Surgery appears likely for Cardinals’ Lohse

Cardinals righthander Kyle Lohse likely will need surgery to repair a rare forearm condition, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

A specialist diagnosed Lohse as having extreme compartment syndrome, a condition in which the sheath covering a muscle in the pitcher’s forearm fails to allow it to expand.

No other major league pitcher is known to have suffered from the condition, which usually is associated with distance runners and motocross riders. In those cases, the recovering time from surgery is usually around seven weeks. However, the surgery could sideline Lohse anywhere from two months to the rest of the season, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Lohse’s alternative would be to convert to a reliever so he would be required to throw fewer pitches.

The newspaper speculated that the Cardinals will explore trade and free-agent options to replace Lohse in the rotation.

Lohse, whose forearm problems date back to last May, is 1-4 with a 5.89 ERA in nine starts this season.

Cardinals righthander Kyle Lohse likely will need surgery to repair a rare forearm condition, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

A specialist diagnosed Lohse as having extreme compartment syndrome, a condition in which the sheath covering a muscle in the pitcher’s forearm fails to allow it to expand.

No other major league pitcher is known to have suffered from the condition, which usually is associated with distance runners and motocross riders. In those cases, the recovering time from surgery is usually around seven weeks. However, the surgery could sideline Lohse anywhere from two months to the rest of the season, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Lohse’s alternative would be to convert to a reliever so he would be required to throw fewer pitches.

The newspaper speculated that the Cardinals will explore trade and free-agent options to replace Lohse in the rotation.

Lohse, whose forearm problems date back to last May, is 1-4 with a 5.89 ERA in nine starts this season.

Fly’s rumorama: Jason Heyward, Tiger Woods, Elin Nordegren, Eric Berry, Buzz Bissinger

MLB: All of Atlanta, it seems, is in love with Jason Heyward. But a youth outreach program is not in love with a private entrepreneur selling T-shirts with the "J-Hey" nickname, which the L.E.A.D. youth program says it holds rights to. Unlike most of these cases, the T-shirt maker is fighting back, saying he invented "J-Hey".

Golf: Part of the divorce "package?" Ecorazzi (that’s environmentally correct paparazzi, y’all) is reporting that Tiger Woods bought Elin Nordegren a shiny, new, charcoal gray Tesla roadster. The $100,000 electric sports car is super sexy and way green. So is that $749,900,000 that Tiger owes Elin now?

NFL: Good to see that Chiefs rookie Eric Berry is getting acclimated to Kansas City. He already knows that you can’t go wrong going to Gates for lip-smacking barbecue.

Media: Buzz Bissinger is using Twitter to go on the offensive. He tells Jim Rome why he’s been attacking his own Twitter followers. But we’re still wondering why he’s going off on Joe Torre and Phil Jackson. Among the gems Bissinger has posted in the past 24 hours: "Jackson just tries too hard to be something he isn’t — interesting. He needs to get rid of his Kung Fu 8 tracks. Man up and watch CSI…" And this disgusting coupling of words: "Torre and Phil Jackson. Total Douche Juice twins separated at birth. Be honest — anybody understand one word Jackson has ever said?" Hey, Buzz, how is this is more informative and salient than what’s written by any of the bloggers you deride?

MLB: All of Atlanta, it seems, is in love with Jason Heyward. But a youth outreach program is not in love with a private entrepreneur selling T-shirts with the "J-Hey" nickname, which the L.E.A.D. youth program says it holds rights to. Unlike most of these cases, the T-shirt maker is fighting back, saying he invented "J-Hey".

Golf: Part of the divorce "package?" Ecorazzi (that’s environmentally correct paparazzi, y’all) is reporting that Tiger Woods bought Elin Nordegren a shiny, new, charcoal gray Tesla roadster. The $100,000 electric sports car is super sexy and way green. So is that $749,900,000 that Tiger owes Elin now?

NFL: Good to see that Chiefs rookie Eric Berry is getting acclimated to Kansas City. He already knows that you can’t go wrong going to Gates for lip-smacking barbecue.

