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The Morning After: Breaking up the Red Sox

August 26, 2012 by Mike 95 Comments

Three-run dinger in his first at-bat last night. (Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)

Blame Robert Andino. Had the Orioles’ utility infielder not laced that single off Jonathan Papelbon last September, the Red Sox would have remained alive in the postseason hunt and none of this probably happens. Instead, the ball found grass and the dominoes started to fall when Terry Francona and Theo Epstein walked away from the organization last winter. Papelbon moved on as a free agent, new manager Bobby Valentine was brought in (by ownership?), and the losing resumed.

The Red Sox are mired in fourth place in the AL East, closer to having the worst record in the circuit than they are a Wild Card spot. Prior to last night’s game, Boston was 74-88 in their last 162 contests despite a payroll north of $170M. GM Ben Cherington (Epstein’s replacement) took a drastic step to improve his team yesterday, completed a trade that can be legitimately described as franchise-altering. Heading to the Dodgers are Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford, Adrian Gonzalez, Nick Punto, and $12M. Coming back are James Loney, prospects Allen Webster, Rubby DeLaRosa, Jerry Sands, Ivan DeJesus, and roughly $260M of cleared future payroll.

You can make a really strong case that this is one of the biggest trades in baseball history, certainly one of the biggest during my lifetime. Prior to this move, only one player with more than $100M remaining on his contract had ever been traded — Alex Rodriguez when he came to the Yankees in 2004. Both Gonzalez (~$109M) and Crawford (~$107M) are still owed nine figures after this year. A trade of this magnitude has a ripple effect throughout baseball, including an indirect impact on the Yankees. Here are some miscellaneous thoughts on the trade…

  • I think the deal is just flat-out brilliant on Cherington’s part. Yes, he did surrender one truly great player in Gonzalez, but in the process he rid himself of two of the most out-of-favor players in team history. Clearing a quarter-billion dollars in payroll and getting real live prospects in return is the stuff GM dreams are made of.
  • While the Red Sox made a great move for the long-term health of the franchise, the short-term damage is severe. David Ortiz may miss the rest of the season, which means they’ve have very little power in the lineup, particularly from the left side. They’ll have to find two corner outfielders, a first baseman, and maybe a DH after the season (more on that in a bit). That’s not easy to do. On top of that they have to replace Beckett in an already porous rotation.
  • On the other end of the deal, pretty bad job by the Dodgers to absorb that much money and give up those kinds of prospects. That said, they just acquired an impact first baseman, a potential impact starter, and a potential impact outfielder for what amounts to one Albert Pujols financially. The future might be ugly, but that team has a phenomenal chance to win now.
  • For more about the prospects involved, check out my MLBTR post. I really like DeLaRosa, that kid has a great arm. He’s not the next Pedro Martinez or anything, but his mid-90s fastball/power slider combination is true swing-and-miss stuff. Getting him alone would have been a coup for the Sox, but getting another strong pitching prospect in Webster and a useful role player in Sands is icing on the cake. DeJesus is just roster fodder in my eyes.
  • I couldn’t be happier that Gonzalez is out of the AL East. He is having a down year — a 114 wRC+ with Boston after three straight years of 140+ and six straight years of 120+ — but the guy still scared the crap out of me whenever he was at the plate. Gonzalez remains a terrifyingly good hitter and not having to see him 18+ times a year is a win for the Yankees.
  • It must be nice to free up all that cash, but that was only half the battle. The Red Sox have been pretty terrible when it comes to signing free agents lately, plus the new Collective Bargaining Agreements mean they can’t just dump all that money into the draft and international free agency. Reinvesting the savings wisely is much, much easier said than done.
  • I fully expect Boston to pursue Nick Swisher this offseason. They’re going to be looking for a first baseman as well as corner outfield help, and he provides both in addition to being a switch-hitter and all that. He makes a ton of sense for them. If a happens, hopefully they give him that Jayson Werth contract he wants.
  • There’s a pretty good chance that starting with 2010, the Red Sox could miss the playoffs for five consecutive years. This season will already be year number three, and although they have the ability to turn it around quickly, I’m not giving the new GM the benefit of the doubt just yet. This isn’t exactly a soft division. (h/t Jamal G.)
  • Here’s the question: are the Red Sox done selling off players? There will absolutely be a market for Jon Lester, Jacoby Ellsbury, and Dustin Pedroia this winter, though I can’t imagine Pedroia would go. Ellsbury sure, Lester maybe, but not Pedroia. That would be a stunner. At the same time, I can seem them signing all three to contract extensions and move forward with them as the core. Will be interesting to watch.

