White Sox Agree To Deal With Scott Podsednik

According to Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports, the White Sox agreed to a minor league deal with Scott Podsednik.

Podsednik, of course, played for the Sox from 2005 to 2007.  They designated him for assignment after '07 and he landed with the Rockies, hitting .253/.322/.333 in 181 plate appearances.  The Rox re-signed him in January but released him in April.  Rosenthal explains why the Sox brought Pods back:

The move became necessary when center fielder Dewayne Wise left Monday's game with a separated right shoulder. Wise will be placed on the disabled list and is expected to miss six to eight weeks.

Manny Would Like A Second Indians Stint

According to Bob Nightengale of USA Today, Manny Ramirez would like to play for the Indians one more time before the end of his career.  He even talked to Jim Thome about reuniting in Cleveland.  Of course, it takes two to tango and the Indians have Travis Hafner locked in at DH through 2012.

Back in the 2000-01 offseason, it seemed that Manny wanted to stay in Cleveland but his agent Jeff Moorad steered him toward the more lucrative Boston offer.  The Indians topped out at $138MM over eight years, but Ramirez received $160MM from the Red Sox.  Manny reportedly regretted his decision by the summer of '01, according to his authorized biography Becoming Manny.

Ken Gurnick and John Schlegel of MLB.com have follow-up comments from Manny and Scott Boras.

Odds And Ends: Hudson, Alvarez, Anderson

Links for Saturday…

Odds & Ends: Lackey, Sheffield, Luis Gonzalez

Links for Thursday…

  • Scot Gregor of the Daily Herald learned that while White Sox GM Ken Williams seeks a leadoff hitter, he does not have interest in Juan Pierre or Gary Matthews Jr.
  • In an article yesterday, MLB.com's Lyle Spencer said all is quiet on the John Lackey extension front.  Angels GM Tony Reagins said Lackey's initial Opening Day deadline was never a factor for the team.
  • Murray Chass says Gary Sheffield's clubhouse presence is a positive.
  • Luis Gonzalez, a free agent, hopes to play in 2009.  But when he retires, he'll do so as a Diamondback according to MLB.com's Steve Gilbert.
  • MLB.com's Joe Frisaro wrote in praise of Florida starter Josh Johnson.
  • MLB.com's Corey Brock says the Padres introduced Tom Garfinkel as the new president and chief operating officer in charge of non-baseball operations.
  • I wrote about Blue Jays starter David Purcey over at RotoAuthority.

Jermaine Dye Talks About The Future

MLB.com's Scott Merkin talked to White Sox outfielder Jermaine Dye about his future, though Dye didn't say much.  He faces a $12MM mutual option for 2010 with a $1MM buyout.  Dye hit .292/.344/.541 in 645 plate appearances last year and his defense was not highly regarded.

Back when the White Sox were seemingly talking about Dye trades in December, his contract seemed reasonable.  But since then Bobby Abreu signed at $5MM a year, Adam Dunn at $10MM, and Pat Burrell at $8MM.

White Sox Sign Jimmy Gobble

Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune reports the White Sox have signed Jimmy Gobble to a minor-league deal. The 27 year old left-hander will report to Triple-A Charlotte this week.

Just five years ago, Gobble was a top prospect for the Royals but never found success against right-handers and was released by Kansas City on March 17th. The Rangers signed Gobble to a minor league deal but opted to go with lefties Eddie Guardado and C.J. Wilson instead, cutting Gobble on March 30th.

Gobble held left-handed hitters to a .200/.246/.323 line in 2008 and can be retained by his new team for 2010 as an arbitration-eligible player.

Odds And Ends: Braves, Bernie, Boras

Links for Saturday…

Offseason In Review: Chicago White Sox

Next up in our Offseason In Review series, the White Sox.  Here's what we wrote about them on October 9th.  Changes for 2009:

Additions: Bartolo Colon, Dayan Viciedo, Brent Lillibridge, Jeff Marquez, Wilson Betemit, Jayson Nix, Kelvin Jimenez, Ryan Braun, Franklyn German, John Van Benschoten, Tyler Flowers, Ben Broussard, Bryan Myrow, Josh Kroeger, Michael Restovich

Subtractions: Nick Swisher, Javier Vazquez, Boone Logan, Orlando Cabrera, Joe Crede, Juan Uribe, Ken Griffey Jr., Toby Hall, Pablo Ozuna.  Midseason: Nick Masset, Danny Richar

The '09 squad will be appreciably different, especially the offense.  How will they compare to the 4.98 runs per game scored last year?  CHONE projections and the Baseball Musings lineup analysis tool suggest 5.07 runs per game, which would again rank 5th in the AL.  This simulation has Chris Getz leading off and DeWayne Wise splitting time evenly with Brian Anderson.  Gone are the 2,075 ABs given to Cabrera, Swisher, Crede, Uribe, Griffey, and Hall.

If the White Sox score 820 runs and hold steady at last year's 729 allowed, they'll be projected to win 90 games.  Is that level of run prevention (7th in the AL) possible again?

Last year's rotation posted a 4.09 ERA in 998.3 innings, 4th in the league.  Vazquez contributed 21% of those innings, but at a 4.67 ERA.  Once again, the White Sox will have to prove projection systems wrong.  CHONE sees a Buehrle/Danks/Floyd/Contreras/Colon/Richard/Marquez rotation posting a 4.91 ERA in 934 innings.  There is a good case to be made that projection systems are selling the newly-locked up Floyd short by calling for a 5.00+ ERA.  And based on gut feel it's hard to believe no one gets under Buehrle's projected 4.57 mark.  Still, it would've been nice to see the Sox add more starting depth or hang on to Vazquez.

Logan's 5.95 ERA is gone from the bullpen; the core group returns.  Projections suggest that as a whole, the pen is capable of repeating its 4.13 ERA.

Defensively, the White Sox ranked 12th of 14 AL teams according to The Fielding Bible II.  The book says the poor fielding was spread across the diamond, with above-average work only at shortstop, third base, and left field.  Fields can't match Crede at third, and the Getz/Ramirez middle infield is an unknown.  Not having Swisher and Griffey in center should help.

GM Ken Williams took a gamble dealing Vazquez, as the '09 rotation is not necessarily a strength.  As presently constructed, even with a quality offense, this team seems destined to win 84 games at best.  The standard disclaimer: the Ken Williams' White Sox have never been predictable.

Bottom line: The White Sox will again need multiple unexpected performances to repeat their 89 wins of '08.

White Sox Likely To Stay In-House For Center Field

On Wednesday Ken Rosenthal said available Yankees center fielder Melky Cabrera "would be a perfect fit for the White Sox."  Rosenthal originally had the Sox interested in Gary Matthews Jr., but updated his column saying that a source refuted the item.

Manager Ozzie Guillen wants to stay in-house for center field, according to Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune:

"No, we're not going (outside the organization).  I don't want that to happen. I don't like that to happen. If we have to go outside the organization right now, gosh, I'm not going to say we're in trouble. But as a ballclub, we have enough guys here to resolve that problem."

Currently the contenders are Jerry Owens, Brian Anderson, and DeWayne Wise.

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