Applications Google
Menu principal

Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"More On The Greinke Trade."

51 Comments -

1 – 51 of 51
Blogger kcfan4ever64 said...

Merry Christmas!!! May the Holiday season quickly pass and Baseball season begin:)

December 25, 2010 at 2:15 PM

Blogger Tim said...

This was an excellent Christmas gift, Rany. It fit perfectly between dinner and dessert, and provided a much needed respite from the fam. (My grandpa has recycled the same 2 stories numerous times.)

My initial reaction, after sorrow, was that the trade was about average. However, grading on a Dayton Moore-sized curve, I'd consider it a resounding success.

For some reason, I also feel that it's important that I can still cheer for Greinke in Milwaukee. If he'd been traded to LA, NY, or another big market club, I would not have derived much joy from his future success.

December 25, 2010 at 3:12 PM

Blogger Old Man Duggan said...

There is no way the Mariners didn't know Lueke was a rapist. Many of their fans knew this when the trade happened. I think given that Smoak had already struggled upon being called up, it seemed like he has lost a bit of his luster at the time of the deal. I know it was premature given the microscopic sample size, but it felt like everyone was expecting Smoak to mash upon being called up. It definitely didn't happen, and it is even like likely to happen for him in Seattle.

December 25, 2010 at 4:57 PM

Blogger KCMIZZ said...

Great work. Kudos for posting on a holiday. I have been patiently waiting for your Greinke follow up. Have a safe holiday season

December 25, 2010 at 7:14 PM

Blogger Reb Moti said...

Well, if the Rangers had won the division without trading Texeira, they still would have won it without Texeira, who would have certainly left as a free agent anyway. So they got 3 more wins or whatever from the guys they traded him for than they would have from the supplemental draft picks they would have gotten instead.

December 25, 2010 at 11:39 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Considering the volatile nature of prospects, isn't it best to grade them on the perception of their growth at the time of their trade? It's more obvious now that the Santana deal was bad...but it was pretty obvious then too, but it had extenuating circumstances as well. In regards to the Teix deal, it doesn't look as good for the Rangers now as it did then...but they were trading for perceived value at the time.

From the '07 Handbook:

Salty: top prospect in the Carolina league, improving defense and patience at the plate, best all-around minor league catcher. Similarly gifted to McCann.
Andrus: young for his league especially when considering most Latinos are still in their homeland @ 18 - players were on average four years older, 3 plus tools with a chance to further develop the other four, fluent, raw in offensive game
Harrison: in Double A before he was 21 (while performing well, so not "rushed"), comparison to Glavine legit, 3-starter potential
Jones: strong debut, wore down late, comparisons to Davies, needs work on change, ranked higher than Hanson
Feliz: twice as many Ks as hits allowed, might have more upside than any other pitcher in the system (a later Handbook mentions him as a potential #1)

It seems to me that most of this article compares where the Royals pick ups currently rank compared to where the players from the other trades currently rank as opposed to how they were thought of at the time of the trade... did the Royals pick up an Andrus (doubt it considering that Andrus has 2.5 years on Escobar - 20 months younger + in the bigs to stay a year earlier + Andrus had a good rookie year), a McCann clone, a 3-starter, a 5-starter and an ace? No. Neither did the Rangers, but in the days and weeks afterwards, it was believed they did.

I may be wrong and probably am wrong, but we have seen attrition hit the Rangers and compared it to the upside of the Royals acquisitions.

December 26, 2010 at 1:15 AM

Blogger benfunke said...

While I think this article is generally well-argued, I would counter that when you have a point to establish, it's easy to fall into the trap of saying, "oh, this guy is a better prospect than that guy" and then call it a "win". It doesn't seem like you've started from a position of neutrality/objectivity, and it's colored your analysis.

Such is clear with the wording of this:
"Even with his wreck of a rookie season, Escobar’s career slugging average of .335 is higher than Andrus’ .333"
Slugging .335 is NOT different an any meaningful way from .333, which is the kind of thing you would normally not overlook. Upon closer inspection, I think the point you are trying to make is that Escobar had a bad season, for him, and that even so it is about the same as Andrus's career. While that's not an outright mistake, I do think that it gives the Royals' player the benefit of the doubt without giving the other player the same benefit.

