BoSox receive De La Rosa, Sands from Dodgers – Rubby De La Rosa | BOS

04 Oct
2012
Red Sox acquired RHP Rubby De La Rosa from the Dodgers to complete the Adrian Gonzalez trade.
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Red Sox get prospects to complete trade with LA (Yahoo! Sports)

04 Oct
2012
BOSTON (AP) -- The Boston Red Sox acquired right-hander Rubby De La Rosa and first baseman-outfielder Jerry Sands from the Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday to complete the teams' Aug. 25 blockbuster trade.
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Alfonso Soriano says he is open to a trade – Alfonso Soriano | CHC

03 Oct
2012
Alfonso Soriano told Doug Padilla of ESPNChicago.com that he's open to a trade.
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Alfonso Soriano says he is open to a trade – Alfonso Soriano | CHC

03 Oct
2012
Alfonso Soriano told Doug Padilla of ESPNChicago.com that he's open to a trade.
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Alfonso Soriano says he is open to a trade – Alfonso Soriano | CHC

03 Oct
2012
Alfonso Soriano told Doug Padilla of ESPNChicago.com that he's open to a trade.
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Cubs’ Soriano says he’s open to offseason trade (Yahoo! Sports)

03 Oct
2012
CHICAGO (AP) -- Chicago Cubs left fielder Alfonso Soriano says he is open to being traded in the offseason.
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NHL 2012-13 Campaign Preview: Philadelphia Flyers

30 Sep
2012


Yes, indeed, despite the promise of impending labor Armageddon and a prolonged work-stoppage, your friends at Puck Daddy are previewing the 2012-13 NHL season (whenever the heck it starts). Why? Because this is the most important election in the history of all-time ever, and you need to know the candidates — like the Philadelphia Flyers.

Just one year removed from an appearance in the Stanley Cup Final, the Flyers blew up their locker room in Summer 2011. Mike Richards was traded to the Los Angeles Kings. Jeff Carter was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets, eventually joining Richards to win the Cup with the Kings.

Other huge changes: Ilya Bryzgalov was signed to a 9-year contract, ostensibly to solve the team's longstanding goaltending issues (and, perhaps, unlock the secrets of the universe); and Jaromir Jagr put on the orange and black on a 1-year deal.

The results were positive — mostly. The removal of Richards/Carter seemed to work from a chemistry perspective, and Jagr helped turn Claude Giroux into a star. But Bryzgalov was inconsistent in goal, and a cataclysmic injury to captain Chris Pronger changed the dynamic of the blue line. The Flyers finished fifth in the East with 103 points. They ousted the Pittsburgh Penguins in an epic first-round battle, but didn't have enough left against the New Jersey Devils in Round 2, seeing their run end in five games.

Is Philadelphia on track to win its first Cup since 1975?

"Eff Crosby"

The offseason transactions begin with The One That Got Away.

The 14-year, $110-million offer sheet given to defenseman Shea Weber of the Predators would have transformed the blue line for the Flyers, defensively and offensively. But the Predators matched, leaving the Flyers with their draft picks intact and without a game-changer to replace Chris Pronger.

Jagr decided to chase the money down to Dallas, signing a 1-year $4.55 million deal with the Stars. Defenseman Matt Carle also left, signing a 6-year deal worth $33 million with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

In a long-rumored trade, the Flyers sent James van Riemsdyk (and his contract) to Toronto for defenseman Luke Schenn, who may or may not have a sibling on the Flyers.

The Flyers added a few players via free agency: Danny Syvret, a defenseman from the Blues; Bruno Gervais, a defenseman from the Lightning; and veteran Ruslan Fedotenko, who played for the Rangers last season.

At forward … Claude Giroux is now a video game cover boy and entered into the Best Player In The World conversation at 24 years old, after a 93-point performance last season. His 1.21 points per game was a career best, and he had 17 points in 10 playoff games — along with a classic hit on Sidney Crosby.

Scott Hartnell ran shotgun on Giroux's line, tallying 67 points in the best offensive season of his career (to go along with the customary 136 PIMs). But Jagr, their running mate on one of the NHL's best lines last season, has moved on. Can Jakub Voracek, who idolized his countryman Jagr, move up to the top unit and be as effective?

