More than any individual transaction, the story of the 2009 trade deadline was just how much activity there was. After years of the deadline falling short of outsized expectations, major league GMs gave us plenty to chew on this season. Of the 19 teams playing for this season, 13 made moves to strengthen their roster in the past few days, as did the noncontending Reds. Of the 11 teams playing for future seasons, all but those Reds, the Royals, and Diamondbacks made a deadline deal to acquire younger, less expensive players. It was the most active trade deadline in memory, and one of the more entertaining baseball days we’ve had in some time.
Considering just trades that happened since my last column-basically, the stuff from Thursday and Friday-here are some opinions about the deadline activity.
Best Move
Trading for a pitcher on the disabled list would hardly seem to qualify, but Kenny Williams finally got his man, trading Aaron Poreda and three other pitchers for Jake Peavy. It’s a huge gamble with both short-term upside-Peavy should be back from his ankle injury for September-and long-term payoff-he’s signed through 2012 at a reasonable $16 million average annual value (AAV), with a big 2013 option. The elbow injury that curtailed his 2008 season is a concern, of course, as is the possibility that Peavy’s ankle won’t let him pitch or pitch effectively during the Sox’ pennant push. Nevertheless, for what amounts to Poreda and filler (I’m not a Clayton Richard fan, although he’ll love Petco), it’s a strong move that, at worst, positions the Sox as co-favorites in the AL Central.
Honorable mention goes to the Tigers, who opened Friday’s action by picking up 12 starts of Jarrod Washburn for next to nothing. The 70 or so innings will enable them to stay in the race in the Central, something that was looking unlikely as Rick Porcello fell apart slowly and the team tapped pitchers like Luke French-traded in the deal-to fill out the fifth slot. Even normal Jarrod Washburn, a league-average starter, is a source of help for the Tigers’ push.
Worst Move
The Braves continued rotating through first baseman, swapping out the current model, Casey Kotchman, for the 2006 version in Adam LaRoche. Even though they didn’t spend more money in the deal-the Red Sox picked up the cost difference between the two players-the Braves at best made a lateral move, and may have made themselves worse. Kotchman is matching LaRoche this season with a .272 EqA (to the travelin’ man’s .271) and has a superior glove. He’s also outplayed LaRoche as measured by WARP1 in both of the last two seasons. It appears that the Braves, led by GM Frank Wren, evaluated the two players solely by their home runs and RBI; you can’t explain the deal any other way.
Biggest Head-Scratcher
The Reds had slipped nine games behind the Cardinals heading into last night’s game, and with one of the game’s worst offenses backing a disappointing rotation, seemed like a seller. Then they completed a deal with the Blue Jays to acquire 34-year-old Scott Rolen and the last $15 million (less some undisclosed amount that the Jays are paying) left on an eight-year deal he signed before his body broke down. Rolen is having his best season in some time, and brings a strong glove; however the Reds can’t leverage his talent this year and are unlikely to in 2010, because they simply won’t be good enough. As I put it in chat, it’s as if Walt Jocketty thought, “Hey, the last time I traded for Scott Rolen, my team won the World Series a few years later.” It’s a bad deal for a team that seems to not understand where it is in the success cycle.
Best Under-the-Radar Move
It is hard to describe just how much better Nick Johnson makes the Marlins. He essentially turns them from an afterthought in the wild-card race to a contender, by being that much better than Emilio Bonifacio, who he will likely replace in the lineup. It is rare for a team to make a 100-point gain in OBP in a single lineup spot in one deal, but that’s what the Fish have done here, and they’ve likely done it in a defense-neutral way. Bonifacio’s been a sub-replacement-level bat while batting leadoff and second all year, has crippled a Marlins’ offense that has plenty of power. Johnson can slide into Bonifacio’s second slot and be worth about two wins to the Marlins in a vaccum; I suspect the value of replacing a .290 OBP with a .400 one in front of Hanley Ramirez will be worth a little more than that in real life.
Overrated Move
Nothing against Victor Martinez, a very good player having a strong season after a lost 2008 campaign, but the idea that he changes the story for the Red Sox is overblown. A year ago, when Jason Varitek was one of the worst players in the league, this would have been a monster deal. Now, Varitek is playing well, and given his status with the team, he’s going to keep his job. That means Martinez will play a lot of first base and DH, and his .294 EqA bat isn’t anything special in those roles. It’s a small upgrade on Adam LaRoche once you consider defense. The gap between Martinez-as-catcher and Martinez-as-other is huge, a reminder that the ability to play catcher and hit well is a special combination of skills.
Where this deal should help the Sox is by giving them an out to cut ties with Varitek next year, installing Martinez as their #1 catcher and reaping the benefits of that decision. For the rest of this season, however, the trade amounts to a depth play, giving Terry Francona flexibility in assembling his lineup and batting order each day.
Wallflowers
The Texas teams did nothing and liked it? The Astros, playing for now, didn’t have much to trade, so it’s not terribly surprising that they completed no deals. Look for Ed Wade to try and bolster his bullpen and bench by acquiring players who clear waivers, nabbing minor improvements here and there, as he did in 2008 by snagging LaTroy Hawkins. The Astros simply don’t have the prospects to make major moves, a real problem in their “play for now” strategy.
