Archive for the ‘Trade’ Category

Hot Stove BS

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Joel Sherman, the writer who first broke the Khalil Greene trade, posted this morning that the Cardinals are surprised by the level of interest in Rick Ankiel out on the trade market. They shouldn’t be: Ank had some amazing defensive highlights (the Rockies game will stay with me forever) and has been cranking longballs at a sick clip for almost two seasons. Add in that he’ll be a Scott Boras FA after next season and he’s an attractive one-year option who shouldn’t cost the receiving team much in talent. Sherman suggests Ian Kennedy from the Yankees.

Ian Kennedy is a 6′-ish RHSP drafted (14th round) by the Cardinals out of La Quinta high school in California in 2003. He opted for college and put up stellar numbers at USC before entering the draft again after his Junior year, when he was picked in the first round by the Yankees. In 2007, his first full season of pro ball, he dominated three levels and received a September call-up which saw him successfully start three games.

Last year’s woes are pretty well known. He pitched poorly for the Yankees and was sent down to AAA, where he pitched great again. He’s throwing great in the Puerto Rican winter league now. (Two starts ago, he pitched a complete game 3-hitter while striking out 7 batters, for example.)

He’s a good pitcher and could be a very good one.

Since I don’t watch any SportsCenter or Baseball Tonight, I don’t follow the Yankees at all, but judging by Humberto Sanchez’ awful performance pitching in relief during the AFL, I imagine he’s looked at as a pretty big risk going into next season. He was the main piece of the three players coming back to the Yankees in the Gary Sheffield trade and underwent Tommy John surgery right away. He came back last season and got a September call-up, in which he pitched two effective innings for the Yankees. In the second outing (Top of the 8th), he was hitting 94 on his fastball pretty consistently and showed a strong curveball.

I’d be pleased with a trade that brought one of those two pitchers, plus a lesser minor-league reliever, for Ankiel. I’d expect that the secondary talent in the Humberto trade would be better given injury history and track record—and I’d judge the upside in that trade as better as well, so that’d be the preferred option if either is.

Ankiel would be great for the Yankees. As I read this their stadium is the second friendliest for LH pull-hitters in the league [ed--What new stadium?!?], after the circus ring in Houston something mimicking baseball is played in.

Spicoli

Friday, December 5th, 2008

I’m thrilled with this trade. If you haven’t heard, my beloved Cardinals traded Mark Worrell and a PTBNL to the Padres for Khalil Greene, who looks exactly like Sean Penn in Fast Times at Ridgemont High. (Greene (w/ brand-spankin’ new photoshop job)| Spicoli. QEMFD.) I’m already thinking up Mr. Hand jokes to lay down all freakin’ season.

Greene has a reputation as an excellent defensive shortstop (although PMR, a defensive statistic that I find useful, didn’t like him in 2008 or 2007, to a lesser extent. I haven’t seen him play all that much, but I’ve liked him when the Cards play the Padres. He’s also got some sock in his bat—he hit 27 HR in 2007 while half his games in the league’s most HR-depressing stadium. Away from Petco, his career batting splits are .270/.318/.484, pretty damned good—although Busch III does suppress right handed batters to an extent. Last year was a very down year offensively for Greene and he still hit 10 balls out. The Cardinals haven’t had a double digit year for HR from the shortstop position since Renteria. He’s not as balanced of a hitter as Renteria was in his prime in the Lou, but he can hit the ball out like him.

I’m looking forward to seeing him gun to Pujols next year. If he can improve his walk rate a little bit, I think we’ll be greatly improved. Greene was the shortstop I thought would have fit us best: Furcal won’t be worth the contract he’ll eventually sign and Renteria’s career trajectory doesn’t look promising. I’m looking forward to seeing, at some point, a Khalil Greene-Tyler Greene double play turned next year.

(Temper that enthusiasm with a little Fungo, perhaps.)