Danny Briere posted his lowest points-per-game total (0.70) since 2001, managing just 16 goals after posting 34 in the previous season. He still brought it in the playoffs — 13 points in 11 games — but the Flyers need more from him in the regular season.

Wayne Simmonds, acquired in the Richards trade, had a promising first season in Philly with 28 goals; now, what does he do with a 6-year contract in his pocket?

The Flyers received a tremendous boost last season from a trio of rookies: Brayden Schenn (12 goals in 54 games), Matt Read (24 goals) and Sean Couturier (27 points, and stellar defensive play in the postseason). Schenn is expected to be a second liner with van Riemsdyk gone; what can Read and Couturier do for an encore?

Max Talbot is the veteran anchor of the lineup's role players, along with Fedotenko. Eric Wellwood, Zac Rinaldo and Harry Zolnierczyk are in the mix as well.

On defense … the Flyers have 10 defensemen that could be in the mix for NHL jobs, and one named Chris Pronger that remains in a prolonged concussion rehab.

Kimmo Timonen is in the last year of his contract and is the Flyers' elder statesman on defense. His 43 points led all Flyers blueliners, and he skated an average of 21:14 per game. With Carle gone, the rest of the offensive load may fall to Andrej Meszaros, who had 25 points in 62 games last season and Braydon Coburn (22:03 TOI), a defensive defenseman who'll need to offer up a little more offense.

Schenn and Nicklas Grossmann are defensive stalwarts; it'll be especially interesting to see how Schenn blossoms in the Flyers' system. Andreas Lilja, Erik Gustafsson, Marc-Andre Bourdon, Brandon Manning, Syvret and Gervais are all in the mix.

In goal … Bryzgalov finished the regular season with a 2.48 GAA and a .909 save percentage. In the playoffs, he ended with a 3.46 GAA and a .887 save percentage, thanks in part to that carnival act of a series against the Penguins.

But the bottom line is that for a goalie signed to be the Answer, he's just another Question Mark for the Flyers. There were times he was very good. There were others in which fans went after him like Chinese authorities chasing a tiger poacher. His HBO interviews made him a national sensation; they also underscored what a flighty mess he could be, to the point where the Flyers protected him by sitting him for the Winter Classic.

Is Bryzgalov the team's best hope in goal, or will he suddenly "disappear" to the KHL if he's not the answer?

Patrick Kane's favorite goaltender, Michael Leighton, looks to be the backup.

As we discovered on HBO, Mac Miller is terrible.

When Peter Laviolette isn't shoving opposing players in the concourse, he's a darn good hockey coach. He probably didn't get enough credit for keeping this Flyers team successful after the locker room was blown up and Pronger went down; lord knows he'll get the blame if that success subsides. But that new contract was a vote of confidence.

GM Paul Holmgren aggressively remade his roster, and there were plenty of critics ready to pounce if that failed. It didn't. But the whiff on Weber underscores the biggest concern for Holmgren: the blue line, even with Schenn, isn't good enough to win the East, let alone cover for the goaltending behind it.

Giroux is the team's best player and the new face of the franchise. He's on track to become a perennial Hart contender. The only question, besides health: How much impact did Jagr have on his 17-point increase year to year?

Brayden Schenn should get second-line duty with Simmonds and Briere next season, which means he should have every opportunity to blow up offensively.

Bryzgalov is "skinny and prepared", and has a season in the Philly pressure cooker under his belt. He's also a goalie that went from being a free agent coup to having fans calculating his buyout impact.

[Female Narrator]

"Times are tough. People are worried. Now more than ever, we need someone who will stand up for us.

"Instead, all Scott Hartnell does is fall down.

"Like, a lot.

"Paid for by People Against Fartsmell."

The Flyers are a playoff team, but how far they can advance will be predicated on Bryzgalov, the growth of last year's rookie crop and how aggressive Holmgren gets in filling the lineup's holes.