December 26, 2010 at 11:29 AM

Blogger Andrew said...

Maybe it's not fair, but I suspect most people are comparing the Greinke deal to the Bedard trade.

December 26, 2010 at 11:48 AM

Blogger Kevin G said...

It seems like you're saying that Andrus is what he is while Escobar can/is going to improve, which seems weird given that Andrus is a year and a half *younger* than Escobar.

December 26, 2010 at 1:07 PM

Blogger Andy G. said...

Thanks for the fine article. I guess I might be the only person who thinks that Greinke's comments after the trade were mildly scandalous, in particular the information that he withheld using certain pitches to save his arm for a more competitive team. As a fan I would have to ask now "Which Greinke as I seeing today? The one who cares? Doesn't care? Saving himself for his next team?", everytime he pitches. A lot of people found Greinke's sometimes off-putting comments like these to be refreshing, but I found them to be immature & self-centered at times. Such a casual attitude should also affect evaluations of any deal involving him, I believe. Baseball general managers, buyer beware! It will be one of the most interesting things in the new season, needless to say, to observe how he performs, whether or not the Brewers are in the race.

December 26, 2010 at 2:05 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Dave, how is that any worse than what the Brew Crew did to Sabbathia knowing he was leaving after the season?

After what I read in the other comments about what Yost said in regards to Cain v Melky, I really am an anti-Yost fan. Shit like that gets the Royals in the trouble they are currently in and have been in for a majority of my life. It reeks of protecting Howard over Conine, going with Long over Huber, Jacobs over KK.

December 26, 2010 at 2:41 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Antonio, you can't just hand Cain the starting spot. Creating competition is a good thing. If he came out and stated the job was Cain's then what does that do for Cabrera's motivation? He's leaving the door open for Cabrera so that hopefully he'll come to camp in shape. Then no matter who wins the starting spot the club will be improved overall.

December 26, 2010 at 2:50 PM

Blogger Rany said...

Fair comments regarding my treatment of Escobar and Andrus. My point is that Escobar can be fairly expected to improve upon his rookie season, both because it was out of line with his minor league record and because there's evidence that he was unlucky (his batting average on line drives was very low, for instance.)

Regarding Andrus, my perception might be colored by the fact that Kevin Goldstein has consistently been skeptical of Andrus' ability to hit for enough power to be a star shortstop in the majors. Certainly, given his age, Andrus probably does have some improvement left in him.

I highly doubt that, in the end, Escobar will have a comparable career to Andrus. I just think it will be close enough that the Royals might get enough from the other three players in the trade to balance, if not tip, the scales.

December 26, 2010 at 5:20 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Cabrera is a fat, less talented player that was promised a spot. Why say anything period? What motivation does Cabrera have now that he has not only been assured a starting role, but reassured? Cabs is not a 25-year old prospect with nothing more to prove. Cain is. Cain needs the reps. Heck, I wouldn't even give him Blanco's at bats. Cain is better. Our pathetic excuse for a rotation will need him in the field and at the plate much more so than Cabrera.

December 26, 2010 at 5:28 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

GooIt's been said many times that Escobar needs to hit .300 to be an effective hitter since he doesn't walk enough. I haven't looked at his LD% or his BABIP, but should we wonder if he'll be able to hit that number very consistently? I guess we have never had what Alcides Escobar represents at short...great glove and empty batting average and speed to burn. Previously it's been good glove and empty average and no speed, good glove and no stick, good glove and 70s MI stick and good speed.

December 26, 2010 at 5:36 PM

Blogger ScottM said...

@Antonio- Excellent point on the Teixeira trade and its perceived value at the time. Its easy to grade it down now after watching Saltamacchia flail (and fail too) so miserably.

@Rany- I have been really biting my tongue trying not to say much if any anything about this trade. But as the time passes I find that more and more impossible to do, so instead I tried to let you convince me that I was wrong about this deal, but it just ain't working.

