Schad wrote:I'd rather risk the fact that his injury issues are bad luck and that he can remain an above-average bat than ship him out and create a hole at a position that we have struggled for years to fill
And do you have any information the Dodgers (or some other team) don't have? If not, why wouldn't they also
rather risk the fact that his injury issues are bad luck and that he can remain an above-average bat? His value to us is the same as his value to another team, all else being equal. Yeah it's nice having a good young second basemen, but if we can cash him in for a big prospect haul and then land Edwin on a team-friendly deal by sliding Pearce over there for the next two seasons it may benefit us. Again... this obviously is prefaced on the idea that Pearce can do that. 2B is not really a physically demanding position that players in their mid-30s struggle with. Not many guys move off of 2B to another position like they do from 3B or SS; the short throw gives a lot of room for error.
Schad wrote:I'm still entirely unclear as to how this brings back Edwin, for that matter; we don't have the money if we want to have a bullpen, from all appearances.
Who are we going to sign for the bullpen that stops us from being able to afford Edwin? Jerry Blevins?? We can also trade to fill holes, which, if we get a few useful prospects in return for Travis, becomes a lot easier to do and more palatable.
Schad wrote:And no, having an opt-out would not be terribly beneficial...if we hang around the Wild Card race, it just means that we're highly likely to lose him for nothing, rather than getting back a comp pick, because he is no longer eligible for a QO per the new CBA.
The effect of an opt-out is to lower the cost (both AAV and up-front cost), so yeah, it would be beneficial since about one paragraph ago you were worried about not having enough money to sign him in the first place. There is no comp pick in play at all, for anybody that signs him, so it's a non-factor. Don't know why you'd mention that part; the lack of benefit of the comp pick would be baked into the contract from Day 1.
Schad wrote:We're not going to trade Travis at this time for a top-level, MLB-ready, cost-controlled young OF. Not until he's healthy again. So instead, we'd be looking at another short-term move with potential long-term ramifications. I'd really rather we stop making those.
We don't need to trade him for an MLB ready cost-controlled OF. We might get a big pitching prospect for him, and swap another prospect for an outfielder, or we might keep the prospects and sign Brandon Moss, or any number of things to fill out the roster. Any specific series of trades or signings is always unlikely to take place.
I don't think it's likely we trade Travis away, just exploring options that could allow us to extract some extra value out of Pearce's defensive flexibility, or from Edwin's preference to stay in Toronto for a below-market price (if that's even the case), or avoid the uncertainty of Travis' health and performance. It'd be nice to have both Travis and Pearce and just use Pearce to spell Travis occasionally, too. But other than adding a corner OF or two, which we'll probably do either way, there's not many other ways to wedge a big bat like Edwin's into the lineup the way it's currently constructed.