Media: Buzz Bissinger is using Twitter to go on the offensive. He tells Jim Rome why he’s been attacking his own Twitter followers. But we’re still wondering why he’s going off on Joe Torre and Phil Jackson. Among the gems Bissinger has posted in the past 24 hours: "Jackson just tries too hard to be something he isn’t — interesting. He needs to get rid of his Kung Fu 8 tracks. Man up and watch CSI…" And this disgusting coupling of words: "Torre and Phil Jackson. Total Douche Juice twins separated at birth. Be honest — anybody understand one word Jackson has ever said?" Hey, Buzz, how is this is more informative and salient than what’s written by any of the bloggers you deride?

Podcast: MLB awards at the quarter mark

Sporting News Audio is a weekly series of conversations with Sporting News experts during the MLB season. In this installment, Tom Gatto talks about the frontrunners for MVP, Cy Young, and Rookie of the Year awards one-fourth of the way through the season.

Sporting News Audio is a weekly series of conversations with Sporting News experts during the MLB season. In this installment, Tom Gatto talks about the frontrunners for MVP, Cy Young, and Rookie of the Year awards one-fourth of the way through the season.

Dodgers reportedly ask about Cliff Lee, Roy Oswalt

The Dodgers have reportedly inquired about two of the top starting pitchers that could be available in this summer’s trade market. The L.A. Times is reporting that the Dodgers have contacted the Seattle Mariners about Cliff Lee and the Houston Astros about Roy Oswalt.

According to the report, both teams said they aren’t ready to deal their aces, but will keep the Dodgers in mind if they make a move. Both teams are in last place in their respective divisions. Dodgers owner Frank McCourt said he would consider adding to the payroll on a case-by-case basis. The franchise’s finances are in flux while McCourt goes through divorce proceedings.

Lee, who is set to become a free agent at the end of the 2010 season, would be the cheaper option dollar-wise than Oswalt, who is under contract through 2011 and has a club option for 2012. Lee was acquired by the Mariners from Philadelphia in the offseason. Oswalt has spent his entire 10-year career in Houston, but recently asked management to trade him to a contender.

The Dodgers have reportedly inquired about two of the top starting pitchers that could be available in this summer’s trade market. The L.A. Times is reporting that the Dodgers have contacted the Seattle Mariners about Cliff Lee and the Houston Astros about Roy Oswalt.

According to the report, both teams said they aren’t ready to deal their aces, but will keep the Dodgers in mind if they make a move. Both teams are in last place in their respective divisions. Dodgers owner Frank McCourt said he would consider adding to the payroll on a case-by-case basis. The franchise’s finances are in flux while McCourt goes through divorce proceedings.

Lee, who is set to become a free agent at the end of the 2010 season, would be the cheaper option dollar-wise than Oswalt, who is under contract through 2011 and has a club option for 2012. Lee was acquired by the Mariners from Philadelphia in the offseason. Oswalt has spent his entire 10-year career in Houston, but recently asked management to trade him to a contender.

Strasburg promotion now pegged to second week of June

Another day, another ETA for Nationals pitching prospect Stephen Strasburg.

MLB.com, citing a team source, reports the Nats plan to have Strasburg debut during the club’s June 8-10 home series against the Pirates. The website reports the actual date will be announced less than a week in advance.

On Tuesday, reporters speculated Strasburg would make his first start June 4 at home against the Reds.

Strasburg is scheduled to start for Triple-A Syracuse on Saturday. Given the latest speculation, he would make one more start for Syracuse, at Buffalo on June 3, then be ready for the Pirates series.

Another day, another ETA for Nationals pitching prospect Stephen Strasburg.

MLB.com, citing a team source, reports the Nats plan to have Strasburg debut during the club’s June 8-10 home series against the Pirates. The website reports the actual date will be announced less than a week in advance.

On Tuesday, reporters speculated Strasburg would make his first start June 4 at home against the Reds.

Strasburg is scheduled to start for Triple-A Syracuse on Saturday. Given the latest speculation, he would make one more start for Syracuse, at Buffalo on June 3, then be ready for the Pirates series.

Sammy Sosa will not face perjury charges over steroid testimony

WASHINGTON — Sammy Sosa will not face a perjury investigation for his remarks to Congress about performance-enhancing drugs.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said Wednesday the panel has decided not to have the Justice Department look into whether Sosa lied at a March 2005 hearing, when the longtime slugger stated: "I have never taken illegal performance-enhancing drugs."

