Oh, maybe. News to me, then.I believe they closed that loophole with the last CBA didn't they?
Oh, maybe. News to me, then.I believe they closed that loophole with the last CBA didn't they?
Yes, they did.I believe they closed that loophole with the last CBA didn't they?
Your math doesn't work against the CBT threshold. They aren't living above it permanently. They'll be offsetting expiring contracts (Porcello, Panda, Hanley, etc) with extensions as the money comes up, so the idea of signing both Hosmer and JD Martinez likely isn't on the table in the first place. Getting to just under that $237 million (which they would with a Martinez signing) is much more realistic.Where did I say we would be able to resign Sale for $12.5M?
Sale $12.5M
JDM $30M
Hosmer $25M
= $ $67.5M
Sale $30M extension leaves them $37.5M to go after Harper or Machado or whomever, or start extending some kids. If they’re going to go over, I’m not sure they care all that much about by how much, but that shouldn’t mean throwing your hands up and say ‘fuck it, let’s blow it all now and who cares if it’s pissing money away?’
The only thing that ensures a financial crisis and ensures the need to rebuild is doing exactly what you're suggesting in dumping a shit ton of money into players that don't deserve it. If they sat tight and made a couple small acquisitions, they would reset their tax bill again for 2019 when Pablo and Ramirez fall off. Pushing their chips into the middle of the table because x/y/z might happen seems foolish to me. Price could easily come back next year, have a stud season and opt out. Or they could dump him.Your math doesn't work against the CBT threshold. They aren't living above it permanently. They'll be offsetting expiring contracts (Porcello, Panda, Hanley, etc) with extensions as the money comes up, so the idea of signing both Hosmer and JD Martinez likely isn't on the table in the first place. Getting to just under that $237 million (which they would with a Martinez signing) is much more realistic.
Even if all they do is extend the kids (and even if we assume they let JBJ walk to ease the pressure a bit) your'e looking at least:
Mookie - 30M
Bogaerts - 15-20M
EdRo - 15-20M
Vazquez - 10-15M
On the low end that's 70M in extensions. They can let Porcello go and will have Hanley and Panda gone, so that's 60M there, and if Pomeranz isn't extended, that's 73M or so. But that's two pitchers they have to hope they can replace internally or a chunk of those savings are gone already. If Pomeranz is extended, he's at least 20M per.
I just don't see where this money is going to come from if the goal is to extend the window. It's just not there.
Their best bet, by far, is to buy in on the next two years hard, then hit the reset button. That's the reality that Dombrowski has created.
If the prices are correct on those last three, let 'em go. Unless all three take a big jump forward this year, none of them would be worth those kinds of dollars on a long term basis annually.Even if all they do is extend the kids (and even if we assume they let JBJ walk to ease the pressure a bit) your'e looking at least:
Mookie - 30M
Bogaerts - 15-20M
EdRo - 15-20M
Vazquez - 10-15M
Your math doesn't work against the CBT threshold. They aren't living above it permanently. They'll be offsetting expiring contracts (Porcello, Panda, Hanley, etc) with extensions as the money comes up, so the idea of signing both Hosmer and JD Martinez likely isn't on the table in the first place. Getting to just under that $237 million (which they would with a Martinez signing) is much more realistic.
Even if all they do is extend the kids (and even if we assume they let JBJ walk to ease the pressure a bit) your'e looking at least:
Mookie - 30M
Bogaerts - 15-20M
EdRo - 15-20M
Vazquez - 10-15M
On the low end that's 70M in extensions. They can let Porcello go and will have Hanley and Panda gone, so that's 60M there, and if Pomeranz isn't extended, that's 73M or so. But that's two pitchers they have to hope they can replace internally or a chunk of those savings are gone already. If Pomeranz is extended, he's at least 20M per.
I just don't see where this money is going to come from if the goal is to extend the window. It's just not there.