To get Greene, we gave up Mark Worrell. Worrell’s a good pitcher with a funky delivery. He’s put up excellent peripherals throughout his minor league career. Added to the 40-man roster before the winter meetings last year, he made a few appearances for the Cardinals this year and didn’t have as much success as I expected he would—and I’m sure he expected better, too. Before last season, I thought he would have been a better pitcher for us than Ryan Franklin. That may have been a little bit of an exaggeration, but not much. He’ll do well for the Padres—they got a solid, major league-ready right-handed relief specialist. The Cardinals dealt a low chip from one of the few too-tall stacks of talent we have on the table. (The other being outfielders.) It would appear that Mark’s happy he’s part of this deal.

The PTBNL will be picked off a list of three players—two of them pitchers—some time around Spring Training. Players put on those lists are usually non-prospects—organizational filler types. Or Chris Lambert. As long as it’s not one of my favorite unheralded minor-leaguers (like Jameson Maj or Brian Broderick), I imagine this won’t be a big deal for anyone but that player and his family.

In unrelated news: there were 7,394,345 words written in game recaps by MLB.com beat writers over the past two seasons. The most common word, of course, is the, which occurred 467,078 times. Banana was written 10 times: six times in the plural, thrice in the singular, and once as banana-fueled. Pujols was written 1155 times. The most frequent personal name, aside from ambiguous terms like will, young, fielder, etc., was Ryan. The most frequent last name was Ramirez. The most common team name (aside from Sox, which refers to two teams) was the Cubs, at 4,177 uses. Going through the descending token frequency list, I had a… let’s call it a guffaw… when I noticed that wrong and hole occurred next to each other in frequency at 948 and 947 uses, respectively. Nobody ever mentioned Delino DeShields over the past two years. Stan Musial was referred to 13 times; Rogers Hornsby twice. Pickle was used ten times, versus 182 uses of rundown.

Mike Hampton

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

I’d argued that trading for Mike Hampton would be a smart high-risk, high-reward move in the offseason. To a mixture of irritation and bemusement for the Braves fans, he injured a pectoral muscle warming up for his first start of the season and has been on the disabled list ever since. His rehabilitation has gone well, though, aside from one bad start in the Sally league in which he wasn’t helped much by his defense.

His penultimate rehab start was a masterful outing, a five inning performance with six strikeouts and seven groundball outs to two in the air. His final rehab start will be tomorrow for the Braves’ AA affiliate, according to Sean Horgan in his write-up of the A+ start. I’ll be keeping any eye on that start, of course.

End of an Era

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

Jim Edmonds has been traded to the San Diego Padres with cash for David (Drew?) Freese, who graduated from Lafayette in West StL County. I’m sorry to see him go, I’ve been as big a fan of his as anyone else. I feel sorry for Freese—how much shit will his friends give him for being the kid Jim Edmonds was traded for. Thanks to Jim for all the great things he showed us and my sincerest wishes that he rebounds next year and helps the Friars win their division.

Freese is a solid prospect—old for his level, but he’s got power and on-base skills, including no qualms for letting pitches hit him. John Sickels has him rated a C+ prospect, saying:

Other C+ guys include Drew Cumberland, Luis Durango, Drew Freese, Danny Payne, Nick Schmidt, and very good LOOGY Joe Thatcher. All interchangeable with the C+ guys above.

So I suppose he’s either the 10th best prospect in the Padres system or the 26th, depending on how you feel about this trade.

In addition to picking up depth at the hot corner in the low minors, this cuts probably $6 or $7 million bucks off of next years payroll. The P-D article speculates: “Trading Edmonds allows the club greater fiscal flexibility as it intensifies a search for additional starting pitching.

Why not bring up one of my favorite dead horses to beat on—trading for one of the few potential #2 starters who wouldn’t cost the farm.

