Top News:
Tracy Ringolsby / Rocky Mountain News:
Colorado's faith leans to Iannetta — Nothing official at catching position after Lopez is cut — TUCSON - Rookie catcher Chris Iannetta received a strong endorsement from the Rockies on Monday. — The team released veteran catcher Javier Lopez, who conceded he had lost the No. 1 catching job.
Discussion:
Purple Row
RELATED:
Adam Rubin / NY Daily News:
Soler waived as strange trip ends — VIERA, Fla. - Alay Soler's difficult journey to Flushing has reached a dead end. — The Mets released the Cuban defector last night, the Daily News has learned. Soler, pitching in relief of Chan Ho Park yesterday, allowed two runs on three hits …
RELATED:
Juan C. Rodriguez / Sun-Sentinel:
Former Marlin Castillo may be on move again — FORT MYERS - The only thing that's changed is the uniform. — A season removed from the trade that sent Luis Castillo from the Marlins to the Minnesota Twins, the All-Star second baseman greeted his former teammates with a two-hit performance from the leadoff spot on Monday.
Chris De Luca / Chicago Sun Times:
Hustling Zambrano hits the ground running — SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Carlos Zambrano has always had a flair for the dramatic, but his pileup coming out of Turn 2 at Scottsdale Stadium sent a scare through the Cubs on Monday. — The Cubs' Opening Day starter tattooed a first-inning pitch from San Francisco Giants veteran Matt Morris.
Discussion:
MLB Trade Rumors
Karen Guregian / Boston Herald:
Spring hysterics: Sox, Yanks hit new heights in exhibition — FORT MYERS - Outside the ballpark, there was a PT Cruiser pulled over on the sidewalk. Before long, there was a woman hanging outside the passenger-side window, screaming at a little guy covered in tattoos. — Red Sox forum:
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Stats Geek: Pirates aren't a bad bet in weak division — By Brian O'Neill, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — I wouldn't know a Bodog if one bit me in the wallet, but this online betting concern, bodog.com, puts the odds of the Pirates winning the World Series at 70 to 1. — That's relatively kind.
Adam Rubin / NY Daily News:
Zito hints Met pitch off target — VIERA, Fla. - Barry Zito intimated in the April issue of Esquire that he was turned off by the Mets' recruitment effort of him. — Author Chris Jones portrayed Zito as coming away from a Dec. 19 dinner at a Beverly Hills hotel thinking …
Discussion:
Hot Foot
Yard Work:
The Physics of Baseball: Newton's Laws Speak Out (a commentary) — We can take solace in the utter predictably of certain principles in the cache of physics: Newton's 2nd law, Fermat's Principle of Least Time, and the BEC-BCS Crossover (if you recognize the first two but thought the third …
Discussion:
Knuckle Curve
CBC News:
Braves' Jones sprains left ankle — Chipper Jones, who missed 44 games with various injuries last season, gave the Atlanta Braves another scare Monday. — The veteran third baseman left a spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals after spraining his left ankle attempting to run …
Discussion:
Baseball Musings
David Cameron / Hardball Times:
Five Questions: Seattle Mariners — When the guys here approached me to write another Five Questions piece previewing the 2007 Seattle Mariners, I started to wonder how I was going to select just a handful of key questions from a roster that apparently was built by throwing darts at a board.
Discussion:
The Mariner Monitor
Jason Beck / MLB.com:
Mailbag: Why are Tigers being plunked? — Reporter Jason Beck answers Tigers fans' questions — What's with all the HBPs this spring for the Tigers? I notice that each game they seem to have at least one player getting plunked. Is this part of their new approach, because that'll get some runners on base this season?
Gordon Edes / Boston Globe:
Score one for graciousness — No evidence here of a bitter rivalry — FORT MYERS, Fla. — Nothing casual about the greeting exchanged last night between Yankees slugger Hideki Matsui and his Japanese countrymen on the Red Sox, Daisuke Matsuzaka and Hideki Okajima.
Ben Shpigel / New York Times:
Needing One Starter, Mets Measure Park Against Prospect — Chan Ho Park thought he threw one bad pitch in Monday's game against the Washington Nationals. So did his catcher, Paul Lo Duca. The problem was, they were talking about different pitches, and that difference of opinion summed up Park's performance in the Mets' 9-6 loss.
Discussion:
BBTF's Baseball Primer …
