Braves, Astros, and Twins known to be interested.
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I definitely do not want to get in to a bidding war for Jason Castro. It defeats the purpose
Food for thought regarding Sale and Archer trade values:
Matt
12:12 Would Jorge Soler, Eloy Jimenez, Jeimer Candelario, and a Low A pitcher be enough for Chris Archer?
Dave Cameron
12:12 No.
CT
12:17 Would Moncada, ERod, Devers plus low level prospects be close for Sale?
Dave Cameron
12:18 Depends on what low level prospects mean, but that probably gets the conversation going, at the minimum.
But yeah, that's the kind of package it would take, probably.
Kris
12:28 Should the Braves be going after Sale, Gray, Archer etc.? Those are gut the farm system type trade targets...why would they do that given their current spot on the rebuild curve?
Dave Cameron
12:29 They clearly want to move up their timetable to win, but also, I wouldn't take these rumors too seriously. It costs them nothing to make a phone call and find out what the asking price is. I don't think we'll actually see them make that kind of win-now trade this winter.
TJ
1:06 Puig, Pederson, De Leon and Verdugo for Chris Sale?
Dave Cameron
1:06 CHW does that. LA does not.
Guest
1:08 If you're the Astros, do you dangle Alex Bregman in a deal for Sale or Archer? I love the guy, but it seems like it'd be real easy to just slide Gurriel over to 3B
Dave Cameron
1:08 No, I'd hang on to Bregman.
Right. The point of Castro is that he is a cheap 1-2 WAR player with additional framing value. As soon as he ceases to be cheap he is no longer desirable.
I don't think we'll get Sale, but one thing that increases the likelihood is if we knew he'd sign a pseudo extension..He's vastly underpaid with 3 years left on his deal. There's a chance he could be open to adding on 2-3 years at market price. Maybe a team could tear up that 3/38 contract he has left and offer him something like 6/125. The reason you don't go after free agent pitchers is you only get a few good years and overpay. This could be a situation where it's worth it....if you knew he and his agent were open to that kind of deal.
Frazier is a rental though and if you look at his stats outside of power, he's been pretty bad
I'm trying to figure out in what universe Rick Porcello deserves to win over Verlander. Verlander was better in every category.
In absolutely none. Rick Porcello had a very good season, but the numbers don't lie -- Verlander was much better.
Also, that was one of the most attractively aggresive tweets that I've ever seen.
He's a clear upgrade at 3B and wouldn't cost much. Don't know his contract situation though.
22-4, 223 innings, 3.15 era, 3.40 fip, 5.2 fWAR
16-9, 227 innings, 3.04 era, 3.48 fip, 5.2 fWAR
Both had great seasons and were deserving of the Cy Young.
Kate's problem was two voters not having him on their ballot - meaning they didn't have her boy in their top five. And she's right.
I'm not really advocating going after anyone as it's all relative to the package required. However, I'm not a fan of the terms like "go for it" "gut the farm system". I don't think it's that cut and dry. You should always be looking to deal from an area of surplus for an area of need.
If we had 3 pitchers who could anchor our rotation for the next 3 years that would allow us a lot of flexibility. We could cherry pick the arms coming up since we'd only need 2 spots to fill (maybe even one if you're ok with a swingman or reclomation project vet as the #5) and you'd be able to trade the rest for hitting. In 2-3 years when the meat of our SP prospect depth is ready we'd be able to trade away guys like Julio/Folty/acquired young starter for prospects to replenish your depth. Tampa Bay has mastered this and that's with no budget.
We're also going to continue to draft more pitching and make trades like flipping Colon and Dickey in July for even more young pitching.
Once again, I'm not advocating anything without knowing the details, but I don't agree with the sentiment that you stop building the farm when you start trying to win. It takes a little more outside of the box thinking and more work like trading hitting for pitching and then trading pitching for hitting, but it can be done. I like how Coppy said "We're buying and selling". That's a stockbroker attitude and that's essentially what this is in it's simplest terms.