Latest Al Central Stories
Posted: Nov 6th 2009 12:25 PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Brewers, Twins, AL Central, NL Central, MLB Transactions

It was no secret
J.J. Hardy was likely going to be traded this offseason, but most believed the
Brewers would use him to acquire some desperately needed starting pitching help. Instead,
they have opted to move him to Minnesota for a young center fielder --
Carlos Gomez.
Hardy, 27, fell out of favor with the Brewers this past season as he failed to meet his previously set offensive standards. He ended the season with an abysmal .659 OPS and the Brewers have uber-prospect
Alcides Escobar waiting in the wings (he hit .304 in 38 big-league games last season). Thus, it made sense to move Hardy, who did hit 50 home runs in his previous two campaigns, for help elsewhere.
Posted: Oct 28th 2009 2:13 PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Royals, AL Central, MLB Rumors

After one pretty lackluster season in Kansas City, it's likely
Coco Crisp is
going to be playing elsewhere next season. The
Royals, who clearly need to avoid wasting money, would owe Crisp $8 million should they decide to retain his services. It would cost them just $500,000 to buy him out.
Crisp, who turns 30 this coming Sunday, batted just .228 with a .714 OPS in 49 games last season for the Royals. He also had surgery on both of his shoulders. Considering all that, there's no realistic reason for the Royals to not buy him out.
Posted: Oct 19th 2009 11:55 PM ET by B. Thompson Stroud (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Indians, AL Central, The Dugout

To me, the playoffs mean one thing: the wise decision-making skills of Cleveland Indians General Manager
Mark Shapiro! After firing Jim Thome/snapping turtle hybrid Eric Wedge as the Tribe head coach, Shapiro has really gotten down in the dirt to find a new skipper, looking in the only place you're allowed: the big recycling bin of failed coaches who didn't do a good job somewhere else and were fired by someone else. Why they sound PERFECT!
Fun fact: That guy in the photo to the right was eating in Heritage Park and just throwing his trash on the ground. Thanks a lot for your contributions, Cy Young! Have an eighth of a hot dog!
Tonight's Dugout is after the jump.
Posted: Oct 14th 2009 12:19 PM ET by Pat Lackey (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Indians, Red Sox, AL Central, AL East, MLB Rumors

It's now ten days after the end of the 2009 baseball season and the only thing the
Cleveland Indians know about their vacant managerial position is that it won't be filled by
Red Sox pitching coach
John Farrell. That's because Farrell, who was initially seen as a front-runner for the job, told the Cleveland Plain Dealer today that while he is interested in managing some day,
he's not interested in the Indians job and he'd rather stay in his position in Boston.
As the former farm director in Cleveland under
Mark Shapiro, Farrell seemed like maybe the most logical choice for the job, but this isn't the first time he's turned a managerial job down. He was believed to be the frontrunner in 2007 in Pittsburgh, where former Shapiro assistant Neal Huntington is GM, but
he also asked for his name to be removed from consideration then, as well.
Posted: Oct 11th 2009 5:20 PM ET by Pat Lackey (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Angels, Cardinals, Dodgers, Phillies, Red Sox, Rockies, Twins, Yankees, AL Central, AL East, AL West, NL Central, NL East, NL West, MLB Playoffs, American League Division Series, National League Division Series

With two series over, Major League Baseball has updated the schedule for the rest of the Division Series.
The Rockies and Phillies will play their Game 4 at 4 PM ET if the Yankees-Twins series is still going on. Should the Yankees finish off a sweep Sunday night, the NL Game would move to 6 PM ET.
Series-by-series times are after the jump (all times Eastern).
Posted: Oct 6th 2009 1:00 PM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Tigers, Twins, AL Central, MLB Live Blogging

For the third straight year, 162 games were not enough to complete the postseason. For the second straight year, the AL Central title and the
Minnesota Twins are involved in the tiebreaker.
Minnesota's remarkable sprint to the finish was enough to catch the
Tigers, who had a seven-game cushion exactly a month ago on Sept. 6. Lest you think that leaves Detroit in a fragile state as it heads to the Metrodome to determine the division champion once and for all, keep in mind it split with the
Twins in a four-game series last week and its strength is starting pitching -- something which can take a team very far in October.
It's the Tigers'
Rick Porcello against the Twins'
Scott Baker for all the Central marbles. Here at
MLB FanHouse, we're just getting warmed up for the month ahead. Join us after the jump for a wrapup of the chat that went from first pitch to final out of the one-game playoff.