Last June, the chairman of the committee said he would look into the matter after Sosa’s name was reported to be on a list of baseball players who allegedly failed drug tests in 2003.

"After a review of the matter, we will not be taking any action," committee spokeswoman Jenny Thalheimer Rosenberg said.

Rosenberg had no further comment, but the committee might have been influenced by a five-year statute of limitations in such perjury cases. Under that time limit, the deadline to press charges expired in March.

Sosa therefore avoids the type of perjury investigation currently surrounding Roger Clemens, who told Congress in 2008 that he had not used steroids or human growth hormone. Clemens’ testimony was contradicted by his former personal trainer, and a grand jury has been hearing evidence for more than a year as it decides whether to indict the seven-time Cy Young Award winner.

Sosa, who hit 609 home runs over 18 major league seasons, was part of one of the most infamous sports-related Congressional hearings on March 17, 2005, when he testified alongside Mark McGwire, Jose Canseco and Rafael Palmeiro.

"Everything I have heard about steroids and human growth hormones is that they are very bad for you, even lethal," Sosa said in his prepared testimony that day. "I would never put anything dangerous like that in my body."

"To be clear," he added, "I have never taken illegal performance-enhancing drugs. I have never injected myself or had anyone inject me with anything. "

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

WASHINGTON — Sammy Sosa will not face a perjury investigation for his remarks to Congress about performance-enhancing drugs.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said Wednesday the panel has decided not to have the Justice Department look into whether Sosa lied at a March 2005 hearing, when the longtime slugger stated: "I have never taken illegal performance-enhancing drugs."

Last June, the chairman of the committee said he would look into the matter after Sosa’s name was reported to be on a list of baseball players who allegedly failed drug tests in 2003.

"After a review of the matter, we will not be taking any action," committee spokeswoman Jenny Thalheimer Rosenberg said.

Rosenberg had no further comment, but the committee might have been influenced by a five-year statute of limitations in such perjury cases. Under that time limit, the deadline to press charges expired in March.

Sosa therefore avoids the type of perjury investigation currently surrounding Roger Clemens, who told Congress in 2008 that he had not used steroids or human growth hormone. Clemens’ testimony was contradicted by his former personal trainer, and a grand jury has been hearing evidence for more than a year as it decides whether to indict the seven-time Cy Young Award winner.

Sosa, who hit 609 home runs over 18 major league seasons, was part of one of the most infamous sports-related Congressional hearings on March 17, 2005, when he testified alongside Mark McGwire, Jose Canseco and Rafael Palmeiro.

"Everything I have heard about steroids and human growth hormones is that they are very bad for you, even lethal," Sosa said in his prepared testimony that day. "I would never put anything dangerous like that in my body."

"To be clear," he added, "I have never taken illegal performance-enhancing drugs. I have never injected myself or had anyone inject me with anything. "

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

SBJ: Rangers creditors offer team additional financing

Rangers creditors offered the team $40 million in financing today, a surprise move in bankruptcy court intended to in part remove Major League Baseball from the process.

The team needed financing in place by the end of the day Wednesday to meet payroll of $3.8 million, the team’s attorney, Martin Sosland of Weil Gotshal & Manges, told the court in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Rangers filed for bankruptcy Monday after reaching a stalemate with creditors that refused to allow the team’s sale to proceed because they think there is a higher offer. The Rangers’ parent company — Tom Hicks’ Hicks Sports Group — defaulted on its debt on March 31, 2009.

On Day 2 of the hearings in Fort Worth, which have lasted far longer than insiders expected, lawyers for the Rangers said they preferred debtor in possession financing offered from MLB, but the creditors, represented by Andy LeBlanc of Milbank Tweed, contested it by offering $40 million.

In response, MLB increased its financing from $11.5 million, which would have taken the club only through to August, to $21.5 million. And MLB agreed to lower its interest rate from 5.75 percent to around 1.5 percent, matching the creditors’ loan proposal.

The reason the creditors wish to lend the money is they believe MLB’s debtor in possession terms would facilitate the sale to Nolan Ryan and Chuck Greenberg, the buyers who have been trying to close on the team since January. Both men were in the courtroom. But the creditors told the court on Monday that they believe there are higher offers for the club, and want the auction re-opened.