Thanks to SBNation Braves ‘site Talking Chop, I’ve got video of his outing in the Mexican league, a one-inning performance that saw him strike out a batter, pop another up, and get the last to ground into a 6-4 forceout. Unfortunately, one batter singled up the middle and when Hampton tried to kicksave the ball, his footing gave out and he injured his hamstring. Turn down the sound, because it stinks in this video:


If the gun’s to be trusted, his velocity was sitting around 85, but he dialed it up to 88 and 90 for strikes, and 91 for a ball way up and away. He wasn’t fooling anyone with the off-speed pitch. That’s not too shabby for your first outing in two years, though. I’m still behind the idea of picking him up. A portion of the fanbase would crap themselves with horror, but Hampton might only run you $2 million more than what we were paying with Jimmy Baseball on the roster if the Braves wouldn’t chip in. It’d be a one-year deal with the Rockies paying Hampton’s buyout, so he wouldn’t cripple you in the future. DeWitt wanted him on board in 2000 until the bidding war went plaid. Can’t imagine he’d be too terribly opposed to taking a high-risk flyer on him now.

Further commentary at 3:30am:

Some excellent highlights of Jim Edmond going over the wall start out that video—I stopped watching when the music kicked in, so don’t know what comes after.

Before anyone joins me on my bandwagon (solo-jalopy?) Mike Hampton is not a peripherally sound pitcher. He’s never struck out 7 batters per nine innings pitched in any season of his MLB career and hasn’t struck out over 6 per 9 since the year 2000. He hasn’t struck out twice as many batters as he’s walked since 1996. From afar, he profiles as Jason Johnson standing in a hole 8 inches deep.

I still want him in the rotation at some point, to reclaim his career with Duncan. He’s got the assortment of pitches: the four-seam fastball, the cutter, the curve, and the big sinker. He’s not worth the 8.5 million reportedly left on his contract, but he’d be worth half that, I’d think. Maybe 2009.

In any case, I’d rather Hampton for one year than Silva or Lohse for four or five.

Updated at 4:30am:

Another big trade today, with Doug Weight, Michael Birner, and a seventh-round pick going to Anaheim for Andy McDonald. Looking forward to Sunday’s game against the Flames, another team I like. Wonder if I’ll fall asleep at some point.

All-Glove, No-Hit Shortstops

Friday, December 14th, 2007

If he’s actually got a glove—something that’s in dispute—we’ve got one of these in Cesar Izturis, and that should help the pitching by improvement in defensive efficiency. A legitimate all-glove, no-hit shortstop changed teams today when Adam Everett was non-tendered by the Astros and quickly snatched up by the Twins. I’m surprised he signed so quickly and for so little, although the market for shortstops is not particularly hot.

It’s another indication that we probably got burned on Izturis.

David Eckstein signed with the Toronto Blue Jays today. This is interesting because it may mean that yet another slick defensive SS could be on the move in John McDonald. McDonald was among the truly elite defensive shortstops last season at +17.5 in fewer than 800 innings on the field last season. McDonald had just signed a two-year extension in September for $3.8M, they have Aaron Hill at the league minimum at 2nd, and Marco Scutaro backing them up for $1.55M, so picking up Eckstein was a major surprise to me. They’ll be devoting a lot of 25-man roster space to the middle infield if they don’t move McDonald, whose contract includes incentives based on games started.

Here’s a list of some shortstops, their ZiPS lines and defensive ratings for 2008, and their 2008 pricetag:

I’ll be pulling for Brendan Ryan to have a big spring, but I’d consider McDonald an upgrade over Izturis—defensively, contract, and Ex-Cub factor-wise, at least. It wouldn’t surprise me if those offensive projections exceed Izturis’ after adjusting for change of league, as well.

New Look

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Whaddaya think?

From this article, it sounds like the Cards won’t be taking my suggestion and dealing for Mike Hampton. Sez Mo:

“We’re always looking to see if there’s some value out there in the market,” he said. “But, right now, we don’t want to focus on looking at someone that had a below-average year last year or performed below expectations, especially if it was related to an injury. That can be a little scary.”

Too bad. That also rules out Jason Jennings, as well, who might be a decent bet to be a league-average starting pitcher. I’ll be curious to see who Mo goes after next week at the Winter Meetings.

Unrelated, but have you voted for Mr. Splashy Pants yet?

