Julio3000
<B>A Chip Off the Old Rock</B>
Only in Atlanta do we bring in a player with considerable potential on a cheap contract and it become an immovable albatross contract before we even get out of April.
Yeah, talk about the reverse Midas touch.
Only in Atlanta do we bring in a player with considerable potential on a cheap contract and it become an immovable albatross contract before we even get out of April.
Olivera’s trade value is so low that one executive whose club was approached by the Braves told Passan that he “can’t believe they even asked.”
It must be a lot of fun to make those phone calls to the other teams. I wonder who gets to make them. And who issued the instruction to call the other teams. And how much of his salary are we offering to pay.
I'm guessing some intern got to make those calls. Sounds like a great way to haze the new new guy.
Coppy to new guy "Hey great to have you on board, first thing I need you to do is make a few phone calls about a possible trade."
Only in Atlanta do we bring in a player with considerable potential on a cheap contract and it become an immovable albatross contract before we even get out of April.
I thought the South was into redemption and all that jazz.
I'm in Minnesota.
Just watch. We'll release him. He'll find "the Lawd." He'll go somewhere else and hit .300 with 20 HRs.
I thought the South was into redemption and all that jazz.
Yeah, talk about the reverse Midas touch.
We develop some guys sure, then their elbow hurts or their pecker falls off.
I understand making the calls. I'm sure Coppy was pretty sure it was hopeless before making them but you have to do your due diligence. The Braves had a completely irrational love for this guy, maybe some other team is still over the moon. Unlikely but the Dodgers did manage to pawn him off on us so it's not impossible we could do the same.
I think this is a precursor to us releasing him. We had to check to see if anyone had even the slightest interest in him before eating his contract.
The thing that gets to me is just the magnitude of failure here. We weren't even close to right about Olivera in any way. We thought he'd be a good thirdbaseman, he can't even play the position. We thought he'd bring power to the lineup, he's a punch and judy hitter. We thought he'd be a line drive machine, he's a ground ball and pop up machine. We thought he'd be a mature professional since he wasn't a kid, he promptly gets arrested.
The front office was absolutely convinced they were right on this guy. The trumpeted the amount of work they had done scouting Olivera. It's just shocking how wrong they were.
Honestly Coppy should have been fired for making that trade.
Even if you bought the idea that Olivera was a good player who was worth trading major assets for... trading for a 30 year old guy in the early stages of a rebuild was just... really stupid
Going by that logic he should have been promoted to JS's position with the Shelby Miller trade.
The Olivera trade was a set back, but I think we tend to overestimate the long term ramifications of these things.
Honestly Coppy should have been fired for making that trade.
Even if you bought the idea that Olivera was a good player who was worth trading major assets for... trading for a 30 year old guy in the early stages of a rebuild was just... really stupid