Author Archives: ianbethune

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 1/24

UConn Huskies Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men's basketball and women's basketball teams as well as the other sports the student-athletes engage in. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you're on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Women's Basketball links

Auriemma’s message to KML: Get more involved [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

UConn May Consider Redshirt For Tuck [john altavilla – hartford courant]

Chris Dailey And The Ham Sandwich [john altavilla – hartford courant]

A’ja Wilson’s Normal Life Has Its Extraordinary Side [john altavilla – hartford courant]

The Story Of UConn And “The Toilet Bowl” [john altavilla – hartford courant]

Dolson, Stewart, Stokes Inaugural Members of 50-50-50 Club [rich elliott – ct post]

Hartley On A Hot Streak Offensively For Huskies [rich elliott – ct post]

No MRI yet for UConn signee Gabby Williams [jim fuller – new haven register]

Little bit of an update on redshirt situation [jim fuller – new haven register]

UConn turning up the heat on defense [jim fuller – new haven register]

Time Running Out For UConn's Morgan Tuck This Season [hartford courant]

UConn women holding season-long block party [new haven register]

The Geno Auriemma Show: Behind the scenes at practice [snyuconn.com]

UConn Men's Basketball links

UConn's Shabazz Napier Named To Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List [sox & dawgs]

Looking Ahead To Rutgers, UConn’s Next Opponent [dom amore – hartford courant]

UConn hoops alumni second highest paid [john silver – snyuconn.com]

Stacking up Napier against the nation [john silver – snyuconn.com]

A Conversation with Connecticut's Own Scott Burrell [the uconn blog]

UConn Football links

Ex-UConn coach Pasqualoni hired by Bears [jim fuller – new haven register]

Meet The Coaches: Wayne Lineburg [uconnhuskies.com]

Other UConn related links

M. Ice Hockey. UConn Faces AIC in Home-and-Home this Weekend [uconnhuskies.com]

M. Track. Huskies Look to Perform at Terrier Classic [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Track. Women's Track and Field Set for Terrier Classic [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Ice Hockey. UConn Primed For Home-And-Home With Providence [uconnhuskies.com]

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Wolf Pack Look for Better Days Ahead in Second Half

Hartford Wolf Pack

By Bob Crawford

Friday night’s home game against the AHL-leading Springfield Falcons is the Hartford Wolf Pack’s 39th game of the season, meaning that the Pack are exactly halfway through the campaign.

And it almost goes without saying that club is hoping for much better things in the second half, after struggling to a 12-21-0-5 record through the first 38 games.

“I think we’re just going to try and regroup,” rookie forward, and team leading scorer, Danny Kristo said this week.  “It was obviously a frustrating first half we had as a team, but it’s not how you start it’s how you finish.  We’ve made a couple of roster moves and I think we got a couple of new guys who can really help us out, so we’re just going to try and go into the second half with a clean slate and start off hot with a couple of wins.”

As Kristo referenced, the Wolf Pack roster has undergone significant turnover in recent weeks.  Two veteran goaltenders, Dov Grumet-Morris and David LeNeveu, have been added, as has T.J. Hensick, an experienced forward who has scored at a better than a point-per-game pace over his more than 300 career AHL games.  On the other side of the coin, players who had been a fairly big part of the mix in the first half, such as Brodie Dupont, Kyle Jean, Jason Missiaen and Akim Aliu, were either released or moved down to the ECHL.

“I think they’re just showing that it’s unacceptable where we’re at right now,” Wolf Pack captain Aaron Johnson said of the moves that the organization made.  “The guys are going to need to take that and work even harder, find a way to get those extra points and show that they don’t want to be one of those guys that are going to get moved.”

Head Coach Ken Gernander said of the personnel shuffling, “It maybe would have been done sooner, but it’s really hard to find people at this time of year.  We knew we had needs that we had to address, but we didn’t want to just jump in and make a mistake either.  We wanted to get quality people, and not just a temporary fix, but something that we could build on moving forward. 

“To some extent we had a lot of injuries in the first half, and that was a contributing factor as well.  You don’t want to kind of overstock your team, knowing full well that you were going to get some of these people back from injury.  So it was a little bit dicey as far as managing players and numbers and personnel in the first half, but now I think the moves we’ve made have really kind of shored things up, solidified certain positions and will allow us to have more success moving forward.