Every player they acquired comes with some fairly serious question marks/baggage. Not the type of things that you should easily over look or worse yet ignore, which you seem to have done. I could (and most likely will at some point) go into detail on each of them but let's just look at Lorenzo Cain, because he was, initially, the guy I was most impressed with in the trade.

His defense is said to be above-average in CF. The metrics agree with that evaluation, but as you pointed out they don't have enough data to be considered accurate even by their most ardent defenders. However I am willing to accept them to be accurate and call him average to above in CF.

His partial season in the bigs was impressive at the plate, but again sample size is an issue so I delved into his minor league hitting. He got on base well, but never hit for any power. As you and most other sabremetricians have pointed out, these guys typically plateau as AAAA players. Good enough to tear up AAA but never quite good enough to be an everyday MLB player. The lack of power allows pitchers to go after them with no fear of a mistake hurting them.

Given what we know comes out of the the Teixeria trade, it is easy to argue that Cain should be a better player then any of them. However, its not that hard to imagine him being the Saltalamacchia of the trade either based on his prospects long term.

And that is just one example. Sadly of the guy that I still like as much or more as anyone in the deal.

December 26, 2010 at 8:58 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Antonio-Yes, he was promised a spot....on the roster. I highly doubt that he was guaranteed a spot in centerfield every day, though. I would bet he was guaranteed the chance to compete for that spot, and at the time we signed him, he was probably the favorite for it. Even as much as you obviously don't like Melky, it's apparent to me that he's still better than anything we had before him to play center.

That is, until the Cain trade. I agree that Cain should and probably will be the starting center fielder come Opening Day. But if Yost comes out and announces that Cain will in fact, be the starter, that takes a lot of motivation away from a guy like Melky. All Yost really said is he's not ready to annoint Cain the starter, and that Melky has to be given the shot to win the job, based on his experience at the ML level.

Really, you are reading WAY too much into Yost's comments. He has not guaranteed Melky the starting spot, like you seem to think he's done.

December 26, 2010 at 11:28 PM

Blogger Michael said...

I think a move to the AL will really help Escobar. A lot of times he was hitting in the 8th spot in Milwaukee, and was pitched around. Well, for a guy who doesn't like to walk, and the ability to put the bat on the ball, I think that really aided his lower than average LD% and BABIP. If he's swinging at pitches out of the strike zone and tapping them back to the pitcher, or whatever, then that will effect his average. Hitting in the AL with an actual hitter behind him, I think his numbers will improve quite a bit.

December 26, 2010 at 11:31 PM

Blogger Kenneth said...

You wrote this on Christmas and your wife let you get away with it ? Was she taking a nap ?

December 27, 2010 at 2:35 PM

Blogger Rany said...

Well, being a Muslim, Christmas isn't nearly the impediment to getting work done as it is for most Americans :)

Also, it helps that my wife and kids were in Miami visiting my in-laws. It's surprisingly easy to write 6000-word tracts when you're all alone and snowed in on a national holiday.

December 27, 2010 at 6:42 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

They promised the starting CF role to Ankiel. Seems very Moorian or Daytonian to promise a starting spot to get an underachieving veteran to sign. Yost's comments seem to at least suggest it.

December 27, 2010 at 9:05 PM

Blogger Michael said...

That's the one thing that the Royals have to offer some veterans. At the time they signed Melky they didn't have anyone else to really be an everyday center fielder. I agree that Melky would be a below average everyday center fielder, but he'd still be better than anyone else the Royals had on their roster at that time.

Now that we have Cain though, the Royals can't just call up Melky and say "I know we said you'd have a good chance to play every day, but now you're going to be our fourth outfielder." There are two big reasons not to do this...

1. The motivation thing I already talked about.

2. It's freaking December! Lots can happen between now and Opening Day (like injuries, for example).

Lets say Yost comes out and says Cain is our starting centerfielder, Francouer in right, and Gordon in left. That pisses Melky off, he stops training, and comes to camp even more fat and out of shape than normal. You've just weakened your team, especially if someone does get injured.

But hey, if it makes the fans feel good in December, then I guess it's ok, right?

