Jump to content

SP Trade Targets Compared


Aristotelian

Recommended Posts

2 hours ago, Aristotelian said:

I don't know why we should assume we will be worse. We have a young team with most guys entering their prime. I could see some regression in the bullpen but overall I'd say repeating last year's performance is a good baseline expectation.

It may be LAA's price is too high but it is not inherently stupid to ask IMO. 

There is/was some youth but there was also some vets that came out of nowhere after a career of not being good.  
 

And there will be more youth with growing pains, which is fine but you can’t ignore that likely possibility.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What about 28-year-old righthander Chris Flexen, who had an ERA of 3.73 in 52 starts over the past two seasons before being relegated to the Seattle bullpen?

Flexen, who posted 3.0 fWAR in 2021, apparently comes with four increasingly expensive years of team control working off his vested 2023 salary of $8 million.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, health55 said:

What about 28-year-old righthander Chris Flexen, who had an ERA of 3.73 in 52 starts over the past two seasons before being relegated to the Seattle bullpen?

Flexen, who posted 3.0 fWAR in 2021, apparently comes with four increasingly expensive years of team control working off his vested 2023 salary of $8 million.

 

He seems very fortunate to have a 3.73 ERA with the K:BB ratio he puts up. I don’t know why we’d want him in the rotation over what we currently have. Let alone if we add legit SP in the off-season. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/2/2022 at 9:39 PM, Can_of_corn said:

I don't think most would consider Bieber a mid-rotation starter.  If you viewed him thusly than you wouldn't give up that package.

Bieber wasn’t in the OP and he’s not a mid-rotation guy. He only has a couple years til free agency though and that makes it really hard to justify giving up 6 years each of Holliday and Hall, plus more probably. Especially when it’s still debatable at this point whether the O’s are even a legit contender next year. 
 

I think if they’re to have any sustained success then it will be from a strong and deep farm. Trading away all your top guys for mere blips in the timeline of a hopeful contention window is short sighted. I’d love to have any of the pitching that’s been mentioned in this thread but not at the costs that I’m seeing discussed. There’s room in the payroll for a $30m+ annual salary for an ace. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really feel like our system is on the verge of blowing up with our 2nd and 3rd tier names. So trading them right now, would be selling a little early. We just had another good draft as the early returns suggest. No way can you trade Hall, until you figure out what he is. 
 

I’d like to see us bring back Lyles, and/or sign a FA, then see where we’re at the deadline. That’ll make our needs more clear and where we’re at in the standings. It will also give our emerging prospects another half season to boost their trade values. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, oriole said:

Bieber wasn’t in the OP and he’s not a mid-rotation guy. He only has a couple years til free agency though and that makes it really hard to justify giving up 6 years each of Holliday and Hall, plus more probably. Especially when it’s still debatable at this point whether the O’s are even a legit contender next year. 
 

I think if they’re to have any sustained success then it will be from a strong and deep farm. Trading away all your top guys for mere blips in the timeline of a hopeful contention window is short sighted. I’d love to have any of the pitching that’s been mentioned in this thread but not at the costs that I’m seeing discussed. There’s room in the payroll for a $30m+ annual salary for an ace. 


Does these transactions make us a legitimate contender?

Sign Rodon 5yrs $140 million

Trade for Bieber, Woodruff, Gallen, or Burnes

or you do a lesser trade or sign Clevinger maybe two years 25-30 million

Sign Veteran hitter

Sign backup catcher 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Camden Yards said:


Does these transactions make us a legitimate contender?

Sign Rodon 5yrs $140 million

Trade for Bieber, Woodruff, Gallen, or Burnes

or you do a lesser trade or sign Clevinger maybe two years 25-30 million

Sign Veteran hitter

Sign backup catcher 

I think we’ve got to let 2023 play out a while before any of us can make that determination. The bullpen advances last year could be a mirage. Rutschman could have the dreaded sophomore slump. I’m not saying I don’t think they’ll be a contender, because I do. I’m saying it’s not a great idea to start trading away  great prospects just for the opportunity to have any player for such a short amount of time when the O’s are still in the infancy stage of contention. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, oriole said:

I think we’ve got to let 2023 play out a while before any of us can make that determination. The bullpen advances last year could be a mirage. Rutschman could have the dreaded sophomore slump. I’m not saying I don’t think they’ll be a contender, because I do. I’m saying it’s not a great idea to start trading away  great prospects just for the opportunity to have any player for such a short amount of time when the O’s are still in the infancy stage of contention. 

You have to trade guys.  You depth but its depth in similar positions.  The longer you wait, the greater chances run for players to start losing value and then you end up losing them for nothing.  You can't do that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

You have to trade guys.  You depth but its depth in similar positions.  The longer you wait, the greater chances run for players to start losing value and then you end up losing them for nothing.  You can't do that.