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Concession Speech: 2012 Cleveland Indians

28 Sep
2012

As the regular season winds down, many teams are already facing an offseason filled with golf rounds and hot-stove strategy.

But we're not going to let them get off that easy. No sir. No way. In an attempt to bring some closure between franchise and follower, we're giving a blogger from each team the opportunity to give a concession speech for this year's squad. Up next is Jon Steiner, a valued and esteemed member of the Cleveland-centric blog Waiting For Next Year.

My Fellow Tribesmen,

Welcome. I want to thank you all for the support you've given the Cleveland Indians throughout the 2012 death march season.  I want you to know that without your encouraging words, your unwavering commitment to our vision, and your constant presence anywhere but the ballpark, we would never have been able to set an attendance record bested only once in the history of our proud stadium.

In short: thank you.  Both of you. You've meant the world to this team.

And so it is with a heavy heart that I come before you today to concede the 2012 season.  To whom, you might be asking, are you conceding?  Let me be clear: We are conceding not to the Tigers from Detroit nor the Pale Hose from Chicago.  Despite the standings, we are conceding neither to the Kansas City Royals nor even the miserable Minnesota Twins.

No.  We are conceding to the simple failure to execute our plan—a plan we've been slowly unfurling for the last half decade—initiated by the trade of a portly southpaw named Carsten Charles to Milwaukee, and set ablaze a year later with the back-to-back moves of Cliff Lee and Victor Martinez for prospects most of you had not heard of.

Beginning with that trade in 2008 — just one year after winning more games than any team in baseball and coming within one win of the World Series — we asked you to trust us.  We told you we would shepherd you through the nadir of a painful rebuild, to the promised land of contending for division titles, and perhaps even bring to Cleveland the championship for which this starved city so longingly pines.

Now, not to pat ourselves on the back here too much, but the plan did get off to quite a promising start. We were the darlings of the blogging cognoscenti when we traded two months of Casey Blake for a stud catching prospect named Carlos Santana.  We managed to nab a young arm we thought could be a front-end starter from Boston for Victor Martinez.  Sabathia netted us a top-20 power prospect named Matt LaPorta, along with three others who might someday contribute, including a 19-year-old outfielder named Michael Brantley. And Cliff Lee got us … well, they can't all be winners, can they?

Throw in some of the internal pieces we'd built with some shrewd trading in Shin-Soo Choo and Asdrubal Cabrera (you're the best, Seattle — hope you're enjoying Ben Broussard's music career!), it wasn't hard to squint and see a young nucleus that could grow together into the sort of team you could embrace.  A team not unlike the one that took you so close to the Promised Land in 2007.

But let me be clear: our plan has failed us in 2012, and today I'm here to own up to that failure.

Let's start with, as one creative email from a passionate fan called it, "the stinking diaper full of digested Mexican food that takes up the roster place normally reserved for a starting rotation." Last season we traded away two young, highly-regarded pitching prospects to the Colorado Rockies for Ubaldo Jimenez, whose pedigree, age and contract status made him particularly attractive to a team like us — especially when we thought we were on the verge of contending for the division title.  In fact, a terribly handsome and eloquent writer may have even written a piece talking himself into the trade.

Since then, Ubaldo has been nothing short of a catastrophe, and a contagious one at that.  Jimenez has now started 42 games for your Indians since the trade, sporting a nifty 5.43 ERA over that period.  For great swaths of the 2012 season, he'd actually walked more batters than he struck out, which we always thought was impossible for a pitcher with a non-detached arm.

Except, of course, our rotation boasted TWO such starters with K/BB ratios BELOW 1.00 this year: Derek Lowe and Roberto Hernandez (née "Fausto Carmona"— don't ask).  Throw in regression years from Justin Masterson (11-15, 4.97 ERA) and Josh Tomlin (5-8, 5.72) and you start to see why your Cleveland Indians sport a rotation ERA of 5.28 as of this speechifying, good for second to last in the American League.

I understand that you might want to blame someone for this "colostomy-bag-of-a-pitching-staff" (Thanks Twitter!!).  I understand how that might "feel good" or "be warranted" or "make perfect sense". But rather than casting sto..HEY LOOK EVERYBODY WE FIRED THE MANAGER, THAT SHOULD TAKE CARE OF EVERYTHING!!!!

