A Special Guest on a Lazy Sunday
A few weeks ago, when the playoffs
were anything but assured, someone on twitter asked whether or not Pauly C. and
I would combine for a joint, mega-edition of Lazy Sunday if the Indians made
the playoffs. Well wouldn’t you know it, but the wi-fi down in Del Boca Vista
was working this week, and what started out as an innocent e-mail exchange
turned into what you see before you here today. We’re heading into the most
important offseason for the Indians since the winter of 2007-08, when the
96-win Indians took the Red Sox to the brink of elimination in the ALCS,
falling just one game short of a World Series berth (and eventual win over the
Rockies, and no one will ever convince me otherwise). That club made only minor
tweaks to what we all thought was a pretty solid roster, then promptly went out
and fell flat on their faces in 2008, stumbling so badly that reigning Cy Young
winner C.C. Sabathia was dealt in early July. Even a 22-3 (167 ERA+!) season
from Cliff Lee couldn’t save that club. There’s a lot of pressure on Chris
Antonetti and company to avoid a similar fate in 2014, as the Cleveland fanbase
has shown an unwillingness to trust the front office and ownership group
despite a playoff* season in 2013. So with that level of gravity established, it
is with great pride that I bring to you the return of THE DiaTribe, The
Westside Kid, the biggest Pat Tabler fan outside of the Tabler family…that’s
right, none other than Paul Cousineau himself! Time and schedule permitting, Pauly
and I will try and get together for a little offseason miniseries, so consider
this installment one of several still to come in the fall/winter months ahead.
Paul Cousineau: So if
you're down at the corner of Carnegie and Ontario, what "levers" are you pulling?
Al Ciammaichella:
To start, they need to figure out whether Ubaldo will pick up his end of his
option (which he won't, unless he's crazy). After he declines it, I think they
need to figure out if he'll sign for a reasonable #, or if they just offer him
the qualifying tender and move on with a draft pick. I think that's the most
likely scenario. As good as he was in the 2nd half this year, that delivery
still has a lot of moving parts, any of which can break down at any point and
he turns back into 2012 Ubaldo. I just think he's better off being someone
else's risk, especially at the $$ he'll command on the open market. Everything
hinges on that decision though, and with the remote chance that the Big U will
offer a big “hometown” discount for the team that kept giving him chances until
he got himself right, that scenario has to be given a little bit of time to
play itself out.
Next
comes Kazmir. Is he worth 2 years/$17 million? Yeah, probably, especially considering
he'd be the only lefty in the rotation and there are no sure things to step up
from the farm next year. They almost have to resign one of them, and I think
Kazmir will come cheaper and with less risk (and lower upside). So after Ubaldo
(likely) leaves, they need to do what it takes to bring Kaz back into the fold
for next season.
Step
3 is feeling out the trade market for Asdrubal. Even if they have to trade him
for $.75 on the dollar, I think they have to move him to free up $$$. You can't
pay him $10 million next year to be a replacement-level SS. By B-Ref's WAR, he
was worth 1.2 wins last year. That's a CAREER LOW, including his rookie year
when he only appeared in 45 games. Yikes. He reports to camp in lousy shape, is
always dinged up throughout the season, and doesn't seem to be a team leader.
With the raises coming to Bourn and Swish, they're going to need every dollar
to maximize payroll. I'm not in love with Aviles, but he can keep SS warm until
Lindor (who I am madly in love with) is ready. And I think Lindor will be
ready at some point in 2014, and will be able to contribute enough with his
glove that he’ll be able to provide the value of Asdrubal at a fraction of the
cost, and be 10 times more adorable while doing so.
What
do you think they'll look to do?
PC:
Absolutely agree on those 3 being the first steps, in that order.
Ubaldo's
walking to greener pastures, so you put in your qualifying offer and take the
pick. As good as he was, let him be someone else's constant project.