On the other hand, the Rangers have enough prospects for the entire state, and they retained all of them. There’s no question that the Rangers could have traded for Roy Halladay, and the Blue Jays’ righty might not have pushed them into the playoffs, but he would have helped close the gap on the Angels in 2009 while fronting the division-winning rotation in 2010. A deal was available if Jon Daniels and J.P. Ricciardi had wanted to make one, because the Jays could have taken a lesson from the Indians and worried less about where the returning players ranked in the Rangers’ system and more about where they would rank in their own. An apparent insistence on two players from Column A-Derek Holland and Justin Smoak-as well as Halladay’s objections to going to Arlington scuttled any hope of a deal. It’s not the worst outcome for the Rangers, as they face short-term financial difficulties in addition to their lineup’s OBP issues, but this is certainly the type of deal, swapping some potential for certainty, that they can look to make over the next 12 months.
Staying
Halladay, obviously, was the dominant story of the past three weeks, and he ended up right where he started. The Blue Jays shouldn’t re-sign him, so we’ll go through this again in December, and for the Jays’ sake, let’s hope J.P. Ricciardi threads the needle that the no-trade clause creates and makes a deal just as good as his one that shipped Rolen to the Reds.
I have no idea why Adam Dunn is still in Washington, but there he is. The Nationals did do the right thing by sending Nick Johnson and Joe Beimel to contenders, but retaining Dunn, the highest-valued player of the group, does little for them other than push them from 65 to 70 wins next season. Yay.
Both Heath Bell and Adrian Gonzalez are still Padres. With the team having traded Jake Peavy, however, all illusion of winning for the next few seasons is gone, and you have to figure that both players will be the topic of heavy bidding at the winter meetings. I would be shocked, just floored, if either was a Padre on April 1, 2010.
The trade deadline was a lot of fun this year, and it sets up what should be a ridiculously exciting last few months of the season, with races in five of six divisions, some involving up to four teams, and an NL wild-card race that will once again be a barn-burner with, as of this morning, eight teams within 6½ games of the lead. The focus that has been on front offices for the last few weeks goes back to the field today.
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More to the point, you don't auction Adam Dunn. No one wanted him last winter, and likely as not he won't be in much demand in this coming offseason. But midseason, when he's raking and teams need bats, immediately, you are in better position.
That's the difference.
Deeper on the farm, the AA ball club has Beavan and Kasey Kiker and Omar Poveda and a 22 year old named Michael Kirkman who's not bad either. Down at Bakersfield they have Richard Bleier, Main, Kennil Gomez, and Tim Murphy. Farther down at Hickory we see Boscan, Jacob Brigham, Font, Martin Perez, Carlos Pimentel, Neil Ramirez and Joe Wieland. Last but not least at Spokane you have Robby Ross, of the 50 k's in 39.1 innings.
That's talent coming in waves. No reason to panic this year. So you let Blalock and Padilla go this off season and let Holland and Feliz and Smoak take over their spots, and while running away with the 2010 division, you can trade a Blake Beavan and Borbon and a Carlos Pimentel to fill a hole next year. And if the Rangers make the post season this year, so much the better for next years attendance.
BTW, Feliz should be up this month..... start your salivation.
And in the meantime, he helps the Nats suck a little less and prevents the impression that they're blowing up and starting over -- which might be what they actually need to do but would be a really tough pill for an already shaky fanbase to swallow.
.881
.824
.750
.736
He's on his last leg.
I'd use V-Mart (C) > Youkilis (1B) > Lowell (3B) as the primary setup for 5 out of every 7 games, as long as Lowell is healthy enough to contribute. When he needs a rest, then go
Varitek (C) > V-Mart (1B) > Youkilis (3B)
Alternatively, you can go Varitek (C) > Kotchman (1B) > Youkilis (3B) > V-Mart (DH) against tough lefties.
Like last year, Varitek can still hit righty but after a brief April-May resurgence, has resumed the terrible performance batting lefty that he exhibited last year.
Interestingly, Victor Martinez has been a much better hitter batting lefty, so the outlines of platoon arrangement easily presents itself.
I doubt that Francona will hold to it but there it is.
Also, this deal gives the Red Sox a catcher for next year.
Knowing Kotchman is not the answer, and then getting rid of him for anybody with just a chance to be better (even not a good chance) is a good idea, if only to avoid "Don Wert" syndrome were someone become a fixture where he is nearly good enough.
Picking up Rolen is a head scratcher, maybe a personal favor more than a strategic move, but if the Reds are paying as much salary as they seem to be, it is a monkey-wrench for the next year's budget as well, that makes it worse than LaRoche, at least to my thinking.
LaRoche, on the other hand has seemingly turned into a different player in 2nd halves of full seasons. Of course, such a trend is very frequently NOT repeatable, even if we've seen it several times. But it is historically a real same-season improvement, as opposed to Kotchman's career split differences.
Maybe it's just me, but the GMs seemed to pull more intelligent moves this year.
It's pretty easy to rationalize, actually - LaRoche is an expiring contract and Kotchman, being arb-eligible, was going to be DFA'd this offseason anyway. It's a money move.
So they pay $10 mil or so for an erstwhile stud who can still pick it and rack some doubles (HR's in GAB?). If he plays 130 games next year it will be worth it, easily. And they gain some ancillary if incalculable benefits in the clubhouse and with fans.
The only problem I might have is not with the money, but the prospects. That seemed a bit generous. But, again, E.Ency is on his way to sub-replacement, so it evens out.
Now, maybe that's still just a sample-size illusion, but it's not a crazy justification for the trade.
Also, the Braves are leaking that they probably would've nontendered Kotchman for clubhouse reasons after this year, because, apparently, he talked to fellow ex-Angel Garret Anderson and nobody else on the team. I'm pretty sure this weighed in the decision as well, though it may just be PR.