Beating the Drum

Monday, November 26th, 2007

The high-risk, high-reward trade target that I’ve been arguing for the past few months, Mike Hampton, threw his first pitch in competition since August 19th, 2005 on Thanksgiving. [Story, Gamelog]

He started by striking out 2007 Cardinal NRI Jolbert Cabrera, induced a pop-out from the next batter, allowed a ground ball single by Armando Rios, then finished the inning with a ground ball out to short. He was then lifted and replaced with Mario Mendoza’s son. Seriously.

That’s a promising start to his rehab—he’s already looking better than Mark Mulder, who’s considered a given for the 2008 opening day roster. Of course, another available lefthander coming back from an injury-plagued season threw an even better game the next night in the Mexican Winter League. First time minor-league free agent Chris Narveson went seven innings of shutout ball with a 6:0 K:BB and 12:3 G:F.

I’d like to get both pitchers into the organization. I’ll be tickled pink if Mo swings a trade for Hampton at the winter meetings next week.

Updated: Just saw that Mike Hampton injured his hamstring in that start and that’s why he was lifted after only an inning. This article at MLB.com suggests he’s not taking it well and I can’t blame him. What a crappy thing to happen. Selfishly, it only further reduces what it would take to trade for him. In spite of the injury, I still think he’s a good trade target.

2008 Roster Prognostication I

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Pour a cup of coffee, I went long with this post.

The Cardinals, led now by John Mozeliak, made their first roster management move recently when they removed Cody Haerther from the 40-man roster and saw him snatched up by the Toronot Blue Jays, raising some eyebrows. This reduced the number of players protected for the December 6 Rule 5 Draft to 35. That list is here:

  Number and Name Bats/Throws
1 29 Chris Carpenter R/R
2 63 Andy Cavazos R/R
3 60 Brian Falkenborg R/R
4 34 Randy Flores L/L
5 31 Ryan Franklin R/R
6 77 Blake Hawksworth R/R
7 44 Jason Isringhausen R/R
8 56 Kelvin Jimenez R/R
9 19 Tyler Johnson S/L
10 52 Josh Kinney R/R
11 41 Braden Looper R/R
12 30 Mark Mulder L/L
13 35 Joel Pineiro R/R
14 23 Anthony Reyes R/R
15 36 Russ Springer R/R
16 48 Brad Thompson R/R
17 50 Adam Wainwright R/R
18 37 Todd Wellemeyer R/R
19 4 Yadier Molina R/R
20 62 Brian Barden R/R
21 7 Adam Kennedy L/R
22 12 Aaron Miles S/R
23 5 Albert Pujols R/R
24 27 Scott Rolen R/R
25 13 Brendan Ryan R/R
26 26 Scott Spiezio S/R
27 24 Rick Ankiel L/L
28 16 Chris Duncan L/R
29 15 Jim Edmonds L/L
30 43 Juan Encarnacion R/R
31 47 Ryan Ludwick R/L
32 – Joe Mather R/R
33 53 John Rodriguez L/L
34 55 Skip Schumaker L/R
35 99 So Taguchi R/R
36    
37    
38    
39    
40    

The Cardinals have a number of players who may draw interest in the Rule 5 Draft coming up:

  • Jason Motte, the hard throwing catcher-turned pitcher.
  • Jarrett Hoffpauir, the 2nd baseman with excellent plate discipline.
  • Stuart Pomeranz, the 6’7″ RHSP who was nearly impossible to score upon in the AFL in spite of an inability to strike batters out. He missed most of the 2007 season to injuries.
  • Mike Parisi, a RHSP who’s probably safe left unprotected, but may draw attention from any teams more desperate for durable-looking fifth starters than the Cardinals, if such a team exists.
  • Kyle McClellan, a local product who put it all together last season in relief.
  • Mark Worrell, another reliever with a lovely strikeout rate.
  • Mike Sillman, a reliever who probably didn’t pitch enough last year to draw serious consideration from other teams.
  • Matt Scherer might attract a few teams.

That’s five players that I’d guess we’d want to add to the 40-man roster and thus protect from the Rule 5 draft: Hoffpauir, Motte, Pomeranz, McClellan, and Worrell.