Kazimir
is the guy I'd keep for the reasons you point out. I don't think he gets
more than that and he (unlike Ubaldo) would have some loyalty to the team
giving him a shot. The presence of Tito and Callaway (plus the fact that
he's made more than $30M in his career) won't hurt.
If
you get Kazimir locked up, the rotation is pretty sound although some of that I
attribute to the steps made by Kluber/McAllister/Salazar and what I’ll call the
“Tao of Mickey”. The wild card could be Masterson if he doesn't seem interested
in an extension (that the team is sure to approach him about) at all. By
that I mean, do the Indians pull a Rays-esque move with Shields...and can the
fanbase handle that? I don't think so…on both counts (at least I can't -
even if they'd get a king's ransom for him), so I hope that Masterson is
willing to do a CC-type deal where he gives up some FA years or maybe one year
and an option for some security. And, yes...CC did that at one point
before the 2005 season.
Even
separating emotion from it as frustration was the norm for him all season, you
try to move Asdrubal. Maybe you don't get as much for him, but I've LONG
been of the opinion that Aviles can at least hold ground there until Lindor is
ready. I was ready for that in July of 2013, so a couple more mediocre
months...and a BRUTAL GIDP in the WC game haven't changed that.
To
me, the interesting spots are 3B/SS and RF/1B and how they think they're going
to utilize Raburn and Aviles for next year. Ideally, they're still bench
guys (and they're getting paid like bench guys at $4M combined for 2014) and
I'm OK with Chiz at 3B to start the season with Swish taking one of RF or 1B,
but what they do in RF and at SS (or Utility IF, if Asdrubal is traded and
Aviles is the starting SS) are the spots to watch.
Oh,
and building a bullpen without Smith, Perez, Pestano (assuming he's not
healthy), and Albers...
AC: Ever notice
how every year that the bullpen is supposed to be the strength of the team it
ends up blowing up in our faces? I'm primarily referring to 2008 in addition to
last year of course; it just seems like no matter what, that's the most
volatile part of the club and you can never really know what you're getting
from season to season. Pestano is the best example; WBC guy prior to the
season, coming off of two seasons where he averaged a 161 ERA+, and he ends up
getting sent to AAA in 2013. YCPB could stand for You Can't Predict Bullpen.
But I also share your opinion that a bullpen is the easiest (and cheapest) part
of a team to construct. Trade or DFA Perez, slide a (healthy) Pestano into the
back end of the bullpen along with Cody Allen, mix with a dash of Scrabble and a
pinch of Bryan Shaw and you've got the start of something promising. I think
C.C. Lee is a full-time member of the bullpen next season, and he can fill the
Joe Smith role capably. I still refuse to believe that the Nick Hagadone
experiment is a failed one; his stuff is just so much better than the results
indicate. I'm still holding out hope that the light bulb goes on for him at
some point next year. Preston Guilmet, Trey Haley, Scott Barnes and Austin
Adams are all internal options that could appear at the corner of Carnegie and
Ontario at some point in 2014, so before you even throw in random vet
signing(s) and minor league signings with invites to big league camp, you have
the makings for a solid cadre of bullpen arms. Adams especially; his
fastball still sits in the upper 90’s and routinely touches 99. I think he
becomes a significant contributor to the major league bullpen as soon as 2014,
with future closer© potential.
So...you're just going to bring up
the idea of a Masterson trade with no warning like that? Give a guy a chance to
brace himself. While I stew over that nugget, what are your thoughts on the
bullpen? Do you think they offer CP arbitration?
PC: Nah, Perez is
gone.
Even
engaging him in arbitration seems unlikely, given the raise that he’s due via
the arbitration process and with the “stats” that they look at and value. They’ll probably put feelers out to move him,
then non-tender him because you just don’t tie up that much $ that can be spent
elsewhere when you’re a team like the Indians.
As for the 2014 pen, you
remember those "odd year"-"even year" bullpens?