“I think the opportunity certainly exists to improve over the first half of the season,” Gernander continued, “from a growth perspective with a lot of our younger players, but also a personnel perspective.  We brought in Hensick, a little more offense up front, two goaltenders with some veteran AHL experience, and that should help shore up some of our things defensively.  So I expect a much improved team over the second half of the season.”

Johnson agreed that having the steadiness of Grumet-Morris and LeNeveu on the last line of defense is a help, but he would not point to goaltending as any kind of a weakness in the first half.

“I think we can count on all of our goalies, I think it’s really a matter of us playing well in front of them,” the veteran blueliner said.  “We’ve hung them out to dry in a lot of situations, you can only put so much on them.  It’s great to have their experience, but we can’t lean on them every game.  When we win hockey games it’s because we’re all playing, and when we lose hockey games we’re usually putting them in tough situations.  We need to play well in front of them.”

Kristo’s view of the roster overhaul from a rookie’s perspective was, “It’s been tough to see some guys go and have some new guys come in, but we’ve got good core leadership in our locker room, and the captains and leaders have done a good job helping those guys come in and helping them feel part of the team.  So hopefully those new guys can help us out, and we can just keep moving forward.”

That core leadership group that Kristo talks about is bolstered by the fact that goaltending is not the only position where the Wolf Pack boast a wealth of veteran experience.  In fact, the Pack are so seasoned a group that for most of the season, they have been over the AHL limit of five veterans with more than 260 games of NHL, AHL or European Elite League experience.  Included in that battle-tested crew are Johnson, Darroll Powe, Arron Asham, Danny Syvret, Micheal Haley and Hensick.

When asked what the older players are harping on to the team, Johnson replied, “Just sticking to the game plan and making sure we’re doing what we’re supposed to do.  The hitters need to hit, the goal-scorers need to score, and we just try and pass that on.  If the young guys ever have any questions, they know they can talk to us, and I think we’ve done a good job with the young guys so far.”

As for how the younger players have responded to the pressures of the AHL, the captain said, “There’s always guys that you can see kind of flourish as the season goes along, and then there’s guys that struggle a little bit.  That’s just part of pro hockey, because we’re playing at an elite level here.  As the season goes further, there’s going to be guys that are going to do the same.  There’s going to be more guys that are going to step up, and more guys that need to find their niche.”

Kristo is one individual who has occupied an important niche, posting team-best totals of 13 goals and 25 points in 36 games, and he remains upbeat about his rookie season.

“I think it was a good first half,” Kristo said.  “Obviously you can learn something new every single day coming to the rink, especially in the games, you can learn game by game, day by day.  I thought it was a good first half for me, and I thought I got better as it went on, and hopefully I can keep that going into the second half.”

Gernander, whose job it is to groom players for the NHL level, feels that it remains to be seen how much the youngsters on his team have grown in the first half.

“I think it’s going to depend on how they finish the season,” he said.  “What kind of progress we’ll see in the second half is going to be one telling sign of what they’ve learned, and what kind of progress they’ve made in the first half of the season, and certainly not everyone develops on the same pace.  We’re not looking to have players drafted one spring and NHL-ready that following fall.  It’s a process, and as long as they keep trending up, that’s what we’re here for.”

One positive that can be taken out of the first half of the season, according to Gernander, is that the team’s adversity has forced players to show quickly what they are made of.

“I think it gave opportunities to certain people, rookies or others, that maybe would not have been afforded to them right away,” he said, “and some people did take advantage of them, and are, because of that, being able to broaden their role on the team, and it’s actually expedited their development.

“I think it gave a number of players opportunity that maybe wouldn’t have been available to them right away, to either make a case for further responsibility and extra ice time, and for some of them it maybe pointed out some weaknesses in their game, or some areas of improvement that must be addressed.  And unfortunately for some of them, it’s going to be in Greenville (with the Wolf Pack’s ECHL affiliate).  For some others, it’s got to be addressed here, but I think it exposed certain weaknesses that guys can be improving upon.”

The Wolf Pack enter Friday’s game 16 points out of a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, and with seven teams sitting between them and the eighth-and-final playoff berth in the conference.  If there is one clear consensus in the locker room and the coaches’ office, it is that the group must ignore that “big picture” and, as the old cliché goes, take one game at a time.

