Schadenfreude wrote:cosmostein wrote:I would gladly take the Eric Aybar, Jered Weaver, and Brandon Wood offer that was rumored last season.
The big problem in that deal is Weaver: he's arb-eligible for the first time this year, and happens to be represented by Scott Boras. So while we'd have him for three years, we would have absolutely no hope of signing him long-term without paying him an absurd amount of money. By the time the team is realistically ready to be somewhat competitive, Weaver will probably be out the door.
Not saying that I wouldn't take that deal, but it's one thing to consider when evaluating offers of ML-ready players vs. those (like the many Philly variants) where most/all of the talent returned is still in the minors...if all breaks we're probably three years or four years out from any modicum of success, so our best bet is probably to go really young in the hopes that those players are reaching the big club at the same time our internal growth is showing through.
If we land any talented pitching that may become "ace" worthy we are going to have to pay them one way or another, maybe the Weaver and Boras combo is the greater evil, but more then anything for me that deal is more about Aybar then it is about Weaver/Saunders or whomever is at the top of that deal.
Aybar IMVHO reminds me a lot of watching Hanley RamÃrez work his way through the Sox organization all those years ago, and having someone to actually fill that void at SS long term is a pretty big priority for me.
And Wood is just another sexy infield bat with loads of potential.
While I understand the appeal of getting a minor league laden package for Doc,
I am passed the point of waiting on the Jays, I gave up my season after the first five year plan fizzled and now the organization expects me to stomach dealing Doc for kids?
Not sure what my thoughts would be.