Last Updated: July 02. 2009 1:00AM

Tony Paul:  Baseball insider

Rays rise on speed, strength

The expectations are greater, and so is the competition. But the Rays finally are starting to prove last year was far from a fluke.

After a sluggish start, which fairly can be blamed on injuries -- among those placed on the disabled list in May alone, Pat Burrell (neck), Scott Kazmir (quad), Troy Percival (shoulder), Jason Bartlett (ankle), Akinori Iwamura (ACL) and Brian Shouse (elbow) -- the Rays had won nine of 10 and were a season-best nine above .500 before losing Wednesday to drop back to five games behind the Red Sox in the AL East.

They've revived their season with equal parts speed and strength. Entering Wednesday, they had 121 stolen bases -- the Angels (76) are second -- and 105 homers, making them the fifth team in history with 100 of each before the All-Star break.

That puts the Rays on pace for 248 stolen bases and 215 homers, which would make them the second member of the 200-200 club (1996 Rockies, 221 homers, 201 steals).

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"It speaks to the athleticism of the group," manager Joe Maddon told the St. Petersburg Times. "Great combination of speed and power. Everybody looks at us and always talks about how fast we are and how well we run and all that stuff. I never heard the credit for the power, and that's good, that's fine because I know we have it."

Carlos Pena's 23 homers lead the AL, Evan Longoria and Ben Zobrist have 16 each, and 12 other Rays have gone deep.

Meanwhile, on the basepaths, Carl Crawford's 40 stolen bases are tops in the majors. Crawford, in fact, with a little hot streak could get back on pace to flirt with 100 steals, something that's been done only 20 times in history, and not since Vince Coleman swiped 109 in 1987.

Pitt swaps

It's not just Pirates fans -- allegedly, they still exist -- struggling to understand the latest round of transactions. The players are stunned, too.

"There are certain guys that you think are going to get traded. It's the ones who you think are a part of the future, those are the ones that get you. Those are the worst," shortstop Jack Wilson told MLB.com this week. "They are building something. Unfortunately, none of us here are kind of seeing that direction."

The Pirates on Tuesday shipped speedy outfielder Nyjer Morgan to the Nationals, just a few weeks after trading Gold Glove-winning center fielder Nate McLouth , a Muskegon native, to the Braves.

This comes a year after they sent Jason Bay to the Red Sox, for whom he's now having an MVP-caliber season, and Xavier Nady to the Yankees. That's four talented outfielders -- all 20-somethings on Trading Day; McLouth is 27, Morgan turns 28 today and neither one is on the brink of free agency -- gone with relatively little in return.

The acquisitions: outfielder Lastings Milledge , the No. 12 overall pick in 2003 who's been mostly a bust and a nuisance since debuting in '06, and right-handed reliever Joel Hanrahan , a second-round pick in 2000 whose 5.30 career ERA apparently made him marketable.

"Big risks, no question, but with big upside," general manager Neal Huntington told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "There are the kinds of things we have to do. We might miss."

Around the horn

MLB will pay tribute to Lou Gehrig on Saturday, with all home teams re-creating part of his "Luckiest Man" speech before the first pitch. It's an effort to raise awareness and funds for ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis), the disease that killed the Yankees Hall of Famer. A "4ALS" logo will appear on first base, Gehrig's position; the bases later will be auctioned off at MLB.com.

• Part of the fallout from Adrian Beltre 's left shoulder surgery, which is likely to keep him out of the Mariners lineup 6-8 weeks: There likely will be a new winner of the AL Gold Glove at third base. Beltre won the Gold Glove in 2007 and '08, and Oakland's Eric Chavez took home the award the six years before that.

tpaul@detnews.com

Diamond digits

76 Games the Padres have played without scoring in double figures. According to STATS LLC., only two teams have gone deeper into the season without putting up at least a 10-spot in the last decade: the 2002 Tigers (97 games) and the 2003 Tigers (92 games).

137-114 The American League's record in interleague play, the sixth straight year the National League has been on the losing end.

7/2/02 The Tigers and White Sox, the same teams who combined for an MLB-record 12 home runs in a game in 1995, matched the mark. The final -- White Sox 17-9.

