nykfan757 wrote:
1) The Cubs havent truly developed a position player that has been a better than average hitter (except Soto) in a VERY long time. Vitters is, by all accounts, going to be the reason either Ramirez or Lee could become trade bait in two years. If the Cubs hit a home run with a homegrown hitter and would never realize his impact because they traded him away and got stuck with aging corner infielders, it would be a tough pill to swallow.
So what? The Cubs are a major market team. They can afford to not develop talent and instead acquire talent via FA or trade. This would be a problem if the team didn't have top hitters at 4 positions (C, 1B, 3B, LF) but since they do and they are set for a while, trade when you can.
2) The Cubs are truly in a position of strength in the Peavy deal. They simply dont need him. He is an absolute luxury at this point in the game. They have 4 borderline 1-2 starters already. Marshall is going to be a fine 3-4 at best and that's all that is needed. Plus he's a lefty. HE would also be included in these proposed deals, which the prospect of losing him AND Vitters as well as other possibly vital pieces in the system and the Cubs need to make sure that they not only remain contenders for a world series, but not absolutely demolish their future as well.
I understand Peavy is a "luxury" but lets remember something:
Dempster just had a career year. You are betting an awful lot he stays healthy and is dominant like he was last year for the next four years.
Harden is likely gone in 2010 when he is a FA and the Cubs don't want to pay him because of how much he breaks down. And oh yeah, he breaks down.
Zambrano has had nagging arm injuries a lot and isn't some 35 start horse who dominates from April 1 to September 31. He has hot stretches that carry him statistically, but he isn't a dominant pitcher.
Ted Lilly is a quality starting pitcher and is decently priced so I have no real problems there.
So basically, the Cubs have enough SP holes that you have to wonder if they don't need Peavy but he sure does cover a lot of bases by having him here. I mean, the Cubs have a deep rotation but if an injury happened, the team would struggle to fill those innings.
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