Just kidding.  But not about the scapegoating-the-manager thing.  We totally just did that.

Nevertheless, today we're not here to dwell only on the failures of the past.  Today is also for looking to the future.  Our club is poised to enter the 2012 season with a position player core of Carlos Santana, Jason Kipnis, Asdrubal Cabrera, Michael Brantley, and — barring an off-season trade — Shin-Soo Choo.  Throw in a return to form from Masterson, a return from Tommy John from Carlos Carrasco, a slight improvement from Ubaldo, continued solid work from young righty Zach McAllister and a young bullpen that performed well this year* and you can begin to see a team with the pieces to make one more push before blowing it all up.

*Sure, we'll probably trade Chris Perez this off-season.  He's practically begging for it.  But let's be completely clear: he's already overpaid and is likely to be more so after having a monster save season.  Couple that with his, er, indiscretions, and I'm pretty sure we'll be more than happy to get what we can for him.  By the way, this is a speech, but it has a footnote?  How does that work?

Also remember: We won't be paying Derek Lowe or Travis Hafner or Grady Sizemore next season, which will amount to well over $20 million in salary relief. And while a good deal of that freed up money will likely go to requisite arbitration raises and a new manager (yes, while we fired Manny Acta, we still have to pay him — though we're looking into loopholes as we speak), there should be enough left for us to build a nice complement around the players mentioned above — I understand there's been some talk of the "black hole of a dumpster fire" at first base.  We'll have to look into that.

I guess what I'd like to suggest is that we still think we've got a good shot to compete in what is increasingly recognized as the weakest division in baseball next season, largely with the core of players that is already on the roster.

You might want to argue that the core outlined above is largely the same one that managed to lose almost 100 games this year.  To that, I say….well…..PAY NO ATTENTION TO THAT MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN!!!!  WE FIRED THE MANAGER!!  ALL IS WELL!!!

The reality, my co-sufferers, is that the team you saw in 2012 is the team we've chosen to build over the last five years, and if it continues to fail, you'll know exactly whom to blame.  I can't imagine I'll be allowed to give another one of these speeches if this club falters next year the way it did this.

But we believe this club is better than it showed in 2012.  We believe that Carlos Santana will not continue to underperform his xBABiP by 60 points.  We believe that Jason Kipnis and Lonnie Chisenhall have an upside they've barely begun to approach.  We believe that Michael Brantley is an everyday centerfielder, and that Vinnie Pestano is as dominant a right-handed bullpen arm that you'll find this side of Craig Kimbrel.  We believe, despite all evidence to the contrary, that we can put Ubaldo back together again and iron out Justin Masterson's delivery and develop Zach McAllister on and on and on.

In short, we believe that this team can win the division next year.  And not too long ago, you did too.

So while today's concession of failure is a necessarily sad moment for all of us, it need not be emblematic of a permanent failure.  Just because the 2012 Indians disappointed us all doesn't mean that the 2013 group must as well.

There is always next year, and with it, the chance to prove that what you've done is not what you will always do.  That this too shall pass, and that championships don't have to remain imaginary objects in our fair city.

But yeah, on that Ubaldo trade … We're sorry 'bout that.

Follow Jon on Twitter (@WFNYJon) and read Waiting for Next Year

Previous Concession Speeches: Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres, New York Mets, Miami Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Toronto Blue Jays, Colorado Rockies, Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros

Want more baseball fun all season long?
Follow @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!


Tags: , , , land, Minnesota Twins, , , , , , , Ubaldo Jimenez
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Concession Speech: 2012 Cleveland Indians

28 Sep
2012

As the regular season winds down, many teams are already facing an offseason filled with golf rounds and hot-stove strategy.

But we're not going to let them get off that easy. No sir. No way. In an attempt to bring some closure between franchise and follower, we're giving a blogger from each team the opportunity to give a concession speech for this year's squad. Up next is Jon Steiner, a valued and esteemed member of the Cleveland-centric blog Waiting For Next Year.

