Anatomy of a truly bizarre series of trades
Posted: Fri Nov 4, 2011 10:45 pm
On November 17, 2010, the Jays traded relief pitchers Trystan Magnuson and Danny Farquhar to Oakland, for Rajai Davis.
Except, a year later, they didn't, kinda. The Jays now have Davis, Farquhar and Magnuson, who today was sent back to Toronto for cash. That follows the trade of David Purcey, who had been DFA'd, to Oakland in exchange for Farquhar, and the trade of Purcey to Detroit for Scott Sizemore. So in the end, you have:
Rajai Davis to Toronto, for David Purcey and cash.
David Purcey to Detroit, for Scott Sizemore.
Scott Sizemore and cash to Oakland, for Rajai Davis.
What makes this truly insane is not the fact that Toronto ended up with their prospects back within the year, giving up virtually nothing...it's the fact that Oakland comes out of it the definite winner despite failing on the first two moves. They turned two prospects into Rajai Davis, and then decided that they needed neither. They then turned one of those prospects into David Purcey, who was likely to be released if they did not swoop, and who is pure awful. Then then turned David Purcey into a fairly young 2B/3B who proceeded to post a 2+ WAR rookie season.
Nothing about that sequence of events makes sense.
Except, a year later, they didn't, kinda. The Jays now have Davis, Farquhar and Magnuson, who today was sent back to Toronto for cash. That follows the trade of David Purcey, who had been DFA'd, to Oakland in exchange for Farquhar, and the trade of Purcey to Detroit for Scott Sizemore. So in the end, you have:
Rajai Davis to Toronto, for David Purcey and cash.
David Purcey to Detroit, for Scott Sizemore.
Scott Sizemore and cash to Oakland, for Rajai Davis.
What makes this truly insane is not the fact that Toronto ended up with their prospects back within the year, giving up virtually nothing...it's the fact that Oakland comes out of it the definite winner despite failing on the first two moves. They turned two prospects into Rajai Davis, and then decided that they needed neither. They then turned one of those prospects into David Purcey, who was likely to be released if they did not swoop, and who is pure awful. Then then turned David Purcey into a fairly young 2B/3B who proceeded to post a 2+ WAR rookie season.
Nothing about that sequence of events makes sense.