Lastly, I consider the trade to be an indication that Bobby V. will be back as manager next season. Instead of firing him they got rid of Gonzalez, a great player and one of his most outspoken subordinates. These rebuild things tend to happen step-by-step — first the coaches go, then the manager goes, then finally the team realizes it’s the players who needed the change. The Sox fired their pitching coach last week, then skipped right over the “fire the manager” step and dumped some players. Regardless of what happens with Valentine, yesterday was a monumental day for the Red Sox in terms of their rebuilding effort, and that’s generally bad news for the Yankees.

Filed Under: Musings Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, The Morning After

Yanks give Kuroda no support, fall to Indians

August 25, 2012 by Mike 71 Comments


Source: FanGraphs

Hiroki Kuroda has been brilliant of late, but asking him to win a game in which the offense plates just one run is a little ridiculous. The bats did the club’s most effective starter this season no favors on Saturday, a tough luck loss against a team that lost their last nine games. Let’s recap…

  • A Tale of Two #HIROKs: Five of the first nine hitters Kuroda faced reached base — including a three-run homer by Michael Brantley — and then just three of the final 21 hitters he faced reached. Hiroki was clearly off in those first two innings, leaving a lot of pitches out of the zone and throwing just 23 of 43 pitches for strikes (43%) in those two frames. Forty-eight of his final 65 pitches went for strikes (74%), so a drastic difference. You’ll take eight innings and three runs from your starter every time out, but once again the offense didn’t bother to score any runs for Kuroda.
  • Stranded: The Yankees have scored a total of five runs in their last 26 offensive innings thanks to some absolutely abysmal production with men on-base (again). At one point six of nine and nine of 16 Yankees reached base from the fifth through seventh innings — including two bases loaded situations — and they managed just one run on a Mark Teixeira sacrifice fly. The suddenly cold Eric Chavez and Russell Martin get some slack for hitting the ball right at people with the bases juiced in the sixth, but otherwise it was an awful job of finishing off the rally. The Bombers do a phenomenal job of getting men on and creating pressure, but they are absolutely miserable at converting those chances into runs.
  • Leftovers: The top three hitters in the lineup went a combined 5-for-11 with two walks while the other six hitters in the order went 2-for-22 with a walk. The bottom of the order has done very little of late, which tends to happens with a lineup full of platoon hitters getting irregular playing time … there really isn’t much more to add here. Very straight forward game. The starting pitcher did his part, the offense didn’t. Generic loss.

MLB.com has the box score and video highlights, FanGraphs the nerd score, and ESPN the updated standings. The Rays lost to the Athletics, so the Yankees blew a chance to expand their AL East lead. It remains at four games over both the Rays and Orioles, though the magic number did drop down to 33. The Bombers will hope good Freddy Garcia shows up for Sunday afternoon’s rubber game while the Tribe will hope for good Ubaldo Jimenez.

Filed Under: Game Stories

GCL season ends with a win

August 25, 2012 by Mike 17 Comments

RHP Angel Rincon will join 1B Greg Bird with Short Season Staten Island while RHP Rich Mascheri and RHP Edison Mejia have been bumped up to High-A Tampa. We’re going to see a flurry of late-season promotions now with the minor league seasons starting to end, September call-ups, affiliates dropping out of playoff races, etc.

Triple-A Empire State (9-5 loss to Lehigh Valley)
RF Chris Dickerson: 1-4, 2 R, 1 2B, 1 BB, 1 K
2B Corban Joseph: 1-3, 2 R, 2 BB, 1 K
DH Eduardo Nunez: 3-5, 1 R, 1 RBI, 1 K — 15 hits in his last 39 at-bats (.385)
LF Ronnie Mustelier: 1-5, 1 RBI, 1 K
C Austin Romine: 1-2, 2 RBI, 2 BB, 1 PB — 13/11 K/BB in 24 games
1B Brandon Laird: 2-5, 1 2B, 1 RBI
CF Melky Mesa & 3B Kevin Russo: both 0-4 — Russo struck out twice, Mesa thrice
SS Ramiro Pena: 1-4, 1 K
RHP Ramon Ortiz: 4.1 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 7 R, 7 ER, 4 BB, 5 K, 5/2 GB/FB — 54 of 91 pitches were strikes (59%) … that’s 40 runs allowed in his last 60.1 IP, the wheels might be coming off the 39-year-old just before the Triple-A postseason unfortunately
RHP Kelvin Perez: 1.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, 1/1 GB/FB — 23 of 44 pitches were strikes (52%)
RHP Chase Whitley: 2 IP, zeroes, 1 K, 2/2 GB/FB — 13 of 18 pitches were strikes (72%)