My Fellow Tribesmen,

Welcome. I want to thank you all for the support you've given the Cleveland Indians throughout the 2012 death march season.  I want you to know that without your encouraging words, your unwavering commitment to our vision, and your constant presence anywhere but the ballpark, we would never have been able to set an attendance record bested only once in the history of our proud stadium.

In short: thank you.  Both of you. You've meant the world to this team.

And so it is with a heavy heart that I come before you today to concede the 2012 season.  To whom, you might be asking, are you conceding?  Let me be clear: We are conceding not to the Tigers from Detroit nor the Pale Hose from Chicago.  Despite the standings, we are conceding neither to the Kansas City Royals nor even the miserable Minnesota Twins.

No.  We are conceding to the simple failure to execute our plan—a plan we've been slowly unfurling for the last half decade—initiated by the trade of a portly southpaw named Carsten Charles to Milwaukee, and set ablaze a year later with the back-to-back moves of Cliff Lee and Victor Martinez for prospects most of you had not heard of.

Beginning with that trade in 2008 — just one year after winning more games than any team in baseball and coming within one win of the World Series — we asked you to trust us.  We told you we would shepherd you through the nadir of a painful rebuild, to the promised land of contending for division titles, and perhaps even bring to Cleveland the championship for which this starved city so longingly pines.

Now, not to pat ourselves on the back here too much, but the plan did get off to quite a promising start. We were the darlings of the blogging cognoscenti when we traded two months of Casey Blake for a stud catching prospect named Carlos Santana.  We managed to nab a young arm we thought could be a front-end starter from Boston for Victor Martinez.  Sabathia netted us a top-20 power prospect named Matt LaPorta, along with three others who might someday contribute, including a 19-year-old outfielder named Michael Brantley. And Cliff Lee got us … well, they can't all be winners, can they?

Throw in some of the internal pieces we'd built with some shrewd trading in Shin-Soo Choo and Asdrubal Cabrera (you're the best, Seattle — hope you're enjoying Ben Broussard's music career!), it wasn't hard to squint and see a young nucleus that could grow together into the sort of team you could embrace.  A team not unlike the one that took you so close to the Promised Land in 2007.

But let me be clear: our plan has failed us in 2012, and today I'm here to own up to that failure.

Let's start with, as one creative email from a passionate fan called it, "the stinking diaper full of digested Mexican food that takes up the roster place normally reserved for a starting rotation." Last season we traded away two young, highly-regarded pitching prospects to the Colorado Rockies for Ubaldo Jimenez, whose pedigree, age and contract status made him particularly attractive to a team like us — especially when we thought we were on the verge of contending for the division title.  In fact, a terribly handsome and eloquent writer may have even written a piece talking himself into the trade.

Since then, Ubaldo has been nothing short of a catastrophe, and a contagious one at that.  Jimenez has now started 42 games for your Indians since the trade, sporting a nifty 5.43 ERA over that period.  For great swaths of the 2012 season, he'd actually walked more batters than he struck out, which we always thought was impossible for a pitcher with a non-detached arm.

Except, of course, our rotation boasted TWO such starters with K/BB ratios BELOW 1.00 this year: Derek Lowe and Roberto Hernandez (née "Fausto Carmona"— don't ask).  Throw in regression years from Justin Masterson (11-15, 4.97 ERA) and Josh Tomlin (5-8, 5.72) and you start to see why your Cleveland Indians sport a rotation ERA of 5.28 as of this speechifying, good for second to last in the American League.

I understand that you might want to blame someone for this "colostomy-bag-of-a-pitching-staff" (Thanks Twitter!!).  I understand how that might "feel good" or "be warranted" or "make perfect sense". But rather than casting sto..HEY LOOK EVERYBODY WE FIRED THE MANAGER, THAT SHOULD TAKE CARE OF EVERYTHING!!!!

Just kidding.  But not about the scapegoating-the-manager thing.  We totally just did that.

