Ho-hum. Another night, another Mitch Moreland home run.
If you’re scoring along at home, that makes Mitch 10, Internet Trolls and Media Infidels 0.
Count me in that latter category, I must confess. I thought the real Mitch Moreland was the one we saw for three years and in the first three weeks of this season — a .264-hitting kind of guy, who couldn’t hit lefties and infrequently drove in an important run.
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1. Pat Rapper's Delight posted on December 21, 2012 at 04:40 PM # hit 0 | hit 0He probably would have except that his personality is part of the deal.
Surprises me too ... it means I was wrong! Well, the Greinke and Hamilton deals were both pretty out there, Sanchez did get his 5/$80 and we still have Swisher.
However, the new national TV money doesn't start flowing until 2014. I'd still have thought we'd see more big money deals, back-loaded a bit to wait for the TV money. Not that this was a good FA class (not that there will be any good FA class anytime soon). Maybe some of the 1-year deals are the player's preference, knowing there will be more money floating around next year.
And the Marlins and Astros being allowed to carry $20 M payrolls ain't helping.
Given that last year was probably his finest, I suppose it's safe to say he survived the early 30s disappearing act that often hits catchers - but one year really doesn't surprise me.
Greinke doesn't count?
Would anyone be surprised if some agent throws around the collusion accusation (and it being accurate)? This off season has been quite tempered despite Baseball swimming in money.
He has been pretty consistent, but I thought he had done better. 2004-2011, 7.7 bWAR, OPS+ from 83 to 94. I was not aware of that.
Now the Yankees are going to parade a three-headed amalgalm of Stewart (who can't hit), Cervelli (who can't throw), and Romine (whos isn't ready) behind the plate and pretend that adds up to an acceptable catcher.
The same way that he puts up with Jeter's defense. He is forced to by circumstance.
Remember the Yankees are still paying the luxury tax in 2013. A $7.5M contract actually costs them $10.5M. So it's not a no-brainer bargain, and they couldn't get a deal as good as could the Rangers or most other teams.
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