Their best bet, by far, is to buy in on the next two years hard, then hit the reset button. That's the reality that Dombrowski has created.
Sure, but one of those gives the lineup exactly what it needs and capitalizes on an additional year of Sale's prime and the other does not. I'd also quibble with the idea that Martinez won't deserve the money he'll get. I don't think he's getting 7/200, and if I'm wrong okay... I'll concede that he's overpaid. But assuming it's more reasonable, like 6/165 or so, what kind of production does he really need for that to be a worthwhile contract, or at least close to it?Edit: And my math is simply to show that for what they'd give JDM for 7 years they could use that towards Sale being extended. JDM + replacing Sale in the rotation, even if it's just for an innings eater, still is more than a Sale extension.
I'm talking about money that will need to be spent when Sale will be up for free agency, following 2019. If they are extending Vazquez before he gets to FA, that's the winter it'll have to happen. If they want to extend EdRo, it's either that winter or the next. Either way, it's money that has to be spent at the same time a Sale extension would be getting under way.I wonder if this is the year to strike
EdRo has 4 years of cost control remaining and Vazquez has 3, I don't think either one get extended any time soon.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2731242-mlb-position-power-rankings-brs-final-top-20-catchers-of-2017Why are we talking about extending Christian Vazquez? He had a fun August, but he's maybe barely a league-average catcher.
Placing 15th on a list of 20 catchers seems like damning with faint praise to me.http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2731242-mlb-position-power-rankings-brs-final-top-20-catchers-of-2017
Bleacher Report says otherwise, ranking him 15th this year and stating he'd be higher had he gotten more playing time.
Also, Daniel Flores was the only other exciting catcher in the organization.
I think it's safe to see whoever signs JD Martinez will be paying a premium for at least his age 30 - 35 seasons. My feeling is that as a bad LFer, he's going to be locked into DH and I'm not bullish on his athleticism to commit $25M+/ yr to that profile (Maybe he's more AGon 2.0). I'd like to avoid that backend.I fail to see how most of the post is defensible.
I agree that Hosmer looks like a bust and comparable to crawford; in the prior four years, both players had low ISO and high BABIP, which makes them easy to spot for regression.
JD Martinez has had 200+ ISO consistently over the past four years, high BABIP, and his weakest season was in 2015 (wRC+ was 136). Miguel Cabrera will be 35 next year and just had a 92 wRC+ season, posting his lowest ISO and third highest K% ever. In fact, Miggy's second best HR total is barely better than JD's worst over the past four years. In all likelihood, JD will sign a deal through the 2023 season, probably around 200 million. Miggy is owed ~30 million AAV through 2023. Not to mention that JD can spell in the outfield, whereas Miggy is limited to 1B at this point. If you don't want to spend resources on JD, I fail to see how miggy is a better alternative. In fact, he's probably a lot more expensive in terms of resources (either farm or $$$$).
I think it's a serious mistake to assume that DD is done on the offensive side. He said he wanted a big bat, as he should. Moreland isn't a big bat. If there isn't a further, more big-ticket offensive acquisition, it'll be because DD couldn't make the deal he wanted on acceptable terms, not because he stopped trying.Well Mitch was my plan "C" - Santana was plan "A". So is there more and if so what - pitching? It looks like defense and pitching.
Re-signing Moreland feels a lot like he stopped trying to me.I think it's a serious mistake to assume that DD is done on the offensive side. He said he wanted a big bat, as he should. Moreland isn't a big bat. If there isn't a further, more big-ticket offensive acquisition, it'll be because DD couldn't make the deal he wanted on acceptable terms, not because he stopped trying.
That's not my hope. My hope is that the Sox sign JDM and platoon Hanley with Moreland. But only if JDM can be had for well under $150M, and if that happens at all, it'll probably take another month.Re-signing Moreland feels a lot like he stopped trying to me.
I mean sure, I guess some can still cling on to the hope that the Sox sign JDM and trade Bradley.