Nevertheless, today we're not here to dwell only on the failures of the past.  Today is also for looking to the future.  Our club is poised to enter the 2012 season with a position player core of Carlos Santana, Jason Kipnis, Asdrubal Cabrera, Michael Brantley, and — barring an off-season trade — Shin-Soo Choo.  Throw in a return to form from Masterson, a return from Tommy John from Carlos Carrasco, a slight improvement from Ubaldo, continued solid work from young righty Zach McAllister and a young bullpen that performed well this year* and you can begin to see a team with the pieces to make one more push before blowing it all up.

*Sure, we'll probably trade Chris Perez this off-season.  He's practically begging for it.  But let's be completely clear: he's already overpaid and is likely to be more so after having a monster save season.  Couple that with his, er, indiscretions, and I'm pretty sure we'll be more than happy to get what we can for him.  By the way, this is a speech, but it has a footnote?  How does that work?

Also remember: We won't be paying Derek Lowe or Travis Hafner or Grady Sizemore next season, which will amount to well over $20 million in salary relief. And while a good deal of that freed up money will likely go to requisite arbitration raises and a new manager (yes, while we fired Manny Acta, we still have to pay him — though we're looking into loopholes as we speak), there should be enough left for us to build a nice complement around the players mentioned above — I understand there's been some talk of the "black hole of a dumpster fire" at first base.  We'll have to look into that.

I guess what I'd like to suggest is that we still think we've got a good shot to compete in what is increasingly recognized as the weakest division in baseball next season, largely with the core of players that is already on the roster.

You might want to argue that the core outlined above is largely the same one that managed to lose almost 100 games this year.  To that, I say….well…..PAY NO ATTENTION TO THAT MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN!!!!  WE FIRED THE MANAGER!!  ALL IS WELL!!!

The reality, my co-sufferers, is that the team you saw in 2012 is the team we've chosen to build over the last five years, and if it continues to fail, you'll know exactly whom to blame.  I can't imagine I'll be allowed to give another one of these speeches if this club falters next year the way it did this.

But we believe this club is better than it showed in 2012.  We believe that Carlos Santana will not continue to underperform his xBABiP by 60 points.  We believe that Jason Kipnis and Lonnie Chisenhall have an upside they've barely begun to approach.  We believe that Michael Brantley is an everyday centerfielder, and that Vinnie Pestano is as dominant a right-handed bullpen arm that you'll find this side of Craig Kimbrel.  We believe, despite all evidence to the contrary, that we can put Ubaldo back together again and iron out Justin Masterson's delivery and develop Zach McAllister on and on and on.

In short, we believe that this team can win the division next year.  And not too long ago, you did too.

So while today's concession of failure is a necessarily sad moment for all of us, it need not be emblematic of a permanent failure.  Just because the 2012 Indians disappointed us all doesn't mean that the 2013 group must as well.

There is always next year, and with it, the chance to prove that what you've done is not what you will always do.  That this too shall pass, and that championships don't have to remain imaginary objects in our fair city.

But yeah, on that Ubaldo trade … We're sorry 'bout that.

Follow Jon on Twitter (@WFNYJon) and read Waiting for Next Year

Previous Concession Speeches: Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres, New York Mets, Miami Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Toronto Blue Jays, Colorado Rockies, Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros

Want more baseball fun all season long?
Follow @bigleaguestew, @KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!


Tags: , , , land, Minnesota Twins, , , , , , , Ubaldo Jimenez
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Deal or No Deal? Robert Griffin III, on the fantasy trade block

27 Sep
2012
by in General

Wall Street dudes will tell you, pretty much without exception, that you should never fall in love with a stock. If an investment hits your price target — and certainly if it shatters your price target — take your profits. It's better to sell shares while they're on the way up, not after they've crested, when everyone is looking to unload.

And clearly we all need to listen to Wall Street dudes, because they've never [expletive] anything to [expletive].

There's an obvious fantasy tie-in here, because experts are always discussing the importance of buying low and selling high. This is a concept we mention all the time, but we're often reluctant to attach specific names to the conversation — if you're vague enough in your advice, then you're never verifiably wrong.