December 27, 2010 at 10:00 PM

Blogger Andrew said...

Making sure Melky Cabrera improves is going to be key to the Royals' future success. Put that one in the bank. I know that the vast majority of elite athletes see that someone who plays the same position as them join the team and immediately think: "Fuck it, I'm just gonna quit. That is how I got here to the pinnacle of my profession, by quitting."

Add in the comment that we had no one to play CF when Gregor Blanco was acceptable [both OBP and Defensively] for a team that should lose about 95 games and you have a lack of knowledge about the Royals' roster.

December 27, 2010 at 10:47 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Wow, Gregor Blanco? Really?? If you're Dayton Moore, you're going to be happy if Gregor Blanco is your starting center fielder?? Espcecially when you can get a cheap, better, and younger player with a lot more MLB experience?? Wow, you show a lack of baseball knowledge, much less the Royals roster.

Also, Gregor Blanco is actually slightly below average defensively, according to both Fangraphs and Baseball Reference. So really, his only discernable tool is the ability to take a walk occasionally. While that is something that many Royals players lack, it's not good when it's the ONLY tool a player has.

December 27, 2010 at 11:30 PM

Blogger Michael said...

And Melky has shown in his career he needs that extra motivation. He's not a self motivator, or else he wouldn't have fattened up like he has. So yes, when he sees another (more) talented centerfielder join the roster, and the manager comes out and says you're gonna ride the bench, then yeah, it probably does take away his motivation.

And you may mock that he is the key to our future, but you never know. No one thought Rick Ankiel would help the Royals at all, but yet he brought us Tim Collins in trade (along with Farnsworth and cash). Same with Scott Podsednik, etc. Heck, GMDM was even able to find someone to give him something for Jose Guillen...

December 27, 2010 at 11:40 PM

Blogger Nathan said...

The balance of this article is strong, and I think the Greinke trade is a good decision by Moore. But I also think Rany is getting a little carried away in suggesting that we got as much for Greinke as the Rangers got for Tiexiera. In fact, I'd trade all four players the Royals got from Milwaukee for Feliz and Andrus straight up. If Texas offered that trade (and they won't), would you turn it down? If not, then the Royals didn't get as much for their star as Texas did, simple as that.

Also, Feliz would be fine as a starter, so being a reliever doesn't damage his trade value. If you're looking for a fair comp for Feliz in the Royals' system, that player isn't Jeremy Jeffress, it's Joakim Soria.

I also disagree with the claim, made in some of the comments, that trades should be evaluated based on perceived value at the time of the trade rather than on the actual performance of the prospects received. If this were true, teams should just fire all their pro scouts. But of course, it is not. The Royals' goal in every trade should be to acquire players who are actually better than they seem to be. The same is true for every team. So the standard for evaluating a trade is the actual ability of the players acquired, not some sort of consensus among baseball writers about how they "should" perform. Baseball is a game of partly asymmetric information.

December 28, 2010 at 12:32 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

I'd take Blanco/Maier over Melky. Some free agents you promise certain things to. The ones the Royals sign, you simply do not. So what if we didn't sign Melky. It wouldn't make any noticeable difference.


My point is why does Yost have to say anything? My point is how many times have we seen the Royals put a lot more emphasis on experience than what it deserves? I'd take a real player's experience every single day. But Melky? Is he any reason that any team he's ever played on won? He's not. What's he going to do? Tell Moustakas how A-Rod did it? (No, you don't jab it in there! Let me show you!)

December 28, 2010 at 3:17 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

@ Nathan

If you are comparing a trade just made to a trade made X years ago, you have to go on perception at the time. It's not exactly fair to compare the potential of the KC-MIL deal to the attrition of the Tex-Atl deal. The Rangers didn't trade Teix for a starting shortstop and a closer even though that's what they got. And the Royals traded Greinke for a starting shorstop, starting centerfielder, a #2 starter and a set-up or closer relief pitcher, but that's not what they're going to get.