In order to do that, they need time. The creditors’ financing would match the $21.5 million and the rate, plus buy out what MLB is owed for funding payroll last year, thus removing the league as a creditor, though not necessarily as a party to the proceedings.

"We upped the ante," LeBlanc told the court.

Rangers CFO Kellie Fischer testified that the team preferred MLB’s financing because the team was comfortable with the league. She also testified that commissioner Bud Selig has been intricately involved in the sales process. Selig’s No. 2 executive, COO Bob Dupuy, was in the courtroom.

The key difference between MLB’s and the creditors’ debtor in possession financing, once MLB matched, is that MLB would not consider it a default if the Rangers were unable to meet the commercial terms set out in the bankruptcy plan. That is a big issue for the lenders, who believe it would allow the Rangers to spurn higher offers.

The hearing dragged on through the day today before Judge D. Michael Lynn of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, who was to make a decision on which debtor in possession financing is acceptable.

The next major hearing is scheduled for June 15.

This story first appeared in SportsBusiness Journal, a sister publication of Sporting News.

Rangers creditors offered the team $40 million in financing today, a surprise move in bankruptcy court intended to in part remove Major League Baseball from the process.

The team needed financing in place by the end of the day Wednesday to meet payroll of $3.8 million, the team’s attorney, Martin Sosland of Weil Gotshal & Manges, told the court in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Rangers filed for bankruptcy Monday after reaching a stalemate with creditors that refused to allow the team’s sale to proceed because they think there is a higher offer. The Rangers’ parent company — Tom Hicks’ Hicks Sports Group — defaulted on its debt on March 31, 2009.

On Day 2 of the hearings in Fort Worth, which have lasted far longer than insiders expected, lawyers for the Rangers said they preferred debtor in possession financing offered from MLB, but the creditors, represented by Andy LeBlanc of Milbank Tweed, contested it by offering $40 million.

In response, MLB increased its financing from $11.5 million, which would have taken the club only through to August, to $21.5 million. And MLB agreed to lower its interest rate from 5.75 percent to around 1.5 percent, matching the creditors’ loan proposal.

The reason the creditors wish to lend the money is they believe MLB’s debtor in possession terms would facilitate the sale to Nolan Ryan and Chuck Greenberg, the buyers who have been trying to close on the team since January. Both men were in the courtroom. But the creditors told the court on Monday that they believe there are higher offers for the club, and want the auction re-opened.

In order to do that, they need time. The creditors’ financing would match the $21.5 million and the rate, plus buy out what MLB is owed for funding payroll last year, thus removing the league as a creditor, though not necessarily as a party to the proceedings.

"We upped the ante," LeBlanc told the court.

Rangers CFO Kellie Fischer testified that the team preferred MLB’s financing because the team was comfortable with the league. She also testified that commissioner Bud Selig has been intricately involved in the sales process. Selig’s No. 2 executive, COO Bob Dupuy, was in the courtroom.

The key difference between MLB’s and the creditors’ debtor in possession financing, once MLB matched, is that MLB would not consider it a default if the Rangers were unable to meet the commercial terms set out in the bankruptcy plan. That is a big issue for the lenders, who believe it would allow the Rangers to spurn higher offers.

The hearing dragged on through the day today before Judge D. Michael Lynn of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, who was to make a decision on which debtor in possession financing is acceptable.

The next major hearing is scheduled for June 15.

This story first appeared in SportsBusiness Journal, a sister publication of Sporting News.

Slow-starting Angels poised to make their run

Last season, the Rockies were 20-29 heading into June; the Angels were 25-24. They each went 72-41 from June 1 on, resulting in a postseason berth for each. Only the Yankees (74-38) were better during that span.

Both Colorado and Los Angeles are off to similar starts this season, but which is more likely to get hot, make a 2009-like run and reach the postseason?

Ryan Fagan says the Rockies are primed to duplicate their 2009 success, while Chris Bahr makes his case for the Angels:

The Angels need Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role.
The Angels need Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role.

The Angels, Sporting News‘ preseason pick to win the AL West for the sixth time in the past seven seasons, are struggling to reach .500. But that also was the case at this time last season, when they won the division by 10 games. Expect a similar turnaround this season, and expect it to happen soon. Starting Friday, the Angels play 10 consecutive games against the Mariners and Royals.

