Schadenfreude wrote:Scutaro was the best free agent shortstop available. As such, the logical decision if we're plowing ahead to win is to re-sign Scutaro (and if we can somehow mollify Rolen and Doc, surely we could convince Marco to return), who ended up being worse than either Gonzalez or Escobar.
Not if they felt Scutaro overachieved, which I think everyone and their mother agreed on. While Scutaro was better in 2009, Gonzalez's WAR was better in 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, and ultimately 2010 (he missed all of 2008). It was a case of signing a better defensive player with more power at a cheaper price. The Red Sox had Gonzalez twice, and they were going for it every year. He wasn't exactly a rebuilding SS option only. Even in a year where they were going for it, Gonzalez + 2 picks beats Scutaro coming off a season he had no chance of repeating.
Perhaps we trade for Morrow. But does he survive in the rotation while carrying an ERA of 6.00 through the end of May? Of course not; we're a team that absolutely has to win that season, and we wouldn't be wasting starts trying to convert a reliever with control issues back into a starter.
So they would have demoted Morrow in your scenario, but continued to trot Brian Tallet out there? Or Litsch (who was clearly not ready for a return in 2010)? None of us know what they would have done in that situation, but I would guess they would have more patience with Morrow than Tallet or Litsch or whoever else. Maybe they put Cecil in that spot a little sooner and we don't see Dana Eveland (who outside of a few starts was trash). A lot changes in that scenario.
We can guess with a high degree of likelihood what would have happened, yeah...we'd have watched our best player walk, and having sold off the kiddies chasing a dream, we would have among the worst minor league and major league talent in baseball.
Pardon my ignorance here but which prospects did the Jays acquire for Halladay/Marcum/Rolen that have contributed to the MLB squad in 2010-11? Drabek and? The Major League talent would have likely been similar. The minor league talent would have taken a hit, but I would hope that trading 1) the best pitcher of this generation, 2) a legit #2 starter, and 3) a two-way 3B would lead to a quick turnaround as far as minor league rankings are concerned.
And yet he demanded to be traded, suggesting that he changed his mind rather dramatically.
A demand the team did not have to comply to. Talk to the man and his agent. Convince him to stay.
I can't be the only one who thinks it is absurd to 1) trade a 4.0 WAR player with only one year left on his deal, 2) send over $4M to cover his salary, and 3) take back a $5M scrub to replace him. Is Zach Stewart worth all of that? I sure hope so.
Not Snider, no. What I'm saying is this: if we were going balls out to win, it's fairly unlikely that we wouldn't have brought in an established major leaguer to play RF, rather than a 29 year old career utilityman who had a good month.
But similar to Morrow, let's say that we do start the year with Jose. Bautista then proceeds to hit .182/.351/.318 over the first dozen games, and while he's drawing walks, his bat looks anemic. Or the .206/.301/.402 mark that he carried through May 2nd. Again, in a year where it is imperative that we make the playoffs, do you keep throwing him out there everyday? If you answer yes, you're lying...Cito and Anthopolous would be shredded for deciding to keep playing the scrub with our team's long-term fortunes on the line. They had the luxury to play a hunch (and stick with it while he scuffled) because the season wasn't particularly important.
Cito Gaston would have given Dick Schoefield and Darrin Jackson 500 PA each in 1993 if Schoefield didn't break his leg (which forced Gillick to trade Jackson for Fernandez). How long did he stick with Lind, Hill, and Overbay in 2010? Or Wells and Rios in 2009? You can accuse Cito of a lot of things, but having a quick trigger on struggling players is not one of them.
They are communicators, but they aren't **** Rasputin.
You are AA. Brandon Morrow (or whoever fits into the Scott Rolen 2009 mold) comes into your office and tells you he wants to leave Toronto ASAP. Do you talk to him and convince him to change his mind, or simply listen to his wishes?
The idea is to have enough assets on hand that we can fill holes with very good players when we're ready to compete. We weren't ready to compete at the time of the 2009 off-season, and had little in the stores to dangle to get us there. In a year or two, we will.
I'm not denying it would have been hard to compete in 2010. I've been preaching for years that Ricciardi's drafting and overall player acquisitions left a lot to be desired (which many here have disagreed with for some reason). What I am saying is no attempt was even made to compete even when JP was out of the picture. They were willing to spend $23 million on Chapman and spent $10M on Hech, but couldn't put any of that money into improving the big league club short-term? Couldn't they have started the rebuild after 2010 if their short-term contending goal failed?
Heh, Lawrie's bat is considerably less speculative than the scenario that you've laid out here.
If he is forced to play the outfield in the long run, how does that change the perception of his bat? If Gose and d'Arnaud can't hit, how does that change their prospect status? Like I said, lottery tickets. Big reward, but equally high risk/bust potential. That is true for most/all prospects.
Like I said, I'm not saying the Jays are in a bad position right now. AA has done a great job and I fully support the rebuilding plan as is. But that doesn't mean the organization made a good decision in terms of how they got there.