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Down on the Farm

Game 126: Co-Ace

August 25, 2012 by Mike 493 Comments

(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

The Yankees welcomed their ace left-hander back to the rotation last night, and tonight they have their ace right-hander on the mound. Hiroki Kuroda has been one of the very best pitchers in all of baseball this season — sixth most valuable pitcher overall in bWAR — and he’s been especially dominant of late, allowing no more than two earned runs in six of his last seven starts and no more than one earned run in five of his last seven starts. It’s been some run, let me tell you.

The Rays already lost to the Athletics, so the Yankees are guaranteed to lose no ground in the standings regardless of what happens tonight. Of course, I would prefer to see them stretch that AL East lead a little bit. Here’s the starting nine…

SS Derek Jeter
RHP Nick Swisher
2B Robinson Cano
1B Mark Teixeira
CF Curtis Granderson
3B Eric Chavez
C  Russell Martin
DH Raul Ibanez
LF Ichiro Suzuki

RHP Hiroki Kuroda

Today’s game is scheduled to start a little after 7pm ET and can be seen on YES locally and MLB Network nationally. Enjoy.

CC Sabathia Update: Just in case you were wondering, Sabathia told reporters that he feels fine and had no problems with his elbow the day after his first start off the DL. He went through his regular between-start routine without a problem.

Rotation Update: David Phelps, who was available last night in the bullpen, will start on Monday against the Blue Jays. Thursday’s off-day gave the Yankees a little flexibility this week, and they’ve opted to give Phil Hughes an extra day of rest rather than start him on normal rest against Toronto.

Filed Under: Game Threads

Aardsma throws 35 pitches in live batting practice session

August 25, 2012 by Mike 1 Comment

Right-hander David Aardsma threw 35 pitches in a live batting practice session today, including some sliders that he says had “good action.” The plan is for him to throw a simulated game on Tuesday, assuming the weather in Tampa allows.

Aardsma, 30, is working his way back from the setback he suffered in June following Tommy John and hip surgery. Depending on who you ask, he either will or won’t be able to join the big league bullpen this September. Considering that he still needs to get in some actual minor league rehab games despite the season ending in less than two weeks, Aardsma will be cutting it real close if he wants to come back this year.

Filed Under: Asides, Injuries Tagged With: David Aardsma

Yankees won’t watch Roger Clemens’ independent league outing

August 25, 2012 by Mike 24 Comments

Worried (or dreaming?) about the potential return of Roger Clemens to New York? Well don’t. Jim Baumbach spoke to a team official who confirmed that the Yankees won’t even bother to scout the 50-year-old right-hander’s independent league start tonight. “That would be crazy,” said the official. Indeed, it would be crazy.

Clemens signed with the Sugar Land Skeeters near his home in Texas earlier this week in what I assume is an effort to delay his Hall of Fame candidacy. The Astros are open to signing the seven-time Cy Young Award winner, and appearing in a big league game would delay his HoF eligibility by five years. That would distance him from the PED controversy a bit, theoretically improving his chances for enshrinement. Either way, the Yankees will thankfully have no part in it.

Filed Under: Asides Tagged With: Roger Clemens

Report: Indians will listen to offers for Shin-Soo Choo

August 25, 2012 by Mike 86 Comments

Via Jon Heyman, the Indians will listen to trade offers for outfielder Shin-Soo Choo this offseason. The 30-year-old Choo is hitting .284/.366/.465 (131 wRC+) with 15 homers and 15 steals this season and is due to become a free agent after 2013. Per the new Collective Bargaining Agreement, a team must have a player on their roster the entire season in order to receive draft pick compensation if they leave as a free agent.

The Yankees figure to be looking for an outfielder this offseason as they’re expected to let Nick Swisher walk as part of the plan to get under the $189M luxury tax threshold in 2014. Choo is an all-around player who plays strong defense with a cannon arm, so he’d be a perfect one-year stop gap — count on Scott Boras taking him out on the open market as a free agent next winter. Whether the Yankees have interest or even the pieces to land him is another matter entirely, but Choo should certainly be on the radar if Swisher is allowed to leave.

Filed Under: Asides, Hot Stove League Tagged With: Shin-Soo Choo

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