Three reasons to believe in the Angels’ ability to reverse their fortunes:

Transition: The Angels lost a trio of major contributors — Vladimir Guerrero, Chone Figgins, John Lackey — to free agency this past offseason, so some struggles should have been anticipated. The Lackey-less rotation, which goes five deep but lacks a true No. 1, finally has shown improvement recently. Now, the team needs Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role and Maicer Izturis to step up at the hot corner. Expecting a seamless, overnight transition in each of the aforementioned situations was unrealistic. The season is 162 games long, not 50, and Los Angeles already has played its worst stretch of baseball.

Division: The Rangers and A’s have failed to capitalize on the Angels’ slow start. As poorly as Los Angeles has played, it is only five games behind Texas and two behind Oakland. Not exactly insurmountable deficits, especially given the questions about Oakland’s staying power and the Rangers’ late-season fade in 2009. Also worth noting: The Angels are 4-2 against the A’s and have 17 games remaining against the Rangers. The best way to make up ground is with head-to-head wins, and L.A. will have plenty of opportunities to do so.

Mike Scioscia: Nothing against Jim Tracy, who helped spark the Rockies’ amazing run last season after replacing Clint Hurdle, but Scioscia is a two-time AL Manager of the Year who has a World Series championship on his resume. He did arguably his best managerial job of his career last season, rallying the team after the tragic death of Nick Adenhart. There will be no panic this season, and Scioscia has shown the ability to push the right buttons.

Are there concerns? Of course. Scott Kazmir must find his form, Hideki Matsui has to prove his poor May is the result of a slump and not an overall decline, the third base situation must get settled (Brandon Wood was an absolute offensive mess before his convenient trip to the disabled list Tuesday — the same day Izturis was activated), and Brian Fuentes must put an end to his habit of turning the ninth-inning into an adventure. But the Angels still are the most talented team in the A.L. West, and they will prove it by October.

Chris Bahr is a senior editor for Sporting News. E-mail him at cbahr@sportingnews.com.

Last season, the Rockies were 20-29 heading into June; the Angels were 25-24. They each went 72-41 from June 1 on, resulting in a postseason berth for each. Only the Yankees (74-38) were better during that span.

Both Colorado and Los Angeles are off to similar starts this season, but which is more likely to get hot, make a 2009-like run and reach the postseason?

Ryan Fagan says the Rockies are primed to duplicate their 2009 success, while Chris Bahr makes his case for the Angels:

The Angels need Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role.
The Angels need Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role.

The Angels, Sporting News‘ preseason pick to win the AL West for the sixth time in the past seven seasons, are struggling to reach .500. But that also was the case at this time last season, when they won the division by 10 games. Expect a similar turnaround this season, and expect it to happen soon. Starting Friday, the Angels play 10 consecutive games against the Mariners and Royals.

Three reasons to believe in the Angels’ ability to reverse their fortunes:

Transition: The Angels lost a trio of major contributors — Vladimir Guerrero, Chone Figgins, John Lackey — to free agency this past offseason, so some struggles should have been anticipated. The Lackey-less rotation, which goes five deep but lacks a true No. 1, finally has shown improvement recently. Now, the team needs Erick Aybar to get comfortable in the leadoff role and Maicer Izturis to step up at the hot corner. Expecting a seamless, overnight transition in each of the aforementioned situations was unrealistic. The season is 162 games long, not 50, and Los Angeles already has played its worst stretch of baseball.

Division: The Rangers and A’s have failed to capitalize on the Angels’ slow start. As poorly as Los Angeles has played, it is only five games behind Texas and two behind Oakland. Not exactly insurmountable deficits, especially given the questions about Oakland’s staying power and the Rangers’ late-season fade in 2009. Also worth noting: The Angels are 4-2 against the A’s and have 17 games remaining against the Rangers. The best way to make up ground is with head-to-head wins, and L.A. will have plenty of opportunities to do so.

Mike Scioscia: Nothing against Jim Tracy, who helped spark the Rockies’ amazing run last season after replacing Clint Hurdle, but Scioscia is a two-time AL Manager of the Year who has a World Series championship on his resume. He did arguably his best managerial job of his career last season, rallying the team after the tragic death of Nick Adenhart. There will be no panic this season, and Scioscia has shown the ability to push the right buttons.