None of the 1B/DH out there were going to be "that bat" anyway, especially once Santana signed.But beyond that? The Moreland decision further closes an already super tight roster squeeze at where you can actually fit that bat, and none of 1B/DH out there are going to realistically steer the Sox FO away from playing out that $20m commitment on Hanley in full. At least to start the year.
Then we know exactly what they are going to do this coming season...although I'm not sure where Ortiz's reality show fits in.The Red Sox are a likable, quality bunch, many of whom will improve over 2016.
And cue a Crasnick tweet about Frazier being willing to move around the diamond. Potential Pedey sub?If we don't end up with JDM, and given Hanley's and Moreland's struggles against LHP this year, how about revisiting last summer's favorite subject of speculation Todd Frazier?
2017 numbers:
1. 44.9 FB% (4th in MLB)
2. 130/101 WRC+ vs LHP/RHP
3. .226 BABIP (vs a career .271)
4. A newfound ability to take walks (14.4% vs a career 8.9%)
5. Good defense at 3rd, where we may well want a defensive sub at times.
6. 27 HR in 576 PA, with
7. This Green Monster-sized hole in his HR chart:![]()
He got 1/12 this year, and it doesn't seem like the Yankees are going to want him around long term. Could the Sox get him for 2/20? 3/27? That's probably less than one year of Martinez.
Todd Frazier has expressed a willingness to move around the diamond. Can play 1B and a little OF, and came up through the minors as a middle infielder. Here's the crazy part: He had a plus-10 Defensive Runs Saved at 3B this season. Manny Machado had a plus-6. Hard to believe.
The Bruce idea makes sense. He could be the 4th OF and DH. Maybe a contract like Santana - less years more money. Sign Nunez if he'll come back and add an arm in the pen - not sure who - a lefty - Liriano, Watson or Boone. That leaves them under the $237 by a good 7 - 8 million - enough for a trade deadline pick up.Re-signing Moreland feels a lot like he stopped trying to me.
I mean sure, I guess some can still cling on to the hope that the Sox sign JDM and trade Bradley. But beyond that? The Moreland decision further closes an already super tight roster squeeze at where you can actually fit that bat, and none of 1B/DH out there are going to realistically steer the Sox FO away from playing out that $20m commitment on Hanley in full. At least to start the year.
That leaves the visible possibilities at what? Maybe, which a ton of emphasis on that maybe, Jay Bruce replacing JDM in that trade Bradley scenario?
Yeah, Boras likes to take his guys into January unless someone wants to overpay (like Ellsbury).I don't see any reason to think the lack of movement on Martinez makes us less likely to sign him, rather than more.
We're the team that is known to be interested. We keep hearing implausible rumors about other suitors, but it seems likely to me that that's Boras and Dombrowski in a staredown.
The Eckersley affair showed us the ugly side of Price, Bradley and Pedroia. You are of course free to like this bunch, but internal affairs were so poor a division winning manager was fired. And I am left with little confidence in the "leadership of this nine".The Red Sox are a likable, quality bunch, many of whom will improve over 2016. Martinez is a probable acquisition, and he will have a galvanizing effect on the rest of the lineup - they will get better pitches to hit. That's what happened during the Ortiz regime.
My only quarrel with Bruce as opposed to Martinez is that he makes the lineup too lefthanded if that's where we stop. This is particularly an issue because Bruce has a fairly severe platoon split (82 wRC+ vs. lefties for the past three years). But his spray chart looks reasonably Fenway-friendly:Jay Bruce is starting to make some sense as this market evolves if he can be had on a short deal. I still want some major guaranteed 30+ HR power in the middle of the lineup. I am hoping for JDM and I'm starting to think Boras may have overplayed his hand.... 5/$130 with an opt out after year 3 is looking possible and ideal.
Fair point about his low WAR. 4/60 is perhaps a little much for his skill set.Bruce has been worth three wins total over the last four years—that's $23.6M on the open market—and 90 percent of that came last year. I'd really hate to give him $60 million.
