At the Letters: Players we love, and love to hate MLB
Readers offer their takes on underperforming players, managers and teams.
Readers offer their takes on underperforming players, managers and teams.
Brandon Inge lost his job at third, then re-invented himself as a highly paid utility man for the underachieving Tigers.
Manager Willie Randolph hangs on by a thread as the Mets slog along and players are called out for lack of effort.
As the Reds slugger approaches a career home run milestone achieved by only five others, a nation shrugs.
General manager blasts his last-place team after another loss, and it appears roster changes are coming.
The talented young first basemen are becoming major players in the glitzy L.A. market, all without flexing their muscles.
John Lackey comes off the DL and displays the form that resulted in 19 wins and a league-low ERA last season.
Are the upstarts from Tampa Bay for real, or is their current perch atop the AL East standings a temporary high?
The race in the AL Central is wide open because two supposedly potent teams have been mediocre.
Despite the death of his brother, steroids accusations and the age discrepancy, Miguel Tejada excels.
First came stardom, then came stumbles, but the Mets' shortstop is young and talented enough to begin all over again.
Three thousand miles from New York, it's Joe Torre who can hold his chin a little higher for the time being.
on Clemens' alleged affair with singer triggered a flood of lively reader responses.
One month into the season, surprises are plentiful and individual awards start and end with Cliff Lee.