Some may ask, wouldn’t it have been easier to cut Andy Cavazos or Kelvin Jimenez from the 40-man instead of Haerther in order to open up the desired five roster spots? Or just DFA Taguchi, since he’ll be non-tendered six days after the Rule-5 draft anyway, after his option was bought out a week or two ago? And it seems likely to me that the time has come to part ways with Aaron Miles, if only to further shake up the middle infield that’s been a problem the past season.

I’m guessing they’ve got some plans for making waiver claims and perhaps a Rule 5 draft pick that they need more roster flexibility for. Maybe they’ve got a trade in the works that they need roster space for before December 6th. It wouldn’t surprise me if Cavazos and Jimenez are both cut in the next few weeks as well. The timing is strange—you’d have liked to see a trade worked out. I, for one, am not a big believer in Haerther like many of the projection systems, but would be happy to see him produce for the Blue Rays and crush the Yankees on a routine basis.

Let’s say the Cardinals plan to add those five players mentioned before, which would bring the total for now to 40, with opportunity to open up to four more roster spaces by parting with any of Miles, Taguchi, Cavazos, and Jimenez. They need to add a “number two starting pitcher” by trade and at minimum, a shortstop to compete for playing time at short with Brendan Ryan.

I hope that I’ve made clear my belief that the only starting pitcher possibly available by trade who could turn out to be #2 quality this season and who could be acquired without destroying the farm system is Mike Hampton, who threw a successful bullpen session the other day and is scheduled to start a game in the Mexican Winter League on Tuesday. (The boxscore will be up here after the game.) The Braves rounded out the front three of their rotation tonight by signing Tom Glavine for $8M. That’s $14M for Smoltz, $13M for Hudson, and $8M for Glavine in the front three—$35 million clams for the arithmetically challenged. They’d have Hampton at $8M and four cost-controlled options {Jurrjens, James, Carlyle, Reyes} for the last two spots, so I’d have to think Hampton could be available. For what it’s worth, they’re supposedly looking for a backup middle-infielder, someone with MLB experience to compete with newly acquired Josh Anderson to keep center field warm for a year or two. I hate trade proposals like this, but what if So Taguchi, Aaron Miles, and Jason Motte could get it done. Not sure why they wouldn’t just use Lillibridge as the backup MI, so the Miles suggestion shouldn’t be taken too seriously. The Twins already traded for Monroe, who would’ve been available after the non-tender deadline, so why not Taguchi and Miles, right? Right? I’d imagine Bruce Manno would have nice things to say about Taguchi, who’s already making $100,000 from the buyout. Maybe someone will think that Miles could do better when not overexposed like he was with the Cardinals.

I’ve mentioned Zobrist as a candidate for short, borrowing an idea from Azruavatar. He’s either real bad, below average, or slightly slightly above average defensively at short, depending on who you ask, and was an on-base machine as a minor-leaguer. I’m thinking he may become available via waiver. The Devil Rays need to cut down to a 24-man roster since becoming a hockey team. They have 39 men on the 40-man right now. Quickly scanning the peripherals of some of their unprotected minor leaguers who are eligible for the Rule 5 draft turns up eight players that the Rays will have to risk losing:

  • John Jaso, a super catching prospect who would be a might nice backup next season, and who will certainly be protected
  • Fernando Perez, a speedy outfielder with great on-base skills who looks like a nice lead-off man
  • Jason Pridie, an outfielder who put up a very nice line in 2007 and who was taken by the Twins in the Rule 5 draft last season
  • Dale Thayer, a relief pitcher who dominated at AA and AAA (although with an unsustainably low .231 BABIP)
  • James Houser, a big RHSP with pretty nice peripherals
  • Reliever Evan Meek
  • Michael Prochaska, a lefty starter who gets ground balls
  • Nick DeBarr, a big RHRP with extreme groundball tendencies.

I’d guess keeping at least one of those non-Jaso players in the organization will be end up being more valuable to Tampa Bay than waiting for Zobrist to adjust to the majors and he’ll be available by trade or on waivers. If you pick up Zobrist on or before rosters are set, you can safely non-tender Miles and have an improved team. I’d hope Mo keeps in touch with the Rays’ GM over the next few weeks.