“That’s going to be the key for us, is to focus, really, on that which you can control, which would be that one game at present time,” Gernander said.  “You don’t look in the rear-view mirror and you certainly can’t look ahead to certain things, but if we can maintain focus on the task at hand and play some of our best hockey, I think it’s (a postseason berth) still within reach.”

Johnson pointed out that, “One of the good things about the American Hockey League is that you play a lot of those teams so much that you’re able to get those kind of four-point situations.  Right now we just take it of game-by-game, look at the team that’s ahead of us, work our way to get to that team and then kind of work our way towards the middle of the pack.  You can’t, unfortunately, get into the playoffs in one or two games, it’s going to take a while, but I think we’ve got the team that’s able to do it.

“At the start of the season I think we learned not to give up.  And in the second (quarter) I think we got a little comfortable and maybe didn’t play our game.  A lot of the games that we win, it’s when we play 60 minutes.  We get back to playing 60 minutes, we’ll win more hockey games.”

Kristo summed up the task at hand by saying, “You just have to go at it day by day and come to the rink every single day, if it’s a practice, game or whatnot, and just try to get better.  And going into each game, just focus on that game.  Don’t think about the three games on the weekend and who you’re playing, just focus on that day and who you’re playing that day.  And if you take it one day at a time, you never know what can happen.”

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photo credit: chris rutsch

UConn’s Shabazz Napier Named To Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List

ST. LOUIS – The U.S. Basketball Writers Association has selected 23 outstanding players, including UConn Huskies senior guard Shabazz Napier (Roxbury, Mass.) for its 2014 Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List. Members of the association's board of directors chose the players to be included on the list as contenders for the Oscar Robertson Trophy, awarded to the national player of the year.

Oscar Robertson TrophyNapier leads the 15-4 Huskies in scoring (17.4), rebounding (6.2), assists (5.9), steals (1.9) and minutes played (34.5). He has twice been named the American Athletic Conference Player of the Week, and he has been on the league's weekly Honor Roll six times. Wednesday, Napier was named to the Midseason Watch List for the John R. Wooden Award and he is on the watch lists for the 2014 Senior CLASS Award, the Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award, and the Naismith Trophy.

The Oscar Robertson Trophy is to be presented to the national player of the year by its namesake at the Devon Energy College Basketball Awards on April 14 at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. The Henry Iba Coach of the Year Award and the Integris Wayman Tisdale Freshman of the Year Award will also be presented at the gala to be held annually the Monday following the NCAA Men's Final Four.

Creighton's Doug McDermott, a first-team USBWA All-American last season, is also on the list, while teammates from six different schools – Arizona, Duke, Kansas, Michigan State, Syracuse and Wichita State – are also lauded. Oklahoma State's Marcus Smart, the 2013 Wayman Tisdale National Freshman of the Year and a second-team USBWA All-American a season ago, is also featured. Overall, 10 conferences are represented, led by the Atlantic Coast Conference with five players and the Big 12 Conference with four.

The watch list includes 12 seniors to go with one junior, four sophomores and six freshmen.

While these standout players are the leading contenders to be named to the USBWA's All-America Team and as finalists for the Oscar Robertson Trophy, all Division I players remain eligible for postseason honors from the USBWA. The association will announce its 2014 All-America Team in mid-March. At that time, finalists will also be chosen for the player of the year. Once finalists are announced, the entire USBWA membership will vote for the winner of the Oscar Robertson Trophy.

Since the 1958-59 season, the USBWA has named a National Player of the Year. In 1998, the award was named in honor of the University of  Cincinnati Hall of Famer and two-time USBWA Player of the Year Oscar Robertson. It is the nation's oldest award and the only one named after a former player.

Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List

Keith Appling, Michigan State

Gary Harris, Michigan State

Cleanthony Early, Wichita State

Fred Van Vleet, Wichita State

Joel Embiid, Kansas

Andrew Wiggins, Kansas

Tyler Ennis, Syracuse

C.J. Fair, Syracuse

Aaron Gordon, Arizona

Nick Johnson, Arizona

Rodney Hood, Duke

Jabari Parker, Duke

Cameron Bairstow, New Mexico

DeAndre Kane, Iowa State

Doug McDermott, Creighton

Shabazz Napier, Connecticut

Lamar Patterson, Pittsburgh

Casey Prather, Florida

Julius Randle, Kentucky

Marcus Smart, Oklahoma State

Russ Smith, Louisville

Xavier Thames, San Diego State

Chaz Williams, Massachusetts

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Wolf Pack’s “Tip-a-Player” Event Set for Tuesday, February 18

HARTFORD, January 23, 2014:  Global Spectrum, operators of the XL Center and Hartford Wolf Pack, announced today that the Wolf Pack’s annual “Tip-a-Player” Dinner and Sports Carnival will take place Tuesday, February 18 at the XL Center.

Hartford Wolf PackThis year’s tenth annual Tip-a-Player extravaganza will run from 6:00-9:00 PM on February 18, and all proceeds from the event will benefit Gaylord Specialty Healthcare of Wallingford, CT.  Gaylord Specialty Healthcare provides specialty care for people with spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, stroke and pulmonary disease.

Tip-a-Player involves the entire Wolf Pack team, and is a family-friendly evening that allows hockey fans to get “up close and personal” with the Wolf Pack players.  The players will be waiting tables, signing autographs and joining fans in healthy competition in the sports carnival, which features an array of inflatables and other assorted lively fun.  Also, the players will compete for “tips” by accepting various challenges and otherwise providing lighthearted entertainment.

The littlest fans will be treated to face-painting and bounce houses, and all guests will enjoy the delicious dining options of a mini “Taste of Hartford”, with area restaurants providing numerous enticing samples of their best fare.  In addition, fans will have the opportunity to bid on special player event jerseys, and there will be a silent auction featuring a bevy of valuable hockey items.

Tip-a-Player takes place during school vacation week, and offers an affordable night out for the whole family, as well as a chance to support a great cause.  Tickets are $30 each for adults and $20 for kids, and “puck bucks”, used to tip the players, are $5 for a quantity of 50 puck bucks.

A ticket order form is on-line at the Wolf Pack’s official website, www.hartfordwolfpack.com, and tickets will also be on sale at the Wolf Pack’s two home games this weekend, tomorrow night, Friday, January 24 vs. Springfield and Saturday, January 25 vs. St. John’s.  Tickets can also be purchased by phone, by calling Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at (203) 284-2881, or Wolf Pack community relations director Frank Berrian at (860) 541-4728.

Tickets for all Wolf Pack 2013-14 home games are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, on-line at www.hartfordwolfpack.com and by phone at (877) 522-8499.  Wolf Pack tickets start as low as $12 for youth 12 years old or younger.  To speak with a representative about season or group tickets, call (855) 762-6451.

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Rangers Assign David LeNeveu To Wolf Pack

NEW YORK, January 23, 2014 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that the club has assigned goaltender David LeNeveu to the Hartford Wolf Pack of the American Hockey League (AHL).

Hartford Wolf PackLeNeveu, 30, dressed as Cam Talbot’s backup on Tuesday against the NY Islanders after signing with the team earlier that day. He returns to Hartford, where he is 1-1-0 with a 3.50 goals against average and .891 save percentage in two games this season. LeNeveu made his Wolf Pack debut on Friday, stopping 26 shots in a 4-2 win at Adirondack. He has split the season between Hartford and the Providence Bruins, posting a combined record of 1-2-0 with a 2.68 goals against average and .906 save percentage in three games. He also appeared in eight games with the South Carolina Stingrays of the ECHL, posting a 4-4-0 record with a 1.64 goals against average, .940 save percentage, and three shutouts.

The Fernie, British Columbia native was originally selected by Phoenix as a second round choice, 46th overall, in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft.