I
get sick just thinking about what those 2006 and 2008 bullpens did to those
seasons by mid-May as the same gas cans were trotted out there as the season
frittered away. But if you think back to those bullpens, there were names
like Masa Kobayashi, Brodzoski (The Close), Brendan Donnelly, Guillermo Mota,
Danny Graves, and Scott Sauerbeck that were all supposed to contribute when
seasons started and, when they didn't, the team scrambled - MUCH too late - to
find suitable replacements, with few options readily available. You could
say that this happens with every team every year as it takes a while to sort
these arms out, but what impressed me about the handling of the 2013 bullpen
was how nimble the organization seemed to be - from the Front
Office to Tito's usage patterns.
Think
about the fact that the 3 relievers that elicited the most confidence when
October hit were Joe Smith, Shaw, and Scrabble...who had that “Trust Troika” in
April, or even mid-August? Essentially, Francona slotted pieces and parts
around to ride the hot hand - whether it was Allen in the middle of the season,
or Perez when he was actually good (and he WAS, basically for the whole month of July), or even a
Cookie Carrasco late in the season - to maximize effectiveness. That's
what elicits confidence for me, in that there are a lot of guys that you
mention that are young, dynamic, and could move quickly in a bullpen that seems
to FINALLY be designed to allow quick movement into different spots in particular
situations...and a lot of the names that you mention are already on the parent
club or are knocking at the door. And if the team is lacking in a
particular area (as they were for a LOOGY last year), the Front Office has
shown that it can and will make a quick and smart move to add a guy that their
analysts or scouts are high on, like a Scrabble, with little given up to net
that piece.
So
I'm not all that concerned about which players makes up the bullpen, but who is
putting it together and managing it calms me. Maybe we see some sort of
combination of Allen, Carrasco, Shaw and a surprise like an Austin Adams come August
or September 2014 or maybe it's something that would be as surprising as the
2013 late season triumvirate of Smith/Shaw/Scrabble...but I think (or maybe it
is hope) that they could have this bullpen thing figured out as well as anyone
could reasonably hope to and the exit of Chris Perez this off-season will
signal the end of a hard-and-fast closer for this organization as they move
into the growing column of teams that figures out their bullpen mix as the
season develops. Maybe they don't go as far as Jonah Keri suggested after Opening Day of 2012, but I think
what we saw down the stretch in 2013 (that AC so accurately wrote about) is what we're
going to start to see in the bullpen...and that's a welcome change.
Now,
as for that reliever-turned-starter, you want to dive into the Masterson thing?
AC: I had forgotten about Brendan Donnelly and
Scott Sauerbeck. Reading that paragraph gave me bullpen PTSD and harkened back
to the days of Derrek Lilliquist, who is probably still my all-time least
favorite Indians reliever.
As for Justin Credible,
IF Masty makes it clear to the front office that he's going to test free agent
waters and IF the right deal presents itself, I guess I could understand moving
him prior to the season. It'd be a shock of epic proportions to a fan base that
still bears the scars of the Sabathia/Lee deals, and something tells me that
few if any would understand nor appreciate it. But if for some reason the St.
Louis Cardinals decided that they'd rather have Masterson than Oscar
Taveras...well, I'd have a hard time saying no to that deal. Remember, Wil
Myers was a consensus top-5 prospect in all of baseball when he was dealt, and
he was basically major-league ready at the time. So Taveras is the best
comparison I can come up with. Since it's all hypothetical at this point, we
could even work out a mega-trade; Asdrubal and Masterson for Taveras, Martinez
and Wacha. Who says no? Probably the Cardinals, that’s who. But if the Twins
are offering up Buxton or Sano, that's a tough offer to turn down as well. Now
is a good time to remind our hyperventilating readers that this is all
hypothetical, and the Rays did make the playoffs this year even after trading
away James Shields.
PC:
Looking past my frustration at seeing these young St. Louis arms in the
playoffs that’s been exacerbated by HOW they’ve pitched while realizing that
Asdrubal’s value is at a near-low right now, that was the point of bringing up
Masterson as a wild card this off-season.