Crazy Talk

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

My favorite current Cardinal is Scott Rolen. I love the way he plays baseball—if I have a son some day who likes the game, I’ll teach him to play with the same kind of class and dedication that Scott plays with. I love seeing him hit a key home run and circle the bases full-speed and head-down. Celebrating is for fans. Hitting and fielding is his job. True to form, he’s got a thoughtful, low-profile charity, the Enis Furley Foundation.

Scott’s career is currently derailed due to some hard-luck injuries stemming from on-field collisions and—perhaps more pertinently, personality clashes with Tony La Russa and the Cardinal organization in general. The current GM is open to trading Scott Rolen due to the problems he’s having with the organization and the VeB sidebar is littered with nonsensical trade proposals involving him. Given his trade value coming off an injury-plagued season, moving him elsewhere would be no more than a salary dump. A wasteful salary dump, motivated by fear or foolishness, in my opinion.

Mike Lowell was the 2007 World Series MVP. Two years ago, he was included in the big Hanley Ramirez and Anibal Sanchez for Josh Beckett trade between the Red Sox and the Marlins. At the time of the trade, I saw his inclusion as the wealthy Boston taking on a large contract for a broken-down third baseman in exchange for the Marlins parting with an ace pitcher for prospects. He was a throw-in, coming off an awful age-31 season with an OPS+ of 77. It was a smart move for the Marlins, who could use the cost-controlled Miguel Cabrera at third base and it was an acceptable trade requirement for the Red Sox, who could afford to gamble on Lowell bouncing back. He did, and is now most likely heading into a four year contract as a player a year older than Rolen.

Scott Rolen’s a better defender than Lowell and hasn’t ever had as bad a season as Lowell did in 2005, even the past few years when his shoulder pain has caused him to scream noticeably with every swing of the bat. To trade him for peanuts would be a real shame—a damned sin.

If I had John Mozeliak’s ear, I’d make sure that he was making every effort to make Rolen happy, to make him enthusiastic about playing in St. Louis for the rest of his career, or at least the remainder of his contract. I don’t know exactly what the problem is except that it stems from the handling of his shoulder injuries, but I’d make it clear that he’s a big part of our future plans. We’d make it clear that Mo will advocate on his behalf to La Russa and that whatever problems the organization had with dealing with medical problems are going to be fixed.

Scott Rolen’s got a lot of good baseball in him. The Cardinals are a wealthy-enough team that they shouldn’t have to play the Marlins and dump his contract to a richer team who can afford to gamble that he’ll be physically sound and producinc at an above average level in 2008 before reverting to his career arc in 2009.

(As insurance, we should sign Marshall McDougall to a split contract to compete with Spiezio as the big-bat utility guy or AAA depth at a number of positions. I said the same thing last off-season, when he went on to hit well for the Dodgers’ AAA team.)

In short, if the Cardinals can’t convince Scott Rolen to play for us next year, we’re in deep trouble as an organization. Mozeliak should work hard after the winter meetings to connect with Rolen and convince him that he’s wanted in a Cardinal uniform.

I’ll Go!

Friday, November 9th, 2007

I hope the Cardinals have a scout in the stands for the 11/20 game between the Algodoneros de Guasave and the Mayos de Navajoa. Not to see the newest Cotton, Jolbert Cabrera, but to see Mike Hampton’s debut with the Navajoa, in which he is expected to throw two or three innings.

I’ll definitely be following his performances with great interest. Ideally, Glavine will sign with the Braves no later than the start of the Winter Meetings on 12/3 and more likely in the next week or so, as he is expected to do, making Hampton that much more expendable.

It may seem obsessive with how hard I’m banging this drum, but Hampton is the only real top-of-the-rotation starter I could imagine the Cardinals picking up this offseason without selling the farm. The Cardinals were actively pursuing him during the 2000-2001 offseason until the offers went plaid, so DeWitt, you’d imagine, would be willing to pay Hampton the $8.25 million he’s said to be owed for this season. I’d like to see the Cardinals be aggressive on him—to have eyes on him for every rehab pitch he sends to the plate during his stint in the Mexican Winter League. If he looks good and the Braves are set with Glavine under contract, I’d like to see the Cardinals positioned better than anyone to get a trade done before the Winter Meetings even begin. He’s the best bet among a bunch of bad options.

