Jump to content

Prince Fielder or Bust


jonglo

Recommended Posts

Paul Konerko? Yeah, right. Derek Lee? Steady, but a bit grizzled. Adam LaRoche? I guess.

We all know all these answers are just place holders(besides Konerko) and old heads(besides Adam), and none of them are a gurantee to produce going forward(No, not even Konerko).

The only real answer is whats being reported here:

http://mlb-facts-and-rumors.blogs.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/22297882/26302250

And here:

http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/orioles/blog/2010/12/orioles_have_kicked_tires_on_p.html

And about 4 other places.

Prince Fielder is the only thing that can make us believe we can contend this year.

Give up Britton, give up Tillman, give up Waring and whoever else isnt named Matusz. Will it hurt? Yes. But if we get an exstention window like the Sox did with Adrian Gonzalez, we can rename the Flag Court Prince's Court and make a decade out of it.

Andy knows this.

Buck knows this.

We all know this.

An 8 year $150million dollar deal for a guy who can play first base the first 5 years and DH the next three may sound steep and risky to some- but its completely worth it it when your team plays in the AL East.

There are only about 9 hitters in the league better then Prince Fielder and all of them are locked up except one (Uncle Albert).

As a delusional Leo Mazzone once said, "The Time is now. The Place is now."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 150
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Giving up Britton and Tillman for Fielder would be stupid.

So there's that.

Then you say you would sign him to a 8 year, 150 million dollar deal. 8 years?? Really? That sounds horrible.

And beyond all of that nonsense, you think Fielder will actually agree to any kind of extension. Which he won't, because Boras definitely will shop him on the open market when he is most likely the only big time 1B on the market (assuming Pujols gets extended).

But yeah, beyond that, great idea.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Funny, but in the 5+ years that Fielder has been on the Brewers, his team is exactly .500 and has made one wild card appearance in a year when his team won 90 games. So why would anyone think that he is going to carry the Orioles by himself to the extent that we can trade away Britton + Tillman + others, pay him a boatload not to become a free agent, and have that deal make any sense?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Giving up Britton and Tillman for Fielder would be stupid.

So there's that.

Then you say you would sign him to a 8 year, 150 million dollar deal. 8 years?? Really? That sounds horrible.

When your reply is "would be stupid" or "sounds horrible" then whats the point of a message board? Theres absolutely no opinion in that its just trash.

You're trying so hard to be cool and I'm just trying to talk baseball.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When your reply is "would be stupid" or "sounds horrible" then whats the point of a message board? Theres absolutely no opinion in that its just trash.

You're trying so hard to be cool and I'm just trying to talk baseball.

You are trying to start a new discussion on something that has been talked ad naseum on this board.

If you give up Britton and Tillman, you have no depth at SP for at least two years. Waring has no value.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Posts

    • Agree that Grayson had more left in the tank and wish Hyder have let him take on the 7th as well. in the early innings, I wish Grayson just kept with the fastball rather than mixing pitches and looking to establish offspeed.  His fastball was generating swing & miss.  
    • I think it’s white people problems to worry about the inconsistent quality of the Negro Leagues. The black ball players lived with a far more consistent worse. Seems a minor reconciliation to combine the stats.
    • Yes, he'll be in the Hall.  He will be looked at one of the better hitters of his era.   I also think the whole WAR argument about certain players is silly, it's certainly silly against Soto.  Like, no one wants to watch Juan Soto because he's a great defender.  No one advertises that as part of his game, no one pretends he is a great defender...so why's that held against him, exactly?  Because WAR?  "Oh, WAR says he's not a great defender, he doesn't bring enough value with the glove so he's not as valuable as this guy and wah wah wah, whine, whine whine..." It's such a lazy argument that doesn't tell the whole story, that Juan Soto hit for a 1.178 OPS in the World Series at 20 years old.  It doesn't tell the whole story that he's one of the brightest, youngest stars in a game that desperately needs bright young stars and still can't figure out how to market them.  WAR doesn't tell the whole story for a guy like Soto just like it didn't for a guy like Ichiro, just like it didn't for Tony Gwynn.  Does anyone want to tell me that Tony Gwynn's greatness and brilliance can simply be boiled down to 69.2 with a straight face? That brings me to Jeter which...I mean, cry about it a little harder, guys.  Near unanimous selection to the Hall of Fame, really?  Yes, Yankees fans still think he was a great defender because jump throws are impressive...everyone else knows he wasn't.  That's our privilege and their delusion. But everyone here also knows that a Hall of Fame vote is an emotional one and that, like it or not, Derek Jeter was one of the prime faces of the MLB during his career in the way that someone like Barry Larkin never was.  It's not Jeter's fault that the Reds aren't the Yankees and that the Reds only won 1 World Series during Larkin's career compared to what Jeter was a part of.   But that's how the cookie crumbles sometimes.
    • If the Yankees move him to SS, he'll be heralded as one of the all time great SS as long as he can make some theatrical dives for the ball.
    • BB-ref did it briefly, then switched back.  I have mixed feelings about it TBH, because I think the overall quality of the Negro Leagues varied a lot from one time period to another, more so than in the majors.   But I’m not a keen student of the Negro Leagues so I’ll leave it to baseball history scholars to debate. 
    • Retirement is the best call he’s made in years. He finally got one right. Way to go, Angel!
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...