Rookie Cory Luebke sent the San Diego Padres into a key series against San Francisco on a positive note.
Rookie Cory Luebke sent the San Diego Padres into a key series against San Francisco on a positive note.
Juan Uribe keeps coming up with some of the biggest hits for the San Francisco Giants.
A healthy Jair Jurrjens is giving the Braves a lift in their attempt to hold off the Phillies in the NL East.
Johan Santana rarely kept the ball down. No matter, his teammates were all over the outfield making dramatic catches and generating some rare offensive support.
Chad Billingsley tossed a five-hitter for his first complete game of the season, Casey Blake homered in the second inning and drove in another run in the eighth, and the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the San Francisco Giants 2-0 on Wednesday night to snap a season-worst six-game skid.
Yovani Gallardo is firm. Even if he's fortunate enough to make the All-Star team again next summer, he'll skip it.
Yovani Gallardo is firm. Even if he's fortunate enough to make the All-Star team again next summer, he'll skip it.
Vicente Padilla was mixing his pitches and speeds, blissfully unaware he had a no-hitter going through five innings.
Rafael Furcal hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in the seventh inning to lift Clayton Kershaw and the Los Angeles Dodgers over the Chicago Cubs 3-2 in their series opener Thursday night.
The Los Angeles Dodgers put shortstop Rafael Furcal on the bereavement list before the final game of their series against the Cincinnati Reds.
Calling the Rafael Furcal negotiations "despicable" and "disgusting," Atlanta Braves president John Schuerholz said his team would never again deal with Furcal's high-power agent, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
The Braves thought they had a verbal agreement in place on Monday for Furcal to rejoin the team for a 3-year, $30 million contract with an option for a fourth year. But Furcal's agent suddenly put the brakes on the deal over the next two days, and Furcal eventually agreed instead to take a similar deal from the Dodgers on Wednesday.
Furcal was represented in the negotiations by agent Paul Kinzer, who works for Arn Tellem and the Wasserman Media Group. It is a powerful agency that represents such stars as Chase Utley, Hanley Ramirez, Carlos Lee and Jason Giambi.
This April 6, 2008 file photo shows Los Angeles Dodgers' Rafael Furcal in a baseball game against the San Diego Padres, in San Diego. Furcal is close to accepting a $30 million, three-year offer to return to the Atlanta Braves. The 31-year-old began his major league career with Atlanta, playing for the Braves from 2000-05. He spent the last three seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi, File)
Shortstop Rafael Furcal finalized his three-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday. Furcal agreed to terms of a contract worth at least $30 million with the Dodgers two days earlier, prompting the Atlanta Braves to claim the 31-year-old switch hitter reneged on a deal with them.
"Raffy has proven to be a very important player for us over the last three seasons," Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti said in a statement issued late Friday. "He sets a great example with his enthusiasm and passion for the game and his teammates."
Furcal hit .357 with five homers and 16 RBIs last season, but was limited to 36 games and 143 at-bats by back problems. He had back surgery July 3 and was sidelined until the season's final week, but started each of the Dodgers' eight postseason games, hitting .258 with one homer, three RBIs and nine runs scored.
"You can't overestimate Raffy's value to the team," Dodgers manager Joe Torre said. "He brings so much more to the table than just his ability to play the game. The players feed off his energy and I think he's an integral piece of the puzzle. I look forward to having that leadership in a Dodger uniform for the next several years."
Braves president John Schuerholz has vowed to never again do business with Furcal's agents, whom Schuerholz accused in a newspaper interview of conducting "despicable" dealings with the team.
Schuerholz and Braves general manager Frank Wren were quoted as saying the Wasserman Media Group, headed by Arn Tellem, negotiated dishonestly by taking the team's signed terms of agreement sheet for Furcal to the Dodgers. Wren said he believed the request by agent Paul Kinzer for a term sheet signed by the Braves late Monday meant an agreement had been reached.
"Having been in this business for 40-some years, I've never seen anybody treated like that," Schuerholz was quoted as saying in Friday's editions of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "The Atlanta Braves will no longer do business with that company — ever. I told Arn Tellem that we can't trust them to be honest and forthright. I told him that in all my years, I've never seen any (agency) act in such a despicable manner.
"It was disgusting and unprofessional. We're a proud organization, and we won't allow ourselves to be treated that way. I advised Arn Tellem that whatever players he represents, just scratch us off the list. Take the name of the Atlanta Braves off their speed dial. They can deal with the other 29 clubs, and we'll deal with the other hundred agents."
Schuerholz did not respond to a telephone message left Friday by The Associated Press.
The players' association is likely to maintain that a team cannot boycott players based on which agent they retain.
"I've been in touch with Arn Tellem," said Michael Weiner, the general counsel for the players' association. "I intend to be in touch next week with the commissioner's office to make sure the Braves are made aware of their obligations under the Basic Agreement."
Furcal gets $6.5 million next season, $8.5 million in 2010 and $12 million in 2011. The deal includes a $12 million team option for 2012, and the option would become guaranteed if he has 600 plate appearances in 2011. He also can earn an additional $1 million annually, including the option year, if he remains healthy.
Furcal also will get a $3 million payment by the end of the January following the contract's completion. He has a limited no-trade provision allowing him to block deals to a specified number of teams.
Furcal began his big league career with the Braves, playing with them from 2000-05. He signed a three-year, $39 million free-agent contract with the Dodgers following the 2005 season.
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AP Sports Writer Charles Odum in Atlanta contributed to this report.
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