December 28, 2010 at 8:45 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Yost was asked a question by a reporter, that's why he had to say something. And all he really said was that they (Cain and Melky) would battle for the starting spot. I just don't see the harm in that. Now, if Cabrera is starting in center over a healthy Cain come April, then yes, I would be upset. Unless, of course, Melky came to camp in shape and had a great spring. But I'd put the chances of that happening at about 10%. :)

But I do agree with you about looking at the Texas deal and the Royals deal you have to look at the perceptions of both at the time of the trade, cause that's the only thing we have to judge the KC deal on right now. I do think, though, that if the guys that the Royals got ALL work out the way we all hope, then we did do better than Texas. Although, like you, I doubt that all 4 will work out to perfection.

December 28, 2010 at 9:05 PM

Blogger ScottM said...

@ Antonio- Right on target again. It's simple to look back at the Teix trade and knowing now how the players work out to down grade it. But when comparing the trades, we have to look at the perceived value because at this point that is all we have on the Greinke deal.

As said in my previous response, I have been spending time evaluating each guy for his strengths/weaknesses. I can present the strengths, as I see them for each, but really there is no need to since Rany already has. I broke down the weaknesses on Cain as example. The other guys are bit harder because of their perceived value currently. In looking at Escobar, a hand full of things stand out.

His defense is said to be awesome, even to the point that I have heard/read some saying that he is the best defensive SS in the AL right now. Let's hope that is truly the case. With him, there are some serious concerns.

First, can he hit at all? Like many of his peers (Latin American SS), he has never seen a pitch he doesn't want to swing at. Therefor he is not going to draw hardly any walks. That ties almost all of his offensive value to BA which is fluxuates so much from season to season based on luck. He does have a minor league track record of a decent amount of pop though so he MIGHT bring a little to the table there.

Second and more important, are the "character issues" concerned that some writers have brought up. Normally I wouldn't care much (and in Jeffress's case I don't at all), but the same thing seems to be repeated by a lot guys. Almost to a man, they question his "make up." Again not a major concern, except that last season was his first failure at any level. How will he handle/deal with it? Will go Alex Gordon on us and say he is going to be great but do nothing to prove it or change to make it happen? Or will he pull a George Brett and get with Seitzer like George did Lau and become a better player for it? We just don't know, but when "make up" questions come out, I typically lean towards the former as the end result.

December 29, 2010 at 7:25 AM

Blogger George said...

Rany - can we get a post (when you get a second) about the pro's/con's of dealing the Mexicutioner? Is now the time to move him with multiple teams looking for bullpen help? MLB Trade Rumors suggests the Yankees offered us Jesus Montero for him last July. Would Montero be enough, in your mind, to get a deal done? Who are some other pieces that the Royals might be interested in from other teams?

Thanks!

December 29, 2010 at 8:55 AM

Blogger John said...

If the Royals are serious about competing in 2012, then trading Soria is a bad move. If they're in contention then, having one of the best closers in baseball under team control through 2014--on a friendly contract--would be quite helpful.

There's no need to trade him now and make a run at the '62 Mets in 2011 and then blowing the AL Central in '13 because you blew a bunch of games with no closer.

December 29, 2010 at 11:38 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

We do realize that for the Royals to compete, they will need to not only hit on a huge number of these prospects but also have them come out of the gate running like a flock of RoYs, right..? For me, 2012 is about a mass exodus of graduating players in...garbage players out. Not to mention the inevitable leash Yosty will put on them initially. Seems to me like fans are expecting them all to post at least 3.0 WARs. There will be some Gordons, some Butlers that need demotions, some Beltrans, some Avileses that shock the world by playing much higher than their skill level.

December 29, 2010 at 2:53 PM

Blogger George said...

Realistically, we're not going to be competitive until 2013 in the best-case scenario. Soria's only under contract until 2014. By then, who knows, Jeremy Jeffres could be the stopper of the future. Otherwise, we have a stable of live arms in the minors that is sure to produce viable bullpen options. If we can deal Soria now for a blue-chip prospect like Montero, why not do the deal? Montero could be a big part of competing well beyond 2014.

December 29, 2010 at 3:03 PM

Blogger Kenneth said...

You would have thought I would have remembered Christmas was not as big a deal at your house after throughly enjoying reading your "Abd el-Kader and the Massacre of Damascus." Post.

