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Does Signing Gallardo Change Our Entire Offseason?


Bahama O's Fan

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Yes and no. We added a decent (not great) established SP when the alternative was to go with an unproven AAA guy. Yes, it absolutely improves the team short term. On the other hand, no, he is just one piece. No guarantee of an above-average rotation or anything more than the .500 season we had with Chen. Plus he costs a pick so it could hurt us long term more than he helps us in the short term.

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Yes and no. We added a decent (not great) established SP when the alternative was to go with an unproven AAA guy. Yes, it absolutely improves the team short term. On the other hand, no, he is just one piece. No guarantee of an above-average rotation or anything more than the .500 season we had with Chen. Plus he costs a pick so it could hurt us long term more than he helps us in the short term.

I wouldn't call Vance Worley an unproven AAA guy.

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Personally, I think the offseason has to be viewed as very strong and I include Fowler as a factor already. There is plenty of reason to be skeptical to be sure. But as someone who has been very critical of PA, I think the Orioles did everything in their power to remain in contention, to retain players the fans like, and in short the Orioles committed money, lots of it, to be a winner. Add to that a stable Front office duo and I think it is darn near historic.

Results, well that comes later. But I like the commitment from top to bottom. I like the moves many seem to think are more marginal. We will see, but as someone once said....

I like our guys!

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I'm not sure that Gallardo moves the needle one way or another for the rotation - more or less just holding serve.

Considering that the team is going for it now, I love that the team spent some money to put quality players on the field for 2016. I only wish that the organization would have spent the money differently. I don't want to live in the past, but looking at the money the Orioles spent, willingness to give up the picks, and the talent available, this team could have undergone a major retooling. Instead of Wieters, Davis, O'Day, Gallardo, and (possibly) Fowler how about Zimmerman, Upton, Fowler, Alvarez, Saltalamachia, and a reliever of your choice?

Overall, as a fan I am happy with the money and effort spent to try and put a winning team on the field. I'm excited for the season to come. Offseason grade (assuming we get Fowler): B

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I love him as the long man now. I hope Buck doesn't go too crazy and feel like he needs MacFarland in there because he's left handed.

Long men don't exist any more. No Oriole reliever in 2015 averaged even two innings an appearance. I believe McFarland led the pen with 6.2 batters faced per appearance.

Addressing the OP, the difference between Gallardo and Worley/et al is likely 1-2 wins.

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This offseason makes me excited for this season and extremely concerned about the next five years.

We won't be losing any significant FAs next winter except Trumbo, so whatever chance we have of contending in 2016 we probably have a fairly similar chance of contending in 2017. I guess we could see a batch of long-term injuries, or if the 2016 team totally tanks there could be a lot of trades, but odds are the roster stays fairly steady over the next two years.

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We won't be losing any significant FAs next winter except Trumbo, so whatever chance we have of contending in 2016 we probably have a fairly similar chance of contending in 2017. I guess we could see a batch of long-term injuries, or if the 2016 team totally tanks there could be a lot of trades, but odds are the roster stays fairly steady over the next two years.

So Wieters isn't significant in your estimation? As significant as Trumbo at any rate?

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Long men don't exist any more. No Oriole reliever in 2015 averaged even two innings an appearance. I believe McFarland led the pen with 6.2 batters faced per appearance.

Addressing the OP, the difference between Gallardo and Worley/et al is likely 1-2 wins.

I guess, when guys go long, they lose them for a 2-3 days, instead, if they keep them to 2 innings, they get them back quicker.

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We won't be losing any significant FAs next winter except Trumbo, so whatever chance we have of contending in 2016 we probably have a fairly similar chance of contending in 2017. I guess we could see a batch of long-term injuries, or if the 2016 team totally tanks there could be a lot of trades, but odds are the roster stays fairly steady over the next two years.

They have many key players transitioning to or already in their 30s. There will be decline among them as a group. Essentially all groups of players in their 30s decline, even if individuals can buck the trend.

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We won't be losing any significant FAs next winter except Trumbo, so whatever chance we have of contending in 2016 we probably have a fairly similar chance of contending in 2017. I guess we could see a batch of long-term injuries, or if the 2016 team totally tanks there could be a lot of trades, but odds are the roster stays fairly steady over the next two years.

Wieters

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