Skin Blues wrote:Spiderdan22 wrote:I_Like_Dirt wrote:
How so? I mean, yeah, they would have been better to have traded him a couple seasons ago but Rogers was never going to sign off on that. Failure would have been signing him to a long-term extension/contract. Thank goodness they didn't do that.
Yeah he should have been dealt before 2018. But since he wasn't, the should have held on to him and given him a QO. It was obvious he was only getting a one year deal anyway. Now if he has a rebound season, and he probably will, he could have been dealt for a better player than a pitcher who is 7000 years old and never played above AA. Complete failure to manage assets, and even worse that it's for a former MVP.
So your plan was to pay Donaldson $14M so that we can trade him for a prospect that is worth maybe $6M at the deadline in 2019. And this of course pre-supposes that Donaldson is as good as ever, and remains healthy. Which is quite a risk considering his age, and how the previous two seasons have gone with him. And this is the best-case scenario, just to get a marginally better prospect.
I don't think there's any doubt that we did the best we could at the deadline last year to get a good return on Donaldson. Sinking another $18M into him in hopes of an incremental improvement would have been a really bad bet to make since we don't benefit at all from any upside, really. The Indians would have benefited from a resurgence in the playoffs, so they had a reason to take the risk with him.
I can see the argument that we waited too long to trade him, which of course makes sense in hindsight. As do all non-trades of a player who goes on to have serious health and performance issues, especially when a team severely under-performs expectations overall. But to say the Jays made a mistake at the deadline last year makes no sense. Cut your losses, don't double-down with a bad bet.
It's what AA is doing right now. He's totally banking on JD rebounding this year. If he does, he'll give JD a QO and take the draft pick when JD signs with another team in the offseason. So yes, the Jays should have kept JD since he was not dealt before the season started, given a QO, and shoot for a better prospect than a failed minor leaguer in the draft.






