In my defense Christmas is still a busy sports day for a sports fan to be researching & typing versus watching :-)

I would like your take on the suggestion thta just Nefali Perez and Elvis Andrus today would be a better package then what the Royals rec'd. I would agree with Nathans suggestion; both that I would take that trade over the four prospects the Royals rec'd and no way Texas would offer it for four prospects. But would they have offered it for Zach after missing on Cliff Lee ?

I do not think I am on the pessimistic side when I say I would have to agree Antonio. You are wearing rose colored glasses when it comes to these prospects. By definition a certain percentage of prospects fail. How will this trade look in 3 years if all we have is a SS with speed that hits .265/.325/.345 plays above avg defense and a middle relief pitcher ?

I realize now that Zach did not wish to perform as a #1 starter here in KC so his trade value would only go down after another year of underperforming relative to his ability. The problem with letting go of Zach is pitchers like him don't grow on trees. Not every major league team can say they have a legit ACE, a surefire #1 starter. Guys like that are rare. I mean really how many would you count in or above his class in the whole leauge ?

Jered Weaver
King Felix
Lincecum
Jon Lester
Roy Halladay
Justin Verlander
Dan Haren
Ubaldo Jimenez
Adam Wainright
Chris Carpenter
Clayton Kershaw
Cole Hamels
CC Sabathia
Cliff Lee
David Price
Josh Johnson
Johan Santana

Even after his less than Cy Young season of 2010 I think everyone in baseball would agree he is one of the top 20 pitchers in baseball. The last time I checked there are 30 teams. So even without Philly hogging all the good pitchers that would still leave at least 10 teams without a bon-a-fide #1 starter. My point is it's a rare commodity. The Royals used to have one, now they don't.

And I can't stop thinking about what you said Rany. He would have loved to stay a Royal if the Royals would have just stopped sucking. In today's game that is the rarest of all gems. Fair or not it is probably in that context I view this as such an awful failure of a trade. Thank you for this article and for trying to cheer up all Royals fans but I just can't be happy about this trade.

December 29, 2010 at 7:52 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Love the discussion in the comments. I tend to agree with the notion that the prospects look promising. My problem is that I still can't get over the premise that he "had to be traded". This is the weakest part of the post in my opinion Rany. All I have seen is quotes about how Zack was unhappy. Well I was unhappy too watching the team. Except when I was able to watch him pitch. Now that time is gone. When do these teams that trade for prospects end up winning championships? I still believe Dayton failed in his duty to convince Zack that he should stay. Rany, can you find an instance where a team kept their star player and ended up doing well?

December 30, 2010 at 1:18 AM

Blogger Michael said...

q-Most people credit the Rangers trade of Mark Teixiera for helping them make the World Series this year. The Minnesota Twins traded Johan Santana for scraps, but that still hasn't stopped them from contending every year.

I don't think we're getting scraps, and I don't think we'll end up with as good a deal as Texas got either. I think we'll end up with 2 average-average plus everyday players, 1 good relief pitcher, possible future closer, and one rotation guy, maybe a 3 or 4. Of course, this is if no one sustains any major injuries that derail their career, or any other major setbacks.

Sure, I'd still love to have Greinke instead, but he wasn't willing to put out the effort to live up to his contract, which would have severely diminished his trade value even more if we waited till July or next offseason.

December 30, 2010 at 11:13 AM

Blogger Michael said...

Antonio-We don't need to hit on a huge number of these prospects. We have a bunch of big time prospects now, so we actually can hit on less than usual and still be competitive in a few years. I do agree that 2012 may not be the year of contention. I think 2012 will be a very interesting year with the possibility of being good, if a few of these prospects light the world on fire right away.

2013-2014 is more realistic in terms of winning divisions. Which, coincidentally, are the final 2 years of Soria's contract. I am strongly behind the idea of keeping him here for those times. He would be a very integral part of The Process at that point. If Dayton believes in The Process himself, which I'm sure he does since he's orchestrating it, he should keep him. If we are competitive by that point, then it shouldn't be too hard to re-sign him again.