Are there concerns? Of course. Scott Kazmir must find his form, Hideki Matsui has to prove his poor May is the result of a slump and not an overall decline, the third base situation must get settled (Brandon Wood was an absolute offensive mess before his convenient trip to the disabled list Tuesday — the same day Izturis was activated), and Brian Fuentes must put an end to his habit of turning the ninth-inning into an adventure. But the Angels still are the most talented team in the A.L. West, and they will prove it by October.

Chris Bahr is a senior editor for Sporting News. E-mail him at cbahr@sportingnews.com.

Slow-starting Rockies poised to make their run

Last season, the Rockies were 20-29 heading into June; the Angels were 25-24. They each went 72-41 from June 1 on, resulting in a postseason berth for each. Only the Yankees (74-38) were better during that span.

Colorado and Los Angeles are off to similar starts this season, but which is more likely to get hot, make a 2009-like run and reach the postseason?

Chris Bahr explains why the Angels have a better opportunity to do so, while Ryan Fagan makes his case for the Rockies:

Troy Tulowitzki has found his power stroke.
Troy Tulowitzki has found his power stroke.

The goal was to avoid a spring slumber.

Jim Tracy, the manager with the magic touch last summer, told Sporting News this past offseason that he was priming his squad for a hot start. "Let’s get busy and have people be aware of the fact that this is how we expect to play from Day 1 of the season and not wait until the middle of June or whatever it was (last year)," he said.

It isn’t mid-June yet and the Rockies aren’t as bad as they were at this point last season, but this wasn’t the start Tracy imagined. His team has been hanging around the .500 mark and hasn’t been more than two games above or below .500 all season.

But make no mistake, the talent is there — and it is starting to rouse from its slumber.

Troy Tulowitzki, the one Colorado hitter capable of carrying his team offensively for a long stretch, has found his power stroke. He wasn’t horrible through his first 38 games (.295 average, .362 on-base percentage), but the power wasn’t there. Tulowitzki, who has twice hit at least 24 homers and twice driven in at least 92 runs, had just one homer and 16 RBIs in those first 38 games. In his past five games, though, he has pounded four homers.

Veteran first baseman Todd Helton has raised his average from .250 to .283 in the past nine games. He no longer is the anchor of Colorado’s lineup, but he isn’t quite done yet, either.

Ace Ubaldo Jimenez has done his best Zack Greinke impression this year — vaulting to superstar status — and shows no signs of reverting to the inconsistency of his younger days. Jhoulys Chacin, a 22-year-old rookie, has a 3.19 ERA in his five starts.

A turnaround often requires a catalyst. Last season, it was the managerial change to Tracy. This season, it could be the return of Jeff Francis. The lefthander won 17 games during the Rockies’ improbable run to the 2007 World Series but hadn’t pitched in the majors since September 2008. His long and arduous journey back from shoulder issues ended on May 16, when he tossed seven strong innings against the Nationals. He followed that up with 6 1/3 shutout innings against the Royals. His two-start totals include a 0.68 ERA and 1.20 WHIP.

More help is on the horizon. Closer Huston Street is working his way back from a shoulder injury, and Jorge De La Rosa, the lefthander who won 16 of his last 19 decisions in 2009, is coming back from a finger injury. Both have started their individual rehab processes, which coincide with the rehab process the team is working on at the moment.

Ryan Fagan is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at rfagan@sportingnews.com.

Last season, the Rockies were 20-29 heading into June; the Angels were 25-24. They each went 72-41 from June 1 on, resulting in a postseason berth for each. Only the Yankees (74-38) were better during that span.

Colorado and Los Angeles are off to similar starts this season, but which is more likely to get hot, make a 2009-like run and reach the postseason?

Chris Bahr explains why the Angels have a better opportunity to do so, while Ryan Fagan makes his case for the Rockies:

Troy Tulowitzki has found his power stroke.
Troy Tulowitzki has found his power stroke.

The goal was to avoid a spring slumber.

Jim Tracy, the manager with the magic touch last summer, told Sporting News this past offseason that he was priming his squad for a hot start. "Let’s get busy and have people be aware of the fact that this is how we expect to play from Day 1 of the season and not wait until the middle of June or whatever it was (last year)," he said.

