Braves release Freddy Garcia / Sign Aaron Harang

lol we cut a guy with an 85 mph fastball and suddenly Liberty is public enemy #1 again. Our scouts probably told Wren that everyone in our AAA rotation is a better option than Garcia
 
lol we cut a guy with an 85 mph fastball and suddenly Liberty is public enemy #1 again. Our scouts probably told Wren that everyone in our AAA rotation is a better option than Garcia

Yea, I'm sure his price-tag hurt him in terms of the Braves' roster calculus, but I think the decision was based as much on performance potential as it was on fiduciary constraints—a likelihood reflected in O'Brien's note on the dismissal:

But the Braves thought Garcia, 37, had lost too much on his fastball and other pitches to justify spending $1.25 million

There's a salient distinction between being able to afford something and thinking something is worth something.
 
I don't get this, could Schlosser have been that impressive? He was the top guy on Mississippi's staff last year.
 
Mark Bowman ‏@mlbbowman 4m

Wren's explanation for releasing Garcia didn't make much sense. But there's no doubt he's hoping to acquire a better option this week
 
Mark Bowman ‏@mlbbowman 4m

Wren's explanation for releasing Garcia didn't make much sense. But there's no doubt he's hoping to acquire a better option this week

Does Bowman elaborate?

From what I've read, Wren et al simply did not expect Garcia to perform at a level that would justify a $1.25-million guarantee. If that's gist of Wren's "explanation" then it makes a lot of sense to me.
 

And yet Varvaro's limited stat line is better than Gearrin's over the past three seasons. I don't cotton much to either Varvaro or Gearrin, but this impression that Gearrin is somehow the second coming of Dan Quissenberry is a bit ridiculous.

I agree with purplebrave. My only caveat is that a win in April equals a win in August, so if Garcia's experience could net a couple of wins early, they would count in the standings. However, the season goes well beyond April and, while one can't prove the negative, there's nothing that leads me to believe he'd get better as the season wears on and Hale, Schlosser, or someone else might.

I think Wren is going to watch the waiver wire closely, especially for a bullpen arm or two. But this rending of clothing and gnashing of teeth over Garcia is kind of amusing.
 
lol we cut a guy with an 85 mph fastball and suddenly Liberty is public enemy #1 again. Our scouts probably told Wren that everyone in our AAA rotation is a better option than Garcia

Exactly. Don't see the problem with this one.
 
I don't get this, could Schlosser have been that impressive? He was the top guy on Mississippi's staff last year.

Now the Braves will have a month or so to evaluate first-hand both Hale's and Schlosser's abilities to start at the major-league level, and even longer to evaluate whichever one they leave in the rotation as fifth-starter until Floyd is ready.

While there is some risk over the first several weeks of the season, with respect to 2014 regular-season record—and I think such risk is probably overstated, since the alternative of giving Garcia starts also carried ample risk—this key evaluation period could be huge in planning for the 2015 rotation and beyond (when the likely departures of Santana and Floyd, and the uncertainty respective to the recoveries and contract-retention of Medlen and Beachy, will present Wren with a lot of difficult decisions). Meanwhile, if either Hale or Schlosser—or both—pitches very well, suddenly the Braves have more attractive pieces for mid-season tweaks; and whether they do pitch well or they don't, each pitcher will have gained experience in case subsequent injuries force the Braves to call upon them again, either this year or next.

All for the low, low price of not paying Freddy Garcia a guaranteed $1.25-million.

Really, in my mind, the more angles from which you view Garcia's release, the more sense it makes.
 
Now the Braves will have a month or so to evaluate first-hand both Hale's and Schlosser's abilities to start at the major-league level, and even longer to evaluate whichever one they leave in the rotation as fifth-starter until Floyd is ready.

While there is some risk over the first several weeks of the season, with respect to 2014 regular-season record—and I think such risk is probably overstated, since the alternative of giving Garcia starts also carried ample risk—this key evaluation period could be huge in planning for the 2015 rotation and beyond (when the likely departures of Santana and Floyd, and the uncertainty respective to the recoveries and contract-retention of Medlen and Beachy, will present Wren with a lot of difficult decisions). Meanwhile, if either Hale or Schlosser—or both—pitches very well, suddenly the Braves have more attractive pieces for mid-season tweaks; and whether they do pitch well or they don't, each pitcher will have gained experience in case subsequent injuries force the Braves to call upon them again, either this year or next.

All for the low, low price of not paying Freddy Garcia a guaranteed $1.25-million.

Really, in my mind, the more angles from which you view Garcia's release, the more sense it makes.

Signing him is what didn't make sense.
 
Its going to be tough to be in the playoff hunt if the rotation is Teheran, Wood, Santana, Hale, Schlosser for very long.
 
Its going to be tough to be in the playoff hunt if the rotation is Teheran, Wood, Santana, Hale, Schlosser for very long.

Agreed. But no different than if you swapped Garcia for Schlosser (just more expensive).
 
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