I’ll try not to mention this again until the 20th.

Dance, Puppets! Dance!

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

The Braves are officially interested in Tom Glavine. I find it hard to believe, then, that Glavine won’t be pitching for Atlanta in 2008.

That’d give them a solid rotation of:

  • John Smoltz
  • Tim Hudson
  • Tom Glavine
  • Chuck James
  • Jairs Jurrjens/Jo-Jo Reyes

That’s three solid veterans at the top, two of them sure-thing Hall of Famers, and three promising youngsters with upside that have already shown success in the majors.

Mozeliak says, “Looking at the free-agent market, we may be better off looking at the trade market.”

Mike Hampton: 2008 NL CPOY for the STL Cardinals. I’ll be behind him on that gamble.

Stoking the Hot Stove

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

I was kind of zoning out, taking a break from work and flipping around the internets looking at awesome prospects like Ben Zobrist, who grew up in a town a bit East of Peoria a big fan of Ozzie Smith, and Jack Egbert, who had a ridiculous season at AA in 2007 and would be eligible for the Rule 5 draft if Kenny Williams uncharacteristically screwed up by failing to make room for him on the 40-man roster when I stumbled over this article about the Toledo Mud Hens offering Alex Rodriguez a minor-league contract for next season. Toledo is home to the Tigers’ AAA affiliate, see, and George Steinbrenner’s pompous rugrat made a comment about Rodriguez opting out of his contract, “does he want to go to the Hall of Fame a Yankee or a Toledo Mud Hen.” Since the Mud Hens have a great third baseman in Mike Hessman waiting in the wings to take over for Brandon Inge, who’s signed through 2010, they asked Rodriguez if he’d be willing to change positions.

That’s at least as funny as the first sentence in this post is long.

I seriously would like to know what it would take to pry away Zobrist. An eventual Zobrist/Hoffpauir middle infield could provide some frequently set tables.

Something else I was considering: the Braves owe Mike Hampton $15 million next season after two injury plagued seasons. From this report, his rehab is going well. Suppose the Braves sign Tom Glavine to be their #3 as many expect and Hampton would be competing for a spot in the rotation with Chuck James, Jo-Jo Reyes, and new acquisition Jair Jurrjens. It’d be an extremely gutsy move for Mozeliak to trade for the then-expendable Hampton, but suppose he does show that he’s an above average or even top-of-the-line pitcher again. He’d be easy to trade for quality prospects when Carpenter returns, so we’d only end up paying a portion of his salary—say the Braves assume $3 million, so we’d be on the hook for around $7M or so. If insurance covers the portion of Carpenter’s salary for when he’s undergoing rehab, it’s not an enormous addition of salary.

That’s only if Hampton is healthy and effective. I’d like to see Luhnow and Mozeliak put together a package of prospects that look good (especially to Bruce Manno, who’s in Atlanta’s front office now) but our internal metrics don’t project to be major contributors down the road. An opening day rotation of Mulder, Wainwright, Hampton, Looper, and Piñeiro could surprise a whole bunch of people. With an improved middle infield of Zobrist and a healthy Kennedy, I could see them outperforming the 2004 rotation.

Update: I floated the hair-brained Hampton idea at VeB and someone pointed me to something noticed at MLB Trade Rumors, that Hampton’s owed $8.25M next year instead of $15m, since Atlanta restructured their payment schedule on his contract with Colorado’s and Florida’s contributions in mind. That’s got me fairly excited. My fingers are crossed that Glavine signs with the Braves well before the Winter Meetings, giving them a solid rotation of Smoltz-Hudson-Glavine-James-Jurrjens with Reyes a promising sixth. That’d make Hampton an expensive, expendable risk for them that the Cardinals would be wise to gamble on. Frank Wren’s shown that he’s ready to deal with the Renteria trade. I’d like to see Mo move fast on this one now that I have a better idea of the actual risk involved.