Reason being that Shields-Myers deal is the precedent given that Shields
was a top-tier SP with 2 years of club control remaining (identical to
Masterson right now) and Myers was that “Can’t Miss” 22-year-old ready-for-MLB
prospect that hadn’t even started his service time clock.
That said, by NO MEANS
is this me advocating a trade of Masterson as I think that the organization is
smart enough to realize that moving Masterson (regardless of who is coming back
for him) basically gives all of the dullards in the Cleveland Sports Media
another reason to say “see, this is what they do when they have a good player –
they trade him for ANOTHER prospect…there’s NO way to support this team” over
and over until it becomes the accepted ethos, regardless of the fact that this
Front Office has now put together three teams with 90-win seasons in the past
nine years.
But if you think about
what Tampa did with Shields and what Oakland did after the 2011 season (trading
their two best starters in Cahill and Gio Gonzalez, plus their best reliever in
Bailey), those teams remove that emotion or fear of public backlash from their
decisions, maximize their assets and try to continually build on the fly, and
trust in their ability to do so…with the results in recent years speaking for
themselves. As much as people in
Cleveland point to TB and OAK as examples of small-market teams that continue to
contend on a shoestring budget, I’m fairly certain that the high rate of roster
turnover simply wouldn’t be accepted by a fanbase that is always ready to grab
those pitchforks.
Again, don’t take this
to mean that Masterson should be shopped here as Tampa was in a different
situation last off-season, with Price (who will be traded THIS off-season)
still around and a litany of young arms ready to ascend still able to make up
for the gap that Shields left. But the
Indians have to be very honest about their expectations for their rotation next
year and whether Danny
Salazar really has the potential to be (gasp) some sort of modern-day Pedro
Martinez while making reasonable assessments of Kluber and
McAllister after making decisions on Ubaldo and Kazimir.
And so we go back to
your first three steps here as where Ubaldo and Kazimir end up affect the
rotation, just as any move/non-move with Cabrera affects what they do not only
at SS, but also at 3B, due to the presence of Aviles as a stop-gap
measure/fill-in for either spot going forward.
To me, I’d prefer that trade of Asdrubal that moves Aviles to SS and
gives Lonnie some time to attempt to (again) settle in at 3B.
AL: You know me; I’ve been on the
“Trade Asdrubal” bandwagon since November 2012, including at
the trade deadline
this past season.
Watching Wacha, Martinez, Rosenthal and company go out and dominate in the NL
playoffs is incredibly frustrating. If I could ask put Antonetti on truth serum
and ask him just one question, I’d ask him what trade offers (if any) were on
the table for Asdrubal, and when.
Heading
into this season, I thought Salazar was one of the four most talented pitchers
in the organization. But I never expected that, still coming off of Tommy John
surgery, he’d make it to the big league club and feature the fastest fastball
among major league starting pitchers. I predicted that he’d be a bullpen weapon
after the all-star break, and I’ve rarely been happier to have been so wrong
about something. His starts were mandatory viewing this year, and I think he’s
the Indians #2 starter behind Masterson (provided you don’t trade him away in
the offseason) in 2014. Danny Salazar and Yan Gomes are my two favorite players
right now, and I couldn’t be happier that Salazar snagged #31 for himself.
As
one of the final remaining members on the Lonnie Chisenhall bandwagon, I'm also
good with him starting the season as an everyday 3B. Give him one last chance
to sink or swim, with the Aviles safety net behind him (provided the Aviles
safety net hasn't already been deployed next to him at SS).
Since
we're in the predicting mode, what do you think Jason Giambi's role will be
with the 2014 Cleveland Indians? Player, coach, or interested observer from
another locale?
