Top News:
Ken Gurnick / MLB.com:
Dodgers sign Giles to Minor League deal — Veteran will compete for a roster spot at Spring Training — LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers signed 39-year-old outfielder Brian Giles to a Minor League contract with an invitation to Major League camp, the club confirmed.
Rob Biertempfel / PittsburghLIVE.com:
Pirates admit ‘rumblings’ about Tabata's age — His birth certificate and passport say outfielder Jose Tabata was born Aug. 12, 1988, in Anzoategui, Venezuela. Yet, during a recent radio interview, general manager Neal Huntington admitted there are “a lot of rumblings” that Tabata might actually be in his mid-20s.
Nick Cafardo / Boston Globe:
Lengthy deal for Beckett requires medical attention — A five-year, $82.5 million deal for Josh Beckett - the same thing former Marlins teammate A.J. Burnett and current teammate John Lackey got - seems logical for the free-agent-to-be. Right now, it's not going to happen in Boston.
New York Post:
Mets' failure to sign bargain players goes beyond Minaya — It is easy to demonize Omar Minaya for the Mets' ills, and I am not here to praise him. I do think the job of Mets GM is too big for Minaya; that his deficits in areas of communication, organization and ability to creatively multi-task …
Lyle Spencer / MLB.com:
Wood's turn at third has finally arrived — Longtime backup ready to compete for full-time job with Halos — Patience is an essential virtue, in life and at home plate. Brandon Wood could do a lecture tour on the subject. — Having paid his dues in full for seven years …
Bob Klapisch / NorthJersey.com:
Joe Girardi faces many challenges to repeat — In less than two weeks, Joe Girardi will assemble his pitchers and catchers in Tampa and give a dress-rehearsal speech that'll be delivered to the full Yankee squad on Feb. 23. That's the day the clubhouse will be closed …
Discussion:
River Avenue Blues, Bottom9 Baseball, BronxBanterBlog.com, WasWatching.com and Love My Team
David Takami / Seattle Times:
‘Willie Mays’: The life and legend of a pioneering baseball player — For two decades, during baseball's golden era in America in the 1950s and '60s, Willie Mays was the game's incandescent star, a marvelous natural athlete who played the game like no one had before.
Discussion:
WasWatching.com
myMotherLode.com:
Coke Helps Firefighters — Sugar Pine, CA - World Series pitcher Phil Coke is helping out firefighters in the Mother Lode. — Coke, a Tuolumne County native, will be greeting fans at the Mi Wuk/Sugar Pine fire station today (Saturday) and signing around 50 World Series baseballs, with proceeds going to the fire department.
