Chris should be thankful Wren even gave him that guaranteed contract.
After spending the offseason knowing the Braves were trying to trade him, Chris Johnson has spent the past few months gaining reason to believe he is no longer wanted in Atlanta.
Classic Bowman.
Read that article and to me it came across as him bashing the front office
LMAOWell, if he wants to be traded then the front office he should bash should be Wren's front office. He's the one who gave him an unmovable contract. Look Chris, if you are really that unhappy then volunteer your ass out of that contract you didn't earn. Guess he's not all that unhappy after all.
I never defend professional athletes, but he's 100 percent right. The front office is dicking him around and they deserve to be treated as such.
Would you guys rather that he said that he'd prefer to stay?
I never defend professional athletes, but he's 100 percent right. The front office is dicking him around and they deserve to be treated as such.
At risk of starting a pile-on on the Wren tenure, while a relatively minor move, this is the one move that puzzled me then and still puzzles me now.
Unforced error. And an expensive one. The only explanation of sorts I can come up with is that the arbitration process overvalues players whose value is mainly embodied on their batting average. And if Johnson had continued with a high BABIP (and batting average) and mediocre defense, walk rates, power, etc., then he would have ended up being overpayed in arbitration.
But there were some warning flags that should have made Wren very cautious. Johnson fits the profile of players who do not age well. Not athletic and arrived late in the majors. Dan Uggla fit the same profile. But BJ did not. We bid against ourselves and overpaid for BJ. But he had a profile that suggested a better aging curve than Uggla and CJ. With Uggla and CJ the risk factors were obvious.
Unforced error. And an expensive one. The only explanation of sorts I can come up with is that the arbitration process overvalues players whose value is mainly embodied on their batting average. And if Johnson had continued with a high BABIP (and batting average) and mediocre defense, walk rates, power, etc., then he would have ended up being overpayed in arbitration.
But there were some warning flags that should have made Wren very cautious. Johnson fits the profile of players who do not age well. Not athletic and arrived late in the majors. Dan Uggla fit the same profile. But BJ did not. We bid against ourselves and overpaid for BJ. But he had a profile that suggested a better aging curve than Uggla and CJ. With Uggla and CJ the risk factors were obvious.
CJ was the "find" that Wren needed. He was a throw in that nobody really new who surprised with his play. With all the crashings and burnings that Wren had going on (Uggla, BJ) Wren needed CJ around as a talking point regarding his usefulness as GM.
I also think he got into "extend everybody" mode and CJ ended up in the line because of the above.