It isn’t mid-June yet and the Rockies aren’t as bad as they were at this point last season, but this wasn’t the start Tracy imagined. His team has been hanging around the .500 mark and hasn’t been more than two games above or below .500 all season.

But make no mistake, the talent is there — and it is starting to rouse from its slumber.

Troy Tulowitzki, the one Colorado hitter capable of carrying his team offensively for a long stretch, has found his power stroke. He wasn’t horrible through his first 38 games (.295 average, .362 on-base percentage), but the power wasn’t there. Tulowitzki, who has twice hit at least 24 homers and twice driven in at least 92 runs, had just one homer and 16 RBIs in those first 38 games. In his past five games, though, he has pounded four homers.

Veteran first baseman Todd Helton has raised his average from .250 to .283 in the past nine games. He no longer is the anchor of Colorado’s lineup, but he isn’t quite done yet, either.

Ace Ubaldo Jimenez has done his best Zack Greinke impression this year — vaulting to superstar status — and shows no signs of reverting to the inconsistency of his younger days. Jhoulys Chacin, a 22-year-old rookie, has a 3.19 ERA in his five starts.

A turnaround often requires a catalyst. Last season, it was the managerial change to Tracy. This season, it could be the return of Jeff Francis. The lefthander won 17 games during the Rockies’ improbable run to the 2007 World Series but hadn’t pitched in the majors since September 2008. His long and arduous journey back from shoulder issues ended on May 16, when he tossed seven strong innings against the Nationals. He followed that up with 6 1/3 shutout innings against the Royals. His two-start totals include a 0.68 ERA and 1.20 WHIP.

More help is on the horizon. Closer Huston Street is working his way back from a shoulder injury, and Jorge De La Rosa, the lefthander who won 16 of his last 19 decisions in 2009, is coming back from a finger injury. Both have started their individual rehab processes, which coincide with the rehab process the team is working on at the moment.

Ryan Fagan is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at rfagan@sportingnews.com.

Panthers OLB Thomas Davis: ‘My trainers are trying to protect me from myself’

CHARLOTTE — A first-round pick of the Panthers in 2005, Thomas Davis successfully made the transition from safety to outside linebacker early in his career. Last year, he was building on a breakout ’08 season before a torn ACL sidelined him for the final eight games.

In five seasons with the Panthers, Thomas Davis has 312 total tackles and 11 sacks.
In five seasons with the Panthers, Thomas Davis has 312 total tackles and 11 sacks.

Working hard in the team’s offseason program to recover from the injury, Davis talked to Sporting News’ Vinnie Iyer and other reporters about the rehab process, playing alongside Pro Bowl middle linebacker Jon Beason and what he expects out of the Carolina defense without Pro Bowl defensive end Julius Peppers.

Q: How are you feeling six months removed from the knee injury?
A: My leg is feeling great right now. My trainers are trying to protect me from myself. It’s something that’s hard for me right now, out here watching everybody compete. I want to get in, but at the same time, I know it’s not the best thing for me to get out here and do the seven-on-seven things we’re doing.

Q: How have you maintained a positive attitude through your rehabilitation process?
A: At first, it was hard. But then once I sat down, I prayed to God to take that pain off my heart and everything started to fall into place. I knew I couldn’t sit around and be sad about it. I had to get out there and work hard to get back to where I am. I think I’ve done a great job of working hard.

Q: How comfortable are you in this cover-2 defensive scheme?
A: This defense is built for a fast linebacker, somebody who can move, and I feel like I fit that well. Coach (defensive coordinator Ron) Meeks has put me in a good position to make plays, and we’ve been able to capitalize on it. I’m just looking forward to starting back up strong and finishing strong this time.

Q: How do you and Beason stack up among the NFL’s best linebacker combinations?
A: Beason, he’s done his job. He’s done everything he possibly can for this franchise. He’s done everything he’s needed to do. Now it’s up to Thomas Davis to make that happen. I feel like I’m in a position right now where I can make that happen. It’s up to me to do my part so we can become the best tandem in the league.