PC: For whatever
reason, I think he’ll be back in Cleveland…in (how’s this for avoiding a direct
answer) some capacity. Giambi’s role will I think (oddly) be
determined by whether Sandy Alomar gets a managerial gig this off-season. The musical chairs on the coaching staff left
Sandy back out of the dugout and at 1B, which is probably where a guy like
Giambi would start off if he’s going to get into coaching. As much as there might have been a
groundswell for Giambi as hitting coach, Van Burkleo is still in place for now
and hitting coaches can find themselves on the chopping block for a bad start. Ideally, I would think that Francona wants
him to continue to be a presence in the clubhouse, perhaps without the stress
of being in the tenuous position of hitting coach.
As
for playing, while I know that Giambi says he wants to play and the Indians are
saying that they’d welcome him back with open arms, both parties have to
realize his abilities and limitations at this point. Certainly, having guys like Raburn and Aviles
on the team would allow them to carry Giambi again because they’re able to play
so many positions, just as Gomes’ emergence should allow them to have their
“second” catcher in Santana playing 1B or (preferably) DH, but Giambi’s playing
career has an expiration date at some point…and everyone involved knows that.
It
goes back to the other things that happen first though, as whether they can
carry a guy like Giambi will likely be determined by whether Sandy’s still
coaching 1B when managerial vacancies are filled and what the Indians do at SS
and some other positions, because it will dictate how Aviles and Raburn will be
used, which either opens up a role for a part-time player like Giambi or
creates a need for a player much more versatile and usable than what Giambi is
at this point.
AC: For anyone who
claims that the front office is “too sabermetric,” I point to Jason Giambi as
exhibit A as to why that can’t possibly be the case. By any sort of raw
statistical measurement, Jason Giambi was utterly useless to the 2013 Cleveland
Indians. He hit .183/.282/.371, albeit with 9 HR in 216 AB. He had an 85 OPS+,
and actually had a negative oWAR (-0.6). But not only was Giambi a fixture on
the roster and in the clubhouse this year, you had Tito Francona (who is firmly
on the same page as Antonetti and company) calling him the team’s MVP. I think
that may be a bit of a stretch, but his value to the club comes more from his
leadership and acting as a de facto hitting coach in the dugout.
When
I was in Goodyear last year, I spent most of my time down in minor league camp.
Virtually every position player I talked to, from Tony Wolters to Dwight
Childs, commented on how awesome it was to have Giambi around the team. They
all loved talking to him about hitting, watching him work in the cage and apply
his craft. Giambi wasn’t just helping out guys in the big league clubhouse, he
was taking the time to work with the minor leaguers as well. For the 18-22 year
old guys who are still trying to make it to The Show to see a guy like Giambi,
a 42-year old who has made over $130 million in his baseball career, working to
get one more season out of what was already a 17-year major league career;
that’s something that can’t be replicated with any sort of coaching. Giambi is
a lever, not just for the 25 guys in the ML clubhouse but for the 200+ minor
leaguers throughout the organization.
So
for that and the reasons you pointed out, I think he’s back next year as well.
It’s even possible that he starts out as a player and transitions to the
coaching staff in mid-stream. Would the Indians have made the playoffs this
past year if Giambi wasn’t on the roster and in the clubhouse? I have no idea.
I know they probably wouldn’t have won that game against the White Sox down the
stretch. And I know that Tito doesn’t think they would’ve made it without him.
So that’s enough for me to want him back next year. Plus, he only needs one
more SB to get to 10 for his career, so that’s a milestone he’s closing in on.
As
for next year, seeing as we’re already closing on the 4,000 word mark, we’ll
save some of the further offseason prediction talk for next time. We still need
to talk about the outfield, rotation options, potential free agent moves and a
whole lot more.
6 comments:
Love you guys. Seriously.
Three quick points, which I wouldn't bother to make if I didn't think they were of fundamental importance:
1. The '3 90-win teams in the last 9 seasons' is technically true, but way too kind when you consider that the same FO has put together 3 90-loss teams in the past 5 seasons.
2. Dismissing the model Oakland and Tampa Bay have used to build those teams because the CLE fanbase would be angry about turnover strikes me as silly at best in view of what a thorough job of destroying its fanbase the franchise has already done.
