Wo1verine wrote:flatjacket1 wrote:I would argue its a fair deal. A lot of risk taken on.
Only fair? He's been good the last 3 years. (seems like a solid deal for the Jays at this point)
With all the money that is being thrown around, i wouldn't think you would want to potentially argue such a small contract for last years cy young winner.
Yeah that's just my opinion, but coming to a new division and age isn't exactly on his side. I didn't like the acquisition at all at the time but I've warmed up to it.
29M for a guy who could blow up in front of you is a lot. There are so many unknowns about him that it just makes it a giant risk. Traditional knuckleballers can't be used for comparison because his is a lot more violent and he throws it MUCH harder. Another thing about Dickey's knuckleball is that when their pitch doesn't break (Which does happen time to time), it gets ROPED, and I'm not talking just doubles. If you've noticed any trends with Dickey is that when it rains it pours, hits come in bunches and he has to make corrections mid-start at times. I've watched a lot of tape of his good and bad starts (MLB.TV ftw) and when he is truly an artist, but as I said before when it doesn't break, it's trouble.
I wouldn't of gone any higher to sign him, unless the contract contained a lot of protective language and was incentive laden.
I like Dickey but he is getting paid fairly. Nobody looks at a contract badly at the time it is signed unless its astronomical. Look at Romero. 20+ starts of 3.5 ERA ball at 25 and we locked him up for what looked like a steal of a contract. He woke up one morning and couldn't find the zone. The risk in that contract was lesser.
I wouldn't be surprised if Dickey regressed a lot in the AL, or if I woke up to the headline "Dickey has career ending surgery" or whatever. The prospects we gave up for him, combined with the cash on the line makes it REALLY suck for us if he doesn't pan out.