zitothebrave
Connoisseur of Minors
Fredi. Uggla, and BJ come to mind.
Who would trade for BJ? Uggla you may find a taker but who would trade for BJ? Thats not even a remotely fair criticism.
Fredi. Uggla, and BJ come to mind.
If you want to knock Wren, knock him for keeping people around who should've been fired/traded already.
Let's talk about what he's done since getting his current contract.
How was the Francoeur trade bad? Or the Escobar trade? They were trades that had to happen because of sucking and in Escobar's case a player who pissed off a hall of fame manager.
Part of the problem with Fredi is he hasn't lost. Until Wren is on the hot seat, Fredi will stay here. Hell he may stay ehre longer than Wren who knows how his ties with JS are.
The 3 years prior to Uggla coming to Atlanta he had a 855 OPS and averaged 32 homers a year. That's not worth what he's currently getting paid?
One can hope. But the Braves are fiercely loyal. And Fredi has a winning record with the Bravos. Of course Fredi inherited a team with Jason Heyward, Freddie Freeman, Chipper Jones, Martin Prado, Tim Hudson, etc.
You aren't paying for the three years prior, you are paying for the future. There was much consternation at the time re: giving a 2B in his 30s a 5 year deal, given the history of 2B collapses in that time frame. And what do you know...
I didn't think Uggla would be this bad, of course, but I also am not a handsomely-compensated GM, with access to analytical and scouting departments, whose job it is to know these things.
Yeah that Ryan Church trade wasn't bad..tell me again which player is still playing baseball at the major league level.
A bit more research would dig that almost all players fall off in their 30s. For some reason 2B are singled out but with a few exceptions (and I think those exceptions are usually body types and work ethic types or freaks) most players start falling off after 30 and fall pretty fast in thr it mid 30s. I compared a sample of 1b and 2b and both groups showed some serious decline, 1b being more harsh. Signing free agents who're old to long deals is bad business regardless of position.
The second Tex trade sucked, but no one thought Kotchman would be that bad.
That wasn't really the point, though. Even if Kotchman had maintained his LAA production (career OPS+ ~100), it would have been a bad trade because he didn't have much upside. We got nothing for the future in that trade.
As always, I trust your independent research implicitly, Zito.
There are a couple rough rules of thumb for predicting how players will age.
1) Athleticism, which can mainly be judged by defense and base running. The more athletic guys age better.
2) Late arrivers to the majors also tend to age more quickly.
These two rules are not 100% accurate, but they have validity. Both were red flags with respect to Uggla.
Interestingly, these same indicators suggested BJ was not at risk for a rapid decline. We overpaid for BJ, but at the time the issue seemed more one of dollars than years. With Uggla it seemed apparent at the time of the extension that the main risk was the length of the extension.
I will say that I think Wren took risks with Uggla and BJ in areas where there was a gap in what the farm system was providing. At the time of the Uggla trade and extension we had a need for a right-handed power hitter and a left fieldier. Uggla filled both, though indirectly with Prado moving to left. Also the off-season Wren signed BJ there was a clear need for a center fielder. There was discussion about the pros and cons of Bourn, BJ, Victorino, Hamilton and Pagan. All those guys carried risk. So far Victorino has been the one that looks good. But that's with hindsight. I don't recall a big pro-Victorino contingent on the old board that off-season. My recollection is that the BJ signing was generally met with enthusiasm, though some of us thought the price was a bit high. But then the price is usually high when you dabble in the FA market.
It is worth noting that the poster who started this thread (unless I have him confused with someone else) advocated either Ellsbury or Sizemore as acquisitions this off-season as solutions to our problems in center. I look forward to seeing how that works out.
The trade for McLouth and Uggla were good ones. They just didn't perform. Texeira trade was terrible, but was under JS, not Wren.
weso, I agree we needed a RH power hitter, but to play with an analogy here, if you need a car, you don't pay Lincoln Continental prices for what may amount to a Dodge Dart (I have gotten a bit histrionic with that comparison. Uggla is better than a Dodge Dart.). It was a time for Wren to get creative and he didn't do that. There are a ton of guys out there who kill LHP and he could have found a platoon partner at a position on the field to fill the gap the Braves had. I don't think there is any question that Wren had a man crush on Uggla and that's what tipped the scales.