The Tribe's failure to draft & develop young talent with anything remotely like the success of those two organizations has EVERYTHING to do with its failures on the field & at the box office, and almost nothing to do with MLB's absurd economic structure.
Likewise the Tribe's failure to get 'value' in return for trading away the core stars of the last 90-win team: The front office that chose to invest heavily in Hafner & Westbrook wound up forced to deal CC, Lee, & Martinez. Blaming Bud Selig for that is valid to an extent, but to argue that the fans & media are wrong to think that this front office got very little in return for those stars would be kinda nuts.
3. From a distance, the attitude that the average CLE fan or media member is just too blind or dumb to understand what a fine job this front office has done strikes me as part of the CLE syndrome, where the losing has been going on for so long that down looks like up. Blaming the media and fans for the organization's failure to build and sustain a competitive team wouldn't work anywhere else.
Scott,
Can’t tell you how cool it is to see you commenting (much less reading here) and your words are much appreciated. As for your points, many of which I agree with in part…
1) Certainly the 90-loss seasons are owned by this FO, but 3 years and 2 months after that awful day when Vic and Lee left in July of 2009, they were hosting the AL Wild Card game. That kind of turnaround is a year more than what they did from July of 2002 to the 2005 season (which is still a bitter disappointment), but in a little over a decade, they’ve turned this roster over twice and have had more success than most other teams in similar financial/geographical situations. And while 90 wins is a fairly arbitrary number (and I certainly realize that 2005 is my start date), there are 8 teams with more (4+) 90 win seasons in the past 9 years than the Indians and most of them (NYY, BOS, TB, LAA, TEX, ATL, PHI, STL) come from large markets with big TV $ pouring in.
2) You’ll get no argument from me on the drafting/developing thing and watching StL this off-season allows everyone to see that it CAN in fact be done, particularly on the pitching side. While we can analyze the trades/drafting/acquisition on a micro level forever, the fact that they HAVE turned this around, in short order, should be lauded, even if the “sausage-making” was unquestionably detestable. The turnover in TB and OAK has been severe, and TB is probably a better example of a small-market team drafting and developing more than OAK, which is constantly churning their roster. Actually, perhaps it is instructive that Oakland drew the most fans of that trio of playoff teams this year – at 1.8M – in terms of fan engagement.
3) As for the media issue, I know that we’ve been on the opposite side of the aisle on this for some time and I’d submit that “distance” may actually color our viewpoints. I’ll stand by my “dullards” stance without qualification and the tenor that the local media strikes about this team is – for whatever reason – accepted, then echoed by the fanbase. Perhaps it is the most vocal corner of the fanbase that complains away, but for as much as the PD is attempting to make themselves irrelevant, they still do play a role in dictating public opinion on the team. In fact, today’s PD features a question in the “Hey Mary Kay” section from my neighbor, a very smart and successful man who somehow believes that asking Mary Kay Cabot a question is the best avenue for clarity on a Cleveland sports team. And that’s without getting into the vitriolic disaster that Sports Talk Radio is concerning the Tribe, which you (thankfully) avoid by not being in town. That separation from the venom – and the parroting of those venomous tones by otherwise intelligent fans and people – does I think play a part in our disagreement on this issue.
Oh...and it should be noted that I was incorrect in Masterson being under control for 2 more years as Justin can become a FA (as it stands right now) after the 2014 season.
Scott,
I'll echo Pauly's sentiments; it's great to have you here, and I'm flattered that you are a reader.
The 90-win benchmark comes a little from arbitrary endpoints, but it's still an accomplishment. Like Paul said, the other teams with more 90-win seasons in the same era are primarily the big-market juggernauts (TB excepted, of course), teams that reload from season to season in part by poaching homegrown talent from smaller markets.