December 30, 2010 at 11:18 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

I was meaning 2012. Many people are talking about 2012 like it is a foregone conclusion that we make the playoffs. Many smart people are saying that...I think it's too much to ask for. We'll be vastly improved by the sheer number of talented youth coming up, but my mind won't let my hope get higher than .500. 2012 is the next step and that step is graduation. I meant to put compete in 2012, not just compete.

Also the Twins had always been a much more balanced team than the traditionally offensive-first Rangers. They couldn't replace Santana but they continued developing #2 and #3 starters and Mauer/Cuddyer/Span have continued growing.

December 30, 2010 at 1:09 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Need....another......post.....

Going......insane......

January 4, 2011 at 7:54 PM

Blogger George said...

Can we also address the Royals rotation heading into 2011? Hochevar, Davies, Mazzaro and O'Sullivan, but who else? I've heard Danny Duffy might get a shot. I've heard Everett Teaford is a possibility. What about the possibility of moving Tejada back to the rotation? He looked good two years ago. Jerry Crasnick reported today that the Royals are in on Jeff Francis. I know he didn't pitch last year because of arm surgery, but he seems like a great option and is still young...

January 5, 2011 at 2:29 PM

Blogger George said...

Forgot we just signed Zach Miner to a minor league deal. Any chance he's the 5th man in the rote?

January 5, 2011 at 4:25 PM

Blogger bbxpert said...

My guess is right now that Hochevar, Mazzaro, and Davies are rotation locks. I am hoping that the other 2 spots are wide open and that a couple of the young guys will step in and grab the job. I want these guys to make it tough for the Royals to send them down.

January 5, 2011 at 5:34 PM

Blogger Michael said...

There is a new rumor that they are also looking at Carl Pavano.

January 5, 2011 at 8:23 PM

Blogger George said...

Not sure why we'd be interested in Pavano other than to trade him for prospects at the deadline. That said, we certainly have the $ to pay him now that Greinke and Guillen are off the books. Speaking of, next year, when we no longer have Meche's contract, are we going to be able to supplement our young roster with some solid veterans (SP? RP? C?). Who might we look at?

January 6, 2011 at 8:40 AM

Blogger Michael said...

If we signed Pavano, it would most likely be a 3 year deal, meaning he most likely wouldn't be traded this winter. He'd be under contract through 2013, so he'd really just be a stopgap until all the young ones are ready. Not a bad stopgap either, although probably costly (I'd guess 24-27 mill over the 3 years). I'd be on the fence if they went through with it.

January 6, 2011 at 11:38 AM

Blogger George said...

Not saying we'd trade him this winter or even this year's trade deadline. However, in another year or two, when he's down to one-two years remaining on his deal, I could see us shopping him around to a contender. Seems to me that Pavano would want to go to a contender. Why not just save our money these next couple years and be able to actually sign some of our home-grown talent to long-term deals?

January 6, 2011 at 2:24 PM

Blogger Kenneth said...

reaction to the haul Tampa Bay got from the Cubs for Matt Garza compared to what the Royals got for Greinke ?

January 8, 2011 at 1:55 AM

Blogger Scott said...

It is being reported that Moore has turned down a trade of Soria for Jesus Montero and Eduardo Nunez from the Yankees. This trade would make sense to me and I'd like to see it happen. What say you, Rany?

January 11, 2011 at 2:31 PM

Blogger bbxpert said...

The Greinke trade made sense, but why would you want to trade Soria? The best closer in the game and inexpensive. You can't continually trade for prospects. You have to keep some guys that are already there.

January 11, 2011 at 6:01 PM

Blogger Michael said...

I agree bbxpert. Just because a guy could bring a good haul of prospects doesn't mean he should be traded. Remember, these are "prospects," guys who haven't proven anything yet. Soria is already a proven commodity on a VERY team friendly deal. And his contract runs through 2014, and we should hopefully be competitive in both 2013 and 2014. I'd hate to get there and miss out on the playoffs by a game or two because we don't have a solid closer.

January 11, 2011 at 6:16 PM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

This blog does not allow anonymous comments.

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.