I'm struggling to think of the last dead-pull, extreme fly ball hitting lefty that's succeeded here (besides the obvious). David Ortiz he is not.
Travis Shaw?Bruce has been worth three wins total over the last four years—that's $23.6M on the open market—and 90 percent of that came last year. I'd really hate to give him $60 million.
I'm struggling to think of the last dead-pull, extreme fly ball hitting lefty that's succeeded here (besides the obvious). David Ortiz he is not.
Maybe he's not at the utmost extreme, but the only LHH with greater pull rates from 2015-17 are Colby Rasmus, Brandon Moss, Brian McCann, Rougned Odor, Chris Davis, Curtis Granderson, David Ortiz, and Logan Morrison.Fair point about his low WAR. 4/60 is perhaps a little much for his skill set.
But he's not really a dead-pull hitter, as both the spray chart above and his splits show. His pull rate on fly balls of 23.6% puts him in the middle of the pack among LHH (#69 out of 125). He's primarily a CF flyball hitter -- 44.1%, #8 among those 125. His FB are distributed primarily in two zones, one in LCF, the other in RCF, with a third, less populated zone down the RF line. The flies to LCF would get plenty of mileage out of the Monster.
Where are you getting those numbers? Fangraphs' splits leaderboards aren't showing that at all.Maybe he's not at the utmost extreme, but the only LHH with greater pull rates from 2015-17 are Colby Rasmus, Brandon Moss, Brian McCann, Rougned Odor, Chris Davis, Curtis Granderson, and Logan Morrison.
I was looking at overall pull rates. So yeah, your point about Fenway in particular makes sense. He's not at the top of the list of flyballs pulled.Where are you getting those numbers? Fangraphs' splits leaderboards aren't showing that at all.
Also, are you looking at overall pull rates or flyball pull rates? The latter is all that matters when we're talking about whether a hitter is suited for Fenway or not.
Better than nothing maybe, but probably no better than Marco Hernandez at this point.Here's another idea for Pedroia stand-in.
Again, not going to get anyone excited: Chase Utley.
His power is pretty diminished
but he has just enough pop to scrape some balls off the monster. His positional flexibility is limited to 1B/2B but it's better than nothing.
Yes. I really don't expect them to go out and find a Pedroia "stand-in" in free agency or via trade. Not when the stand-in duties aren't likely going to last more than 6 weeks or so, and then that stand-in will have to be relegated to the bench. They've got enough in-house candidates that it makes no sense to expend additional resources unless there's a guarantee that they can either move that player in a trade or slide him into a super-sub kind of role where they can extract more value from their investment (essentially, a Holt-type player).Better than nothing maybe, but probably no better than Marco Hernandez at this point.
I really like... but never loved Pedroia.... I've always felt mildly let down after his first two seasons. Anyhow I'd be thrilled to see Hernandez or Lin play 6-8 weeks of phenomenal 2B with an .800+ OPS for a starting job controversy when Pedroia returns.Better than nothing maybe, but probably no better than Marco Hernandez at this point.
It was definitely more than two seasons. From 2008 to 2013, at ages 24-29, he accumulated 35.1 brWAR--this is the 4th-best total for a 2B in that age slice in MLB history, behind only Hornsby, Eddie Collins, and Frisch. The list of 2B who've ever had a better six-year stretch than that, at any age, is mostly a list of Hall of Fame 2B (Utley, Morgan, Carew, Lajoie, Cano, Biggio, Gehringer, Sandberg, Jackie R., Grich, Joe Gordon).I really like... but never loved Pedroia.... I've always felt mildly let down after his first two seasons.
Everything I am seeing is saying it was a minor league contract. Regardless, nothing would make me happier if somehow Velazquez could turn into a solid 5/6/7 starter/long man, Quiroz could ably fill the UI role, and Steven Wright could replicate some of his 2016 success.