I’m okay with trading from the infield prospect depth, but other than that it’s pretty even across the board. There may be some surplus in the OF also, depending on Kjerstad and Stowers. But right now Kjerstad and Stowers don’t have much value and I really don’t want to let go of Cowser. 
 

Anyways, I guess it’s just subjective on whether you value the long term outlook or the short term more highly. I’d like to see the approach of trading the major league pieces that are more expensive and closer to free agency, let the prospects play in Baltimore, and finish it off with some strong free agency signings. Trade Santander this year, maybe Mullins, Urias, and Mountcastle the following year or two. Let Cowser, Henderson, and Mayo take their spots which leaves more room on the payroll for a bit signing when the need arises. 
 

Right now the need is front line pitching. Keep the prospects and just sign one of the many very good options on the market. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, oriole said:

I’m okay with trading from the infield prospect depth, but other than that it’s pretty even across the board. There may be some surplus in the OF also, depending on Kjerstad and Stowers. But right now Kjerstad and Stowers don’t have much value and I really don’t want to let go of Cowser. 
 

Anyways, I guess it’s just subjective on whether you value the long term outlook or the short term more highly. I’d like to see the approach of trading the major league pieces that are more expensive and closer to free agency, let the prospects play in Baltimore, and finish it off with some strong free agency signings. Trade Santander this year, maybe Mullins, Urias, and Mountcastle the following year or two. Let Cowser, Henderson, and Mayo take their spots which leaves more room on the payroll for a bit signing when the need arises. 
 

Right now the need is front line pitching. Keep the prospects and just sign one of the many very good options on the market. 

It is 100% false that by trading prospects, that you are looking short term vs long term.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

It is 100% false that by trading prospects, that you are looking short term vs long term.

 

100%? That’s pretty bold considering we’re literally talking about giving up multiple high end prospects with little to no major league service time for two years of a proven player. You can debate the merits of both approaches all day, but “100% false” is about as hyperbolic as it comes. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, oriole said:

100%? That’s pretty bold considering we’re literally talking about giving up multiple high end prospects with little to no major league service time for two years of a proven player. You can debate the merits of both approaches all day, but “100% false” is about as hyperbolic as it comes. 

No its not. Teams can trade prospects and still look out for the long term.

You are acting as if people are saying to trade every prospect for vet help.  That's not the case. You absolutely, 100% can do both...as most contending teams do.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • This is accurate based on pockets.  But the Yankees have positive Cash Flow even with the huge payroll, because they are the richest franchise in the MLB.  The fact that the owner can fund higher salaries is certainly important, but it isn't the same thing as team revenue.
    • These two paragraphs are not congruent.  I disagree that the Orioles have to resign Burnes.  I think they should be in on him, but they don't have to sign him. I completely agree that if they do not sign him the have to have another TOR.  I think counting on Bradish to return is a poor decision.  You hope so, but planning on it would be weak.  Same with assuming #2 status for Rodriquez.  His case is stronger of course, but still.  We have some depth IF we have a TOR and that should be Burnes or someone comparable.  
    • There are several. Snell, Pivetta, Bieber (depending on structure of the contract), Nick Martinez (swing type guy) and Heaney.  May be others. This is off the top of my head.
    • I think this is correct but I would say it differently.  I think Elias has done a great job constructing the organization and making it one of the top teams, complete teams, in baseball.  That was a huge hurdle from where he started and that has been a major success. Getting from a top MLB team to a successful playoff team may seem like a small jump but it is pretty large.  And Elias has been tentative at best at trying to make those changes.  He has taken an incremental path in hopes of maximizing his long term potential.  So far that really hasn't had much success.   But like Elias, we really should not assume that the changes needed to make that seemingly small jump from AL East contender to WS contender will not require some pretty big things.  I don't know if that is really different than what you are saying.  
    • It was never in hindsight. The Os were always against it. We had the numbers. We knew how bad it was going to effect the team.   That is why the MaSN deal was structured the way it was. It benefited the Os for a reason. That was essentially the compromise to having the team move to DC.
    • The Mets just had more exciting wins in one week than we had in four months.  I called us the Dull Orange Machine a few weeks ago for a reason.  Really boring team most of the season, with no personality at all.  They seemed to have a "get knocked down, stay down" mentality, which isn't fun to support as a fan.  There are a lot of very good reasons noted here as to why attendance wasn't great, but the energy around this team and the organization is just low and that can't help.  And a slow and boring offseason that doesn't move the needle much won't help attendance heading into next season either.  
    • This.  I grew up in Northern VA and it always took 1 hour to drive to Memorial or Camden no matter the time of day.  It was always easy to find parking as well.  Now that same drive takes 2-3 hours, and finding good parking is a pain.  Plus, the cost of parking, tickets, food/drinks, souvenirs has skyrocketed.  So the choice is to sit in traffic, fight for parking, pay tons of money for the hassle...or sit on my comfortable couch and watch the game on a huge HD screen for free...
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...