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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, January 02, 2009
Lowe: “Stick It Where The Sun Don’t Shine.”
According to a source familiar with the negotiations, Derek Lowe is likely to continue shopping for a more desirable offer after the New York Mets presented him with a three-year, $36 million offer on Tuesday, the Boston Globe reported.
While some reports have placed Lowe’s target in the range of five years and $90 million, a much more probable outcome is that Lowe ends up with a three- or four-year deal worth in the rage of $14-$15 million annually. It was unclear whether the Mets’ proposal included any type of option, but the sides last week were dicsussing a pair of proposals, one being a four-year offer and the other being a three-year proposal with a vesting option.
Part of the reason the Mets may have entered the bidding with a relatively conservative offer is because they believe Lowe has no other suitors in the Northeast, where the pitcher has expressed a desire to pitch. The Yankees, Red Sox and Phillies had only preliminary conversations with Lowe and none of those clubs is believed to be interested in the pitcher at this time.
Repoz
Posted: January 02, 2009 at 01:36 PM | 37 comment(s)
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No, wait, COLLUSION!!!!
I can't keep track these days.
This has been a slow, slow winter. All the big names were locked up by this point last year, weren't they?
You only remember it that way because Buster Olney told you so. ;-)
And yes, I realize it's high-risk/high-reward.
If I were Doug Melvin that is where I would start....................
Sigh. Get me reliable innings-eaters. We have no safety net (in the form of major-league ready starters) for Sheets. Ollie would be OK, but the number of times the relievers have to get up when he starts to struggle would remain a concern.
You can read Boras's move here in a couple of ways. One, he is telling the Mets he's prepared to keep Lowe out for a long time, even if he has to wait for offers that aren't there yet. So if they want to firm up their rotation, they better not think they can lowball him. Second, it could just be a bluff to get them to bid against themselves. Boras has been known to pull both stunts.
The right counter-move for the Mets would be to go to their second choice, whom I assume is Ollie. Unfortunately, he's also a Boras client -- so Boras has every incentive to keep those talks moving slowly, too, so he doesn't allow Ollie to be a mere pawn in reducing Lowe's leverage (if he suspects that's what the Mets are doing and aren't actually serious about Perez). If those talks are kept alive, but not really getting anywhere nearing a deal, then Boras can hope the Mets start to get anxious about needing one of them . . . at his price.
Which is why the real best move is to go to Sheets, but in a totally cynical way. Negotiate with him simply to put pressure on Boras in a way that he can't control. Then you find out if Boras is willing to risk losing the Mets as his one big-market landing spot for either Lowe or Perez because they might just sign Sheets. If Omar is talking to Sheets, and he sees that Boras is on the line for him, he knows he's won.
You're already carrying risk with Pelfrey, with an unsettled second base, with a RF unsuccessfully coming off a concussion - not to mention what I see as an unhealthy dependence on Daniel Murphy, and bringing in a setup guy coming off of an injury. You need innings that you can count on and I'm not really comfortable going with Sheets.
The Mets need at least one or two more definitive answers before I see it safe to be taking on more risk.
He's probably a better option than Bobby Simmons or Yi right now, assuming he has a decent mid-range game and can post up once in a while.
Ha!!
I am not an NBA fan. I follow UW basketball as an alum.
A .600 winning percentage in 26 or so starts plus a replacement level w% in 8 starts is probably a win better than a .520 winning percentage in 34 starts. The rumblings about Sheets suggest that teams are offering fewer years to him due to concerns about his health. To me, Sheets is a worse option for the Mets than Lowe, but better than Perez.
That interpretation is completely misguided.
Ben has had a series of disparate injuries over the past four years. While disconnected they have all resulted in lost time, they have all impacted his effectiveness and by Ben's own admission they have had a cumulative impact on his ability to perform not just over the course of the season but from game to game.
Also, this season Ben, in agreement with the team, pretty much threw caution to the wind. Where previously Ben might have been removed from a game because of some tweak or twitch he was left in until everyone agreed things were better left to the bullpen. Ben wanted to maximize his contract opportunities while the team wanted to get to the playoffs.
There is no overstatement here. Ben is the modern day Spud Chandler. He can get eyes out but the ability to take the mound to do so decreases in frequency ever more so over time.
I wish him the best. But to downplay the injury concern is beyond foolish, it is foolhardy........
Also, isn't Sheets hurt right now?
Detroit
Milwaukee
Atlanta
Cleveland
Boston
St. Louis
LA Dodgers
We will see if they do.
He finished the season injured, that is correct.
robin:
Lowe has politely told Doug Melvin to "p*ss off"
They probably are, but they should be working on "winning games."
Compare him to A.J. Burnett: 34, 25, 21, 32, 19, 4, 29, 27. Admittedly, that was a stupid contract, but it woulda been stupider any other season. With him, your fingers are crossed both for 30 starts AND a 120 ERA+.
Sheets declined arbitration. If he had a truly debilitating injury he would have been all over that.
EDIT: By "truly debilitating" I'm referring to imminently necessary surgery.
Given that many teams have investigated their health, and both the Yankee and Braves were willing to go 5/75+ on Burnett (and the Jays wanted to extend him), and no one seems to be making a big offer to Sheets, I think it is pretty safe to say that the industry consensus is that Sheets' health issues are quite a bit worse.
My guess is that teams think Burnett may well miss 30 starts over 5 years, but his stuff remains top notch, while they think Sheets injuries are eating away at his ability to pitch at a top level.
But you stated that Ben's fragility was overstated. I disagree.
And medical records and a $2 will get you a Starbucks coffee. That stuff is all but useless. Especially given a guy like Ben who has suffered everything from a torn lat muscle to an inner ear infection that caused recurring dizziness. Nobody has any idea what could be next. Brewer blogs have worn out the "stampeded by elephants" and "contracted ringworm" jokes in listing what might be next with Sheets.........
He voiced his frustation multiple times during the season about his inability to "finish guys off".......
Correct. That's why I don't worry too much about injury history, unless the guy is hurt now, or his stuff has been degraded.
There are only two types of starters, those that have already been hurt, and those that are going to be hurt. I'd assume anyone, CC, Johan Santana, etc. is going to miss 30 starts over the next 4-5 years.
Where's the Rear Admiral when you need him?
He voiced his frustation multiple times during the season about his inability to "finish guys off".......
Well that makes the contract situation very clear, and reasonable, then. Thanks for the info, I don't really follow the NL.
Three types - you forgot knuckleballers.
Louisville.
Rim shot! Oh, wait ....
Now that's a different question from whether he's a broken pitcher right now. That's not something we could really know.
I think we need to remember that Ben wants big money. That is reserved for guys who either have real high ceilings or are reliably very good.
Ben is neither.
Don Sutton says 'hi'.
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