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 1/23

UConn Huskies Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men's basketball and women's basketball teams as well as the other sports the student-athletes engage in. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you're on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Women's Basketball links

Video: UConn Women Spank Memphis, 83-49 [sox & dawgs]

Video: Geno Auriemma Suckers Players into Running With $100 Bill [sox & dawgs]

Huskies roll past Memphis for 20th win [carl adamec  – snyuconn.com]

Tuck sits out again, return date unknown [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

Notebook: Recruit Williams hoping for best [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

Geno Concerned About Morgan Tuck [john altavillla – hartford courant]

Geno Not Surprised Warde Manuel’s A Popular Guy [john altavilla – hartford courant]

UConn Commit Williams Has Knee Scare; Will Undergo MRI [rich elliott – ct post]

Tuck Misses Fourth Straight Game; Red-Shirting A Possible Option [rich elliott – ct post]

Is UConn's Morgan Tuck's sophomore season at risk? [jim fuller – new haven register]

Game report: Mosqueda-Lewis, UConn romp to 20-0 [ct post]

Mosqueda-Lewis comes to life for UConn [ct post]

UConn Routs Memphis, 83-49 [hartford courant]

UConn women improve to 20-0 with rout of Memphis [new haven register]

UConn Men's Basketball links

Former Husky Cliff Robinson Will Be on Survivor: Cagayan [sox & dawgs]

UConn's Shabazz Napier Named To Wooden Midseason Top 25 List [sox & dawgs]

DeAndre Daniels Continues To Provide Offensive Spark [uconnhuskies.com]

Huskies Visit CT Children's Medical Center [uconn huskies youtube]

UConn's Daniels Needs To Maintain Focus, Get Off See-Saw [hartford courant]

UConn Football links

Britton, Summers Join UConn Football Team [sox & dawgs]

Other UConn related links

UConn's youth movement will inevitably spark rumors [ct post]

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Video: UConn Women Spank Memphis, 83-49

If there's one thing you can say about the UConn Huskies women's basketball team, it's that they are consistent.

Connecticut Huskies forward Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis (23) goes up for a shot against Memphis during the second half at the XL Center in Hartford, CT.When they faced the Memphis Tigers 18 days ago, UConn only gave up 49 points. Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis led them in scoring in that matchup with 21 points while Stefanie Dolson had a double-double of 12 points and 10 rebounds.

This time around, KML had 21 points and Dolson had a double-double of 12 points and 10 boards as UConn beat Memphis 83-49 in front of 8,365 at the XL Center in Hartford, CT on Wednesday night.

It's the 21st time the Huskies have won at least 20 games in a season (20-0, 7-0 American). It's also the eighth time they've started 20-0 which bodes well because they've won five national titles in those eight seasons. Memphis falls to 10-9 (3-4).

Dolson also had five assists and five steals while Moriah Jefferson had three points, six assists and nine steals.

Bria Hartley added 20 points with Breanna Stewart scoring 16 points and falling one rebound short of a double-double with nine. Stewie also had three blocked shots.

Breigha Wilder-Cochran paced the Tigers with 12 points. Asianna Fuqua-Bey had a double-double but it's not one you want to have. She scored 10 points but had 11 turnovers. Fuqua-Bey also led the team in rebounds with six along with Pa'Sonna Hope.

The Huskies started off slow in the first half as they seemed to be as cold as the air outside from the floor. Memphis hung tight early on as they trailed 11-8. The Tigers stayed close until about the seven minute mark when UConn closed out the half on an 11-3 run to take a 39-23 lead.

UConn got hot in the second half as they used an early 14-2 run to put away the Tigers and cruise to their 20th victory.

The Huskies are back in action on Sunday afternoon when they'll host the South Florida Bulls at the XL Center. Tip is scheduled for 12 p.m.

Memphis Tigers @ UConn Huskies 1/22/14 box score

Here are UConn's postgame quotes.

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photo credit: john woike – hartford courant

Red Sox Make Grady Sizemore Signing Official

As we learned earlier, the Boston Red Sox and Grady Sizemore agreed to terms on a one-year deal worth $750,000 with incentives that could bring the deal to $6 million. The Red Sox have now made it official.

Here's the release:

BOSTON, MA – The Boston Red Sox today signed three-time All-Star outfielder Grady Sizemore to a one-year contract through the 2014 season. To make room on the 40-man roster, right-handed pitcher Brayan Villarreal was designated for assignment. Executive Vice President/General Manager Ben Cherington made the announcement.

Boston Red SoxThe 31-year-old Sizemore has played eight major league seasons, all with the Cleveland Indians from 2004-11, batting .269 with 216 doubles, 43 triples, 458 RBI, 430 walks, and 601 runs scored. During that eight-year span, no other major leaguer reached both his totals of 139 homers and 134 stolen bases in 892 games.