Worst case scenario: The Cardinals waste $8.25M and a few minor leaguers of the Jason Motte type (nothing against Jason, but I’d guess he’d be one of the better prospects involved). Mo would have a reputation of a GM who can be fleeced, which could be advantageous if his lieutenants do their jobs.

Best case scenario: The Cardinals shore up the front end of the rotation with a resurgent Mike Hampton until Chris Carpenter returns in his full glory and Hampton is traded for high-quality prospects to improve the farm. Mo earns a reputation for novel shrewdness and other GM’s uselessly attempt to imitate his “method,” which was really a one-time thing proposed by a very handsome gentleman in Illinois who he rewards with tickets and lodging for 2008 Spring Training.

Most likely scenario: The Cardinals acquire an about league-average pitcher on a one year contract for slightly more than they’re paying Looper or Piñiero. When healthy, he’d be better than either. Mozeliak grudgingly buys me a Budweiser at a Jupiter bar during 2008 Spring Training to shut me up about how he owes me, man.

I originally got to thinking about that as an extreme high-risk move and wasn’t sure whether I’d be happy seeing it get done. Now I’d genuinely like to see it happen, and fast. Provided, of course, that none of our top 10 prospects head out. Or Jameson Maj, who’s my ultra-sleeper pick for a big 2008. (72:4 K:BB in his final year of college!)

Surely, You’re Joking, Mr. La Russa

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

A stunning note in today’s post-game Birdland entry (as usual, plenty of good stuff there—read the whole thing):

The Cardinals pursued a deal for Arizona setup man/closer Jorge Julio and were—um, beat out?—by the Florida Marlins. This much we know. The Marlins got Julio and cash for a marginal prospect pitcher, and it’s likely the Diamondbacks were asking for a higher caliber player from the Cardinals. La Russa had his own take on the trade.

“They liked (Florida’s prospect) better than they liked what we had,” the manager said. “I thought Wainwright was a little steep.”

Erik wrote up at Gashouse Graphs a good illustration of what sort of pitcher Jorge Julio is. (I put the link comparing Jorges Sosa and Julio in the comments.) He can strike batters out—but walks a bunch and consistently lets the ball leave the park. I’d rather use Dove or Perez in 2007 over Jorge Julio. I think Petit’s quite a bit better than a “marginal prospect pitcher” and that he’s got plenty of time to develop a bit more, but Adam Wainwright he ain’t. (Petit was the pitching prospect who came to Florida along with 3B Grant Psomas and 1B/C Mike Jacobs in exchange for Carlos Delgado).

I hope Walt gave Byrnes the Furrowed Brow of Disdain. I’ll go out on a limb and say that Beinfest should work on his.

Strange Trade

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

The Royals traded light hitting catcher Maxim St. Pierre to the Brewers for AAAA curveball artist Ben Hendrickson today.

The strange thing is that the Brewers could have just signed St. Pierre in the offseason and kept Hendrickson, likewise the Royals could have claimed Hendrickson off waivers last week and kept St. Pierre. Presumably, the Royals worked out a deal in principle with the Brewers that if he cleared waivers, they’d trade anybody from a list for him. Hendrickson’s not without value, though, so it’s surprising that the Brewers would part with him for an organizational depth catcher.

He and Taylor Buchholz were the two out-of-options curveball pitchers I’d been keeping an eye on this spring. I got it in my head that Buchholz might be the latest pitcher to come up with Houston, then struggle in Colorado, before joining the Cardinals and seeing his career really take off.

Wedding Bells

Sunday, February 18th, 2007

Rick Ankiel got married this weekend, and it’s likely that his new bride is this former Dolphins cheerleader. Way to go, Rick.

The quotations in this article sure make it sound like Brad Penny is trying to drop his trade value. It would be nice to add a legitimate power pitcher to the rotation, especially if it would reduce some of the logjam of AA-AAA outfielders. He sounds like he’d benefit from Duncan’s tutelage, too. Restoring confidence in one’s pitches is his specialty.