Staff injection

The Rockies finished 21-7 in June to cut six games off their deficit in the NL West. There's plenty of credit to go around, but it all starts with the starters -- the rotation won 19 games. No NL team has won more in a month in 40 seasons (the Mets also won 19 in July 1985):

2009 Rockies GS W-L ERA
Jason Marquis63-23.76
Ubaldo Jimenez63-12.89
Aaron Cook65-12.36
Jorge de la Rosa54-16.08
Jason Hammel54-03.41
1985 Mets
Dwight Gooden65-01.66
Ron Darling64-24.85
Ed Lynch44-02.48
Rick Aguilera53-10.89
Sid Fernandez51-22.73
Bill Latham11-03.68
Terry Leach11-02.38

Source: Elias Sports Bureau, Detroit News research

My AL All-Star ballot

Position Should start Will start Latest vote leader
First baseJustin Morneau, MINKevin Youkilis, BOSYoukilis by 40,047
Second baseAaron Hill, TORDustin Pedroia, BOSIan Kinsler, TEX, by 6,830
ShortstopJason Bartlett, TBDerek Jeter, NYYJeter by 1,627,314
Third baseEvan Longoria, TBLongoriaLongoria by 1,634,044
CatcherJoe Mauer, MINMauerMauer by 1,451,873
OutfieldJason Bay, BOSBayBay by 1,119,113
OutfieldIchiro Suzuki, SEASuzukiSuzuki by 312,026
OutfieldCarl Crawford, TBJosh Hamilton, TEXHamilton by 144,981
PitcherZack Greinke, KCGreinkeN/A (manager selects starter)

Game: 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 14, Busch Stadium, St. Louis (Fox)

Central concerns

The Indians, at 31-48, are a season-worst 17 games below .500, but it's not because of the offense. Here's a breakdown of the AL Central offenses and pitching staffs (major league rank in parentheses):

Team R HR AVG Starters ERA Relievers ERA
Chicago White Sox343 (17)91 (7).257 (19)4.12 (7)3.90 (11)
Cleveland403 (4)87 (11).260 (15)5.52 (30)5.09 (28)
Detroit368 (12)90 (8).261 (14)4.20 (10)4.46 (24)
Kansas City305 (28)67 (23).250 (25)4.18 (8)4.59 (25)
Minnesota373 (10)82 (12).270 (8)4.48 (19)3.85 (9)

Tony's top five

• 1. L.A. Dodgers (1): Manny Ramirez finished rehab stint 3-for-10 with HR, 3 BBs, 5 Ks.

• 2. Boston (2): Of Jonathan Papelbon's club-record 132 saves, 101 have been 1 IP.

• 3. N.Y. Yankees (4): On Sunday, Mariano Rivera earned his 500th save, 1st career RBI.

• 4. Detroit (3): RP Fu-Te Ni tied Chin-Lung Hu for shortest last name in MLB history.

• 5. L.A. Angels (6): Began June trailing by 4 1/2 games in AL West; ended it up 1 1/2 back.

Tony's bottom five

• 26. Kansas City (22): Zack Greinke's 28 consecutive starts of 5 or more IP is tops in MLB.

• 27. Oakland (26): Club's streak of 5 seasons of fewer than 100 errors is in jeopardy (54).

• 28. Cleveland (28): After starting 6-4, Carl Pavano is 0-3 with 8.85 ERA in last 4 starts.

• 29. Arizona (29): In June, Dan Haren was 3-1 with 1.64 ERA and hit 1st HR.

• 30. Washington (30): SPs had 13 quality starts, 3.86 ERA in 26 games in June.

Note: Last week's rankings in parentheses.

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Former Tiger Carlos Pena has clubbed 23 home runs, leading both the resurgent Rays' power surge and the American League. (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

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  • Former Tiger Carlos Pena has clubbed 23 home runs, leading both the resurgent Rays' power surge and the American League. (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)
  • Former Tiger Carlos Pena has clubbed 23 home runs, leading both the resurgent Rays' power surge and the American League. (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)
  • Royals pitcher Zack Greinke has gone at least five innings in 28 consecutive starts. (Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press)

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