Drafting and acquiring amateur talent is always going to be the best recipe for success, and you're absolutely right that this organization has not been consistently good enough in that department. I'm still mystified over the Tyler Naquin selection last year, especially with guys like Michael Wacha on the board. Wacha has dramatically outperformed his draft-day scouting report, and part of that is due to the developmental staff that the Cards employ. But the point remains, and it looks worse and worse with every high-pressure start that Wacha makes in the playoffs.
Same for the big trades; the return for CC and Lee was (is) incredibly underwhelming, although I'd argue that they did OK for Victor (Masterson). That they've been able to flip lesser talent like Eddie Perez, Ben Broussard etc for key pieces like Choo and Asdrubal is the only thing that's saved their performance on the trade front, and that makes their inability to caplitalize on (two) Cy Young award winners all the more frustrating.
I'm also removed from the daily grind of the sports radio and PD columnists, and of the few things that I enjoy about being away from home, that's one of them. They frequently take the lazy way out in interviews with players and management, and try their best to come up with the most controversial (read; negative) angle possible in order to increase page clicks and listeners. The Indians aren't the best-run franchise in baseball, far from it. But they are the best run franchise in town, almost by default. The local media portraying otherwise panders to the lowest common denominator of the fanbase, which can sometimes also be the loudest.
Again, thanks for reading and commenting. Really respect your opinion, and it's great to have you here.
I would not be so certain that the inability to draft and develop talent had almost nothing to do with MLB's absurd economic structure. I happened to look back at drafts after the Byrd trade in 08 when I read a statement that they would use the money saved on his salary to sign draft picks. What I found was we were not even signing 50% of the draft picks we drafted. I believe in the 2005 draft we signed 17 players of the 50 we selected. How can a team develop any worthy talent when it is not signing anything close to 50% of its drafted players? Also teams were drafting players they knew they could sign (thinking Jeremy Sowers) and not players that were best on draft boards. I recall teams like the Nationals, the Royals losing their top picks as they could not meet the demands those players were asking for signing. As a result of this the better players were falling in drafts to teams in larger markets with more money to spend on amateur talent and ignored the slotting agreement Once I looked into those drafts I found a correlation to the amount we spent on draft picks to our major league salary including money we spent on any free agents. If your statement is true that it had nothing to do with the absurd economic structure why the change to the draft structure limiting the amount of money spent in the first 10 rounds?
Al, most draft experts prior to the 2012 draft had us taking Waccha, instead we chose Tyler Naquin. I never fully understood the reason given by Grant on how he could sign more players by reaching for Naquin.
Re: Giambi. In the early 80s, the Dodgers had 50-year old Manny Mota as a 1B(?) coach. Someone got hurt and he was activated as a player, and got a few pinch-hit singles in the 2 or so weeks he was on the roster. So that's what I'd like the FO to do - not use a roster spot on him out of spring training, but make him a coach (is there a limit on bench coaches?) and let him take BP, keeping him in reserve for the inevitable injury. I just wonder if he'd go along with this plan...
Question for Al or Paul
I have been thinking about this since I read your last Lazy Sunday. If I was an agent representing either Scott Kazmir or Ubaldo Jimenez I believe I would recommend that they sign the qualifying offer if it was presented to them. Reason for my thinking is the math doesn’t work for Kazmir.Going by what I have been reading about Kazmir, he should get a 2 year deal worth 16-18 million. Why Kazmir would say no to 14 million and go the free agent route again next year? Even Fausto was paid 3 million by Tampa this year, unless he breaks down completely he still gets value next year. In the case of Ubaldo, we witnessed last year teams cherish their first round picks and were very reluctant to lose that first round pick. Limiting teams for a possible second or third year may not be in his best interest. He has an option for 8 million this year, once he refuses that option he gets a 6 million dollar raise from the qualifying offer and once again he can leave the following year. I am unclear if the Tribe can make 2 qualifying offers to the same player on consecutive years, but if so, why not wait till next year and do this all over again? After watching what happened to players like Bourn and Lohse another strategy may be used by agents.
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