GovClintonTyree
<B>Vencer a Los Doyers</B>
Rich Hill has won 38 games in 12 years. I'm not giving him a big-ass three year deal. Hell, he missed six weeks this year.
I agree. Everyone understands the need for a rebuild at the beginning but get a year or two of terrible baseball and everyone starts looking for ways to cut corners.
No one likes to watch crap baseball. But when you sign up for a rebuild it's inevitable. And when you decide to get out of the boat in the middle of a crossing it doesn't end well.
As for Hill, I mentioned that I understand the injury concerns (and don't disagree completely with anyone who gets scared off by it), but spending on him this winter would accomplish several things that fit what many agree should be strong considerations.
No long-term commitment, and wouldn't block anyone that happened to take steps forward. If the light happened to completely come on for Folty or Newcomb in the next couple of years and they become that #1/#2 type SP that their stuff says they can be, there's not going to be a concern about "Hmmm, I wonder if we can get anything of value for Hill?" Those that love the idea of the perpetual rebuild ought to like that too. Hill and Reddick landed Oakland Cotton, Holmes, and Montas. Hill was the biggest part of that deal, and likely got two of those three alone. So let's play "homer" and assume Folty becomes a legit #2 and at least one of Wisler/Blair/Newcomb takes enough of a step forward to cement themselves in the rotation. If the offense can't keep performing and we're sellers in June, let everyone know Hill's in play and get more prospects. Call Theo and Jed - "You want to go back-to-back? Send me Eloy Jimenez and Jeimer Candelario and your playoff rotation becomes Lester/Arrieta/Hill". If we're not sniffing around "contention" (above .500 with a legitimate shot at a wild card), pawn him off to the highest bidder.
As others have mentioned, you don't want to do anything to get in the way of maintaining future financial flexibility, but you do want to make the on-field product better. Players on 2-3 year deals will do that, and won't get in the way of the kids that the organization is really high on (Albies, Minter, the Rome staff, Maitan, the kids drafted this year, etc.). It's going to be tough to get players on 2-3 year deals that can bring back legitimate impact prospects, but Hill is certainly one that could. We have the money to spend on making the 2017 team better, so why sit on it? IF the "impossible" happens and the team plays well with those players, you just might back into the playoffs. If you don't, who cares? You'd have made the "average" fan awfully happy by taking a shot.
Finally someone we can all say we missed on this list - and I'm having an unbelievably hard time understanding how.
1.) TOR potential.
2.) Left-handed.
3.) BIG-TIME swing-and-miss stuff.
4.) Won't likely require more than a 3 year commitment.
5.) No draft-pick compensation attached even if there's no change to the CBA.
Checks ALL the boxes for us, right?
I think I recall his name being mentioned once or twice, but really only in passing - not as a realistic target. The question is, why not???
RICH HILL
Sure the injury history is checkered, but when he's been on the mound for the last two years he's absolutely performed like an "Ace". I wouldn't personally bat an eye if they offered him 3 years/$54 million.
Add a trade for Santana and bring on Spring Training.
Teheran, Hill, Santana, Folty, ???
Re-sign Collmenter and grab another inexpensive veteran off the scrap heap to split deals (guaranteed if they win a rotation spot) to provide competition for Wisler and Blair as potential trade chips in case they pitch well and to buy more time for Blair/Newcomb/Sims in case of injuries (or non-performance from Matt or Aaron). Jorge de la Rosa is another name not yet mentioned that might prove viable as a name for that as a potential second lefty.
I think they probably have to give Hill a year more than is wise and he'll be pretty expensive. Also, if he's injured, his value is 0 in trade. So it would be a risky sign.
All of these older free agents would be perfectly fine on a two year deal of almost any terms, IMO. that third year is close to a deal breaker to me.
If the Braves say traded for Jaime Garcia and signed Rich Hill stranger things than wild card contention have happened. But it would be one of those years where a lot of things went just right.
I'm interested to see what the offseason looks like. It could go a lot of different ways.
While I understand a calculated gamble on a pitcher with injury history to try and catch some surplus value with your dollars, I don't know if a guy as checkered as Rich Hill is the way you go. And if you DO, your second signing better be a really healthy guy. If you sign Hill and Garcia, you deserve whatever you get.
It's like sleeping with a really hot girl with a reputation, knowing that it's quite possible that you're gonna get the clap. Enscheff will understand that, what with being a male porn star and all.
I see no reason for the Braves not to be in on the younger Gurriel brother who is holding private workouts with teams in the near future. At 6'4 he probably has to to move to 3b or the OF. He will need at least a few months in AA or AAA, so he would be a perfect fit for the Braves.
Except that most scouting reports say he's not that great of a prospect.
Most? Really?
Here's a good one: http://www.baseballdecuba.com/Top-20-Cuban-Prospects.html?language=en
Rated as the 6th best international prospect here: http://m.mlb.com/prospects/2016/?list=int
I couldn't find a single bad one. Can you please direct me to some? Should be easy for you to find since most scouting reports are bad.
I see no reason for the Braves not to be in on the younger Gurriel brother who is holding private workouts with teams in the near future. At 6'4 he probably has to to move to 3b or the OF. He will need at least a few months in AA or AAA, so he would be a perfect fit for the Braves.
True, but he won't count against the international cap, so we will have a ton of competition.
Yes, and if the bidding goes crazy the Braves need to back away. But they should be in it. It would be foolish to ignore all Cuban talent just because they completely whiffed on Olivera.
I agree, though I generally think Cubans tend to be overvalued on the market, so I would be wary of jumping in too hard or believing too strongly in the hype.
Braves are late to that party. The tipping point was likely with Jose Abreu. But if you can hit on one you are going to get great value. Hell even if HO was an average player it would of been a good signing financially.