Q: What are you thoughts on the defense going into the ’10 season?
A: I love this defense. We have a lot of guys that are coming into position right now, filling in spots. They’ve been waiting for their opportunity, and now they’re getting it. So we’re looking forward to what they look like and when we get in there and compete with other teams.

Q: Without Peppers, how’s the team effort coming along to replace him on the pass rush?
A: I think we’re jelling very well. You have a lot of young guys who are eager to win and eager to play. So it’s going to be exciting to see us line up and see us compete, and I think we have a lot of competitive guys on this team.

Q: When everyone’s flying out there healthy, would you say you have one of the league’s fastest, most aggressive defenses?
A: That’s how this defense is built up. That’s the mind-set of our coach, defensive coordinator and our other coaches on the staff. We know that we have the talent in place; now it’s about us going out there and applying it.

Q: Most of the talk has been about Peppers’ absence on the line. How do you feel about the talent level in the linebacker corps and secondary?
A: All the components, once we get them into place, the back seven is going to make the front four better. The front four will make the back seven better. We are definitely looking forward to putting everything together, and just going out there and jelling as one.

Vinnie Iyer is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at viyer@sportingnews.com.

CHARLOTTE — A first-round pick of the Panthers in 2005, Thomas Davis successfully made the transition from safety to outside linebacker early in his career. Last year, he was building on a breakout ’08 season before a torn ACL sidelined him for the final eight games.

In five seasons with the Panthers, Thomas Davis has 312 total tackles and 11 sacks.
In five seasons with the Panthers, Thomas Davis has 312 total tackles and 11 sacks.

Working hard in the team’s offseason program to recover from the injury, Davis talked to Sporting News’ Vinnie Iyer and other reporters about the rehab process, playing alongside Pro Bowl middle linebacker Jon Beason and what he expects out of the Carolina defense without Pro Bowl defensive end Julius Peppers.

Q: How are you feeling six months removed from the knee injury?
A: My leg is feeling great right now. My trainers are trying to protect me from myself. It’s something that’s hard for me right now, out here watching everybody compete. I want to get in, but at the same time, I know it’s not the best thing for me to get out here and do the seven-on-seven things we’re doing.

Q: How have you maintained a positive attitude through your rehabilitation process?
A: At first, it was hard. But then once I sat down, I prayed to God to take that pain off my heart and everything started to fall into place. I knew I couldn’t sit around and be sad about it. I had to get out there and work hard to get back to where I am. I think I’ve done a great job of working hard.

Q: How comfortable are you in this cover-2 defensive scheme?
A: This defense is built for a fast linebacker, somebody who can move, and I feel like I fit that well. Coach (defensive coordinator Ron) Meeks has put me in a good position to make plays, and we’ve been able to capitalize on it. I’m just looking forward to starting back up strong and finishing strong this time.

Q: How do you and Beason stack up among the NFL’s best linebacker combinations?
A: Beason, he’s done his job. He’s done everything he possibly can for this franchise. He’s done everything he’s needed to do. Now it’s up to Thomas Davis to make that happen. I feel like I’m in a position right now where I can make that happen. It’s up to me to do my part so we can become the best tandem in the league.

Q: What are you thoughts on the defense going into the ’10 season?
A: I love this defense. We have a lot of guys that are coming into position right now, filling in spots. They’ve been waiting for their opportunity, and now they’re getting it. So we’re looking forward to what they look like and when we get in there and compete with other teams.

Q: Without Peppers, how’s the team effort coming along to replace him on the pass rush?
A: I think we’re jelling very well. You have a lot of young guys who are eager to win and eager to play. So it’s going to be exciting to see us line up and see us compete, and I think we have a lot of competitive guys on this team.

Q: When everyone’s flying out there healthy, would you say you have one of the league’s fastest, most aggressive defenses?
A: That’s how this defense is built up. That’s the mind-set of our coach, defensive coordinator and our other coaches on the staff. We know that we have the talent in place; now it’s about us going out there and applying it.

Q: Most of the talk has been about Peppers’ absence on the line. How do you feel about the talent level in the linebacker corps and secondary?
A: All the components, once we get them into place, the back seven is going to make the front four better. The front four will make the back seven better. We are definitely looking forward to putting everything together, and just going out there and jelling as one.

Vinnie Iyer is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at viyer@sportingnews.com.