But that won't be an issue with this particular feature, because today we're discussing just one name: Robert Griffin III, rookie quarterback for the NFL's top-scoring team. Three weeks into the season, Griffin leads all players in total fantasy points, by a significant margin.

Here's the overall top-five in Yahoo! public scoring:

Robert Griffin III — 81.78 points
Matt Ryan — 73.52
Ben Roethlisberger — 68.36
Drew Brees — 65.06
CJ Spiller — 64.20

RGIII has actually been so productive that if you ignore his passing stats entirely, leaving only the rushing totals (209 yards, 3 TDs), he still ranks ahead Jay Cutler, Josh Freeman and a handful of other QBs in year-to-date fantasy scoring. Based simply on his rushing numbers, he'd be the No. 12 running back in our game. He's been ridiculous, an outstanding fantasy asset. If you haven't been thoroughly impressed, then you probably haven't been watching.

Griffin is also, in my opinion, the most obvious sell-high candidate in fantasy right now, a name-your-price trade chip. If he's on your roster, I'd suggest that you at least explore the market. I've flipped RGIII twice over the past 10 days, and wish I had more shares to sell.

My first Griffin deal was a one-for-one trade in a 16-teamer, returning Darren McFadden. In that league, my starting quarterback is Matt Ryan, and DMC replaces Ryan Williams in the active lineup. In the second trade, I acquired Mike Vick, Steve Smith (the useful one) and Santonio Holmes in exchange for RGIII and Pierre Garcon. Vick is merely a back-up to Drew Brees on that team; the addition of Smith and Holmes means Justin Blackmon can take a seat, which thrills me.

In both deals, the goal was to address a glaring weakness in my every-week starting roster by trading from a position of surplus. Make sense?

Let's hope so, because that should be a primary objective in any trade you ever make.

I'm assuming that a majority of RGIII owners, like me, drafted him as a high-end back-up. He was usually a best-player-available selection, made after you'd sketched in most of the starting roster, quarterback included. And even if you targeted him as a fantasy starter, you likely took a second respectable QB soon after. This could mean that RGIII's contributions are, to some significant extent, replaceable. If you toss his name on the trade block now, today — with an appealing match-up on the horizon (at Tampa Bay) — you're basically guaranteed to receive a pile of interesting offers.

There's a very good chance you'll be dealing at or near the peak of the RGIII market, too.

This seems like the right time to once again mention — before we go any further down the trading road — that Griffin has been phenomenal. Fantastic. Brilliant. There's no arguing otherwise. His three-week performance has definitely not been fluky. A reasonable case can be made that he'll maintain his current spot at the top of the ranks.

But when you attempt to forecast his rest-of-season fantasy contributions, it's important to acknowledge these two key details:

1) Griffin has faced three of the league's most generous defenses in his first three games, opening with New Orleans (34.0 PPG, 477.3 YPG), St. Louis (26.0, 358.7) and Cincinnati (34.0, 416.7). Not every match-up in the NFL is quite so friendly. The degree of difficulty will increase dramatically, and soon. Washington still has its complete division schedule ahead, plus match-ups with Atlanta, Pittsburgh and Baltimore.

And then there's this...

2) RGIII has really taken a brutal beating. This should worry his owners in no small way. He was sacked six times in Sunday's loss to the Bengals, a game in which he was sent to the ground by contact 28 times and underwent a concussion test. He's already up to 32 carries on the year, leading all quarterbacks. The rushing workload clearly enhances his fantasy potential, sure, but it also changes his risk calculation. Griffin isn't tiny, but he's three inches shorter and 30 pounds lighter than Cam Newton. The injury potential here is clearly elevated.

Thus, I've cashed out. Maybe it's a losing move, maybe I haven't maximized his value. Hell, I've fielded three separate questions in recent days about RGIII-for-Aaron Rodgers trades; I certainly didn't do that well in either of my deals. And of course I can't argue that Griffin presents any more injury risk than McFadden or Vick, two of the assets I've recently added.

But, again, I feel I've made non-trivial improvements to my starting rosters, enhancing my title odds. Many of you are positioned to do the same, if you're willing to sell (very) high on the game's buzziest player.

Your move, Cap'n Huevos.

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