Marlins, Pujols, Sabathia

Buster Posey, Jason Heyward, Colby Rasmus, Gordon Beckham and Matt Kemp make Jon Heyman's list of players who could take another step toward stardom in 2011. Here are the latest rumors from Heyman at SI.com

  • Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez begins the season ‘under the gun,’ according to Heyman. Rodriguez was never the first choice of owner Jeffery Loria, who can make Miami seem like ‘Steinbrenner south.’
  • Three GMs predict Albert Pujols will re-sign with the Cardinals after the season, when he hits free agency for the first time in his career. The sides are not negotiating during the season, but earlier in the spring, the Cardinals’ main offer was for over $200MM and nine years.
  • A rival GM predicts that C.C. Sabathia is “definitely opting out'' of his contract with the Yankees after the season. It seems likely that the lefty could obtain more than $92MM over four years if he puts together a typical season in 2011.

NL East Notes: Reyes, Werth, Amaro

The latest on the NL East, before the Phillies, Mets and Marlins open their respective seasons…

Jimenez Extension Going Well For Rockies

There's inherent risk in signing any pitcher long-term, let alone someone who has just one full season of Major League experience to his name. If you're wondering why teams ever commit $10MM-plus to relatively inexperienced pitchers, take a look at the Rockies and Ubaldo Jimenez.

Ubaldo

When Jimenez signed his current extension with the Rockies, he had similar numbers to the ones Wade Davis has now. Their ERAs (Davis 4.01 vs. Jimenez 4.06), records (Davis 14-12 vs. Jimenez 16-16) and innings totals (Davis 204 1/3 vs. Jimenez 288 1/3) were comparable after one-plus MLB seasons and those stats led to similar extensions (Davis four years, $12.6MM vs. Jimenez four years, $10MM).

Two years into Jimenez's deal, he has developed from a promising 25-year-old like Davis into a Cy Young candidate and legitimate top-of-the-rotation starter. Jimenez has posted a 3.17 ERA with 8.4 K/9 and 3.6 BB/9 since signing his extension, averaging 220 innings and 17 wins per season. If any doubt remained about his status as an ace, he erased it last year, throwing a no-hitter, making the All-Star team and finishing third in NL Cy Young balloting.

Jimenez earned twice as much as pitchers in his service class in 2009-10 thanks to the structure of his extension and he'll earn $2.8MM in 2011, his first season as an arbitration eligible player. It's a substantial raise from his 2010 salary of $1.25MM and not a bad salary for a first-time arbitration eligible pitcher.

But given Jimenez's career accomplishments to date, he could have surpassed the salaries Mike Pelfrey ($3.925MM) and Chad Billingsley ($3.85MM) earned their first time through arbitration and matched Jered Weaver's $4.265MM salary. Not only is that $1.4MM more than Jimenez will actually earn in 2011, a $4.265MM salary would have set him up for future arbitration raises.

As it stands, Jimenez will earn $4.8MM from 2009-11, about the same as he would have obtained by going year to year. The Rockies will start saving big in 2012, when they'll pay Jimenez just $4.2MM and the savings could continue in 2013 and 2014, as the Rockies have a pair of team options. The risk paid off for Colorado, which could save $15MM or more if Jimenez stays healthy and GM Dan O'Dowd exercises both options.

That doesn't make the deal a regrettable one for Jimenez and his representatives at SFX, however. Like Davis, Jimenez took the risk that his performance would justify larger raises than the ones structured into his extension in exchange for the security of guaranteed money. Like Davis, he'll hit free agency in his early 30s, even if the team exercises its options, so there's still time for a substantial free agent payday.

Baseball Blogs Weigh In: Rays, Crow, Peavy, Boyer

Ten years ago today, Major League Baseball played its first ever game in Puerto Rico. The Blue Jays beat the Rangers by the score of 8-1 in front of a crowd of just under 20,000 at Hiram Bithorn Stadium. Alex Rodriguez had two hits in his first game with Texas after signing his landmark ten-year, $252MM contract, but he also committed an error on his first defensive chance.

With the regular season underway, let's take a look at what's being written around the blogosphere…

If you have a suggestion for this feature, Mike can be reached here. Only one email per week, please.

Ichiro Hints At Prolonged Career With Mariners

Ichiro Suzuki hinted to John Hickey of Sportspress Northwest that he wants to re-sign with the Mariners after his current contract expires. Ichiro, whose contract expires after the 2012 season, is now 37, but he says age is more of a distraction than a limitation. 

“Take the talk of age. It’s something that I will have to battle," Ichiro said. “When you have to think about something like that, it’s not a positive for you. I mean, it’s something you don’t have to think about, but when you have people around you talking about it, you don’t want the negatives to get in.”

There were lots of positives for Ichiro in 2010. He led the league in hits, reached the 200 hit plateau for the tenth consecutive season and stole 42 bases, hitting .315/.359/.394. As Ichiro points out he can still play though, “there are players who are 25 who play already like they’re 40.”

He has 2,244 hits as a Major Leaguer, so the 3,000 hit plateau is within reach, even though he didn’t make his MLB debut until he was 27. Ichiro admits that his goals were once personal, but says they have become more team-oriented as he has become a fixture in the game and, especially, in Seattle.

“For me, it’s about going to the playoffs with the Mariners,” Ichiro said. “It’s all the time you’ve spent getting there."