Horsehide Harry
<B>Mr. Free Trade</B>
Strictly a stab in the dark on my part, but the only thing I've been able to attribute the inclusion of Peraza to is that they insisted he be in the deal IF we wanted the arms we got plus the pick. I haven't read that specific comment anywhere, but it's the only thing that would seem to make any sense. Both organizations' hype machines worked their regular magic, and I'd assume the Dodgers correctly read our internal reservations about Peraza - many here had long pointed out the concerns about his ability to succeed as strictly a slap-hitter, and that success would be tougher against the more advanced pitching.
I just assume that they (the Dodgers) already knew Olivera was going to have a tough time sticking on the dirt, and that (if nothing else) Peraza could be a REALLY good super-utility guy for them. Call it being a "Johns-Apologist" or whatever someone likes - I think the deal was pretty even overall. We got a bat (that we desperately needed) that we were really high on, regardless of where he plays. We also got two arms with high ceilings PLUS a pick that will fall in the range where we got Herbert and Riley. I know everybody's getting tired of hearing about pitching, pitching, pitching, but it's just what the organization has always done well. What it breaks down to (for me) is Wood for Olivera, (the maddening at times) Avilan and Johnson for Rodriguez and Bird (both with significantly higher upsides and longer control), and Peraza for the draft pick. For me - IF we hit on the draft pick, it's at worst a wash. Just an educated guess, but I feel like the organization's committed to giving Peterson the chance to prove himself this season without looking over his shoulder at Peraza. If he can improve and Albies continues to grow and can be fast tracked, you've put yourself in position to see if someone will significantly overpay for Andrelton.
I don't mean to badmouth yet another former Brave, but I just don't think the organization viewed Peraza as a legitimate option at SS.
I think this is more illusion than reality. The Braves reputation as a pitching organization was built on the backs of Maddux (FA signee), Smoltz (trade), Glavine (2nd round), Millwood (mid round), etc.
A lot of the really early re-build first rounders such as Avery, Merker, etc paid dividends but they should have been expected to do that.
What the Braves have been really good at is developing significant quantity of pitching, not really quality, but that should be expected with an organizational philosophy that has leaned heavily to pitching...