Sizemore was named an American League All-Star in each of his last three full seasons from 2006-08. During that three-year stretch, he combined for a .279 batting average, a .380 on-base percentage, and a .499 slugging percentage. He also averaged 160 games played, appearing in all 162 Indians games in both 2006 and 2007.

Hampered by injuries over the last five years, he missed the past two seasons recovering from right knee and back surgeries. Before 2009, he had never been placed on the disabled list.

The left-handed batter has hit at least 20 home runs with at least 20 stolen bases in each of his four full major league campaigns from 2005-08, the most 20/20 seasons in Indians history. The only other players ever to record three 20/20 seasons within their first four years appearing in the big leagues are Darryl Strawberry (1984-86) and Bobby Bonds (1969-71).

From 2006-09, Sizemore ranked second in the American League with 426 runs and 276 extra-base hits (Alex Rodriguez, 438 runs; David Ortiz, 291 extra-base hits). He was the only AL player to score at least 100 runs in each of those four campaigns.

Sizemore led the majors with 134 runs, 53 doubles (tied, 1st in AL), and 92 extra-base hits in 2006. With 11 triples and 28 home runs that year, he became just the fourth player with a 50-double, 10-triple, 25-homer season, along with Hall of Famers Joe Medwick (1937), Chuck Klein (1932), and Lou Gehrig (1927).

In 2008, he became the 10th player in AL history to put together a 30-homer/30-stolen base season (33 HR, 38 SB) and earned a spot on the Louisville Slugger Silver Slugger Team.

The Indians' leadoff hitter for most of his career, Sizemore led the AL in pitches seen in three consecutive seasons from 2006-08 and has averaged 4.0 pitches per plate appearance in his big league career. He is Cleveland's all-time franchise leader with 22 leadoff home runs.

Exclusively a center fielder in his major league career, Sizemore earned back-to-back Rawlings Gold Glove Awards in 2007 and 2008. His lifetime .993 fielding percentage ranks second all-time among AL outfielders with at least 800 games played.

Sizemore was originally a third-round selection by the Montreal Expos in the 2000 June Draft. In 11 career postseason games, all with the Indians in 2007, the Seattle, WA native owns a .279 average (12-for-43) with two doubles, a triple, two home runs, and eight walks.

Villarreal, 26, was acquired from the Detroit Tigers last July 30 as part of the three-team trade that brought Jake Peavy from the White Sox to the Red Sox. He combined to allow 10 runs in 4.1 innings in the major leagues last year with the Tigers (7 games) and Red Sox (1), and also made 35 minor league relief appearances between Detroit's Triple-A Toledo, Boston's Triple-A Pawtucket, and a rehab stint with Short-A Lowell. The right-hander is 4-8 with a 4.56 ERA (38 ER/75.0 IP) and 86 strikeouts in 74 career major league outings from 2011-13.

Report: Red Sox To Sign Grady Sizemore

Grady Sizemore

It's appears that Grady's Ladies will be moving to Boston for the 2014 season.

According to Rob Bradford of WEEI.com, the Boston Red Sox and OF Grady Sizemore have come to terms on a one year deal worth $750,000. Bradford reports that he can earn another $5.25 million in incentives.

Sizemore hasn't appeared in the big leagues since the end of the 2011 season with the Cleveland Indians. He hasn't played a full season in the big leagues since 2008 due to many injuries.

One, I find it interesting that the Red Sox are giving him a big league contract considering the fact that he hasn't played in a baseball game since 2011. Are Sizemore's knees and back healthy?

Secondly, is he going to be the every day centerfielder? Or is he going to be the fourth outfielder? Or will he platoon with Jonny Gomes in left field?

Thirdly, what does this mean for Daniel Nava, who you expected to platoon with Gomes?

All those questions boil down to how healthy Sizemore is. And if he ends up healthy at the end of spring training, the Red Sox could send Nava to another team to grab some pitching depth.

It's absolutely a low-risk, high reward signing if Sizemore can stay healthy. Based on his track record, that's not likely to happen. But if he can play pretty regularly, he definitely can be an asset.

And if he's not, the Red Sox will have only spent $750,000 on him, which in MLB terms is like pocket change.

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photo credit: getty images