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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Feinsand and Madden: Red Sox making push to trade for Roy Halladay, try to beat Yankees to punch

The Sandman and Madden: Together again!

The Red Sox are “putting on a full-court press” to acquire Roy Halladay, according to a source, and are hoping to add the former Cy Young winner to the top of their rotation to go with Josh Beckett and Jon Lester.

“They would love to get it wrapped up before the winter meetings (beginning Dec. 7),” the source said of the Red Sox, who made a big push to deal for Halladay last summer.

If the Red Sox are serious about dealing for Halladay in the next two weeks, the Yankees will likely have their chance to get involved in the sweepstakes for the Blue Jays ace, although it will take a package of top prospects - as well as a sizeable contract extension for Halladay, who has a full no-trade clause - to get a deal done.

According to sources, the Yankees will get together in Tampa next week for another round of organizational meetings, during which Brian Cashman will be given his budget for the 2010 season.

...To land Halladay, Boston would likely have to give up Clay Buchholz, the organization’s top young pitcher, as well as Casey Kelly, the pitcher/shortstop who signed with the Red Sox in 2008 after being recruited by Tennessee to play quarterback. Red Sox GM Theo Epstein is said to be smitten with Kelly, which could be a sticking point in talks with Toronto if Jays GM Alex Anthopoulos insists on the 20-year-old being included in a deal.

Repoz Posted: November 25, 2009 at 12:59 PM | 102 comment(s) Login to Bookmark
  Tags: blue jays, red sox, rumors, yankees

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   101. Darren Posted: November 27, 2009 at 03:45 AM (#3397482)
1) Would the Blue Jays trade trade Halladay for 19 million dollars?
2) Would the Red Sox trade 19 million dollars for Roy Halladay?

The answer to the first is an obvious no and the answer to the second is an obvious yes. Therefore it is quite obvious that the "excess value" way of thinking about trades is wrong.


But the answer to #1 is influenced by PR. If you instead asked "Would the Blue Jays trade Roy Halladay for a $19-million player who's being paid the minimum?" the answer would be yes.
   102. Steve Balboni's Personal Trainer Posted: November 27, 2009 at 03:57 AM (#3397484)
Interesting way of thinking about this discussion in #99. IMO, the Blue Jays probably don't need to absolutely liquidate due to cash constraints - if they trade Halladay, it is less about saving the money, and more about trying to get long-term help in exchange for the one year of control they have left with Halladay.

But for many other teams in the same boat - that is, they have a highly-paid, excellent ballplayer on their roster, but they either need to cut costs, or they realize that they are not winning anything next year - they would gladly trade Halladay aware for 19 million dollars. Kansas City would. So would Detroit. If Tampa Bay, which probably has a payroll similar to Toronto, had Halladay left for one year, and then he told them that he was walking away, I have little doubt that they would sell Halladay for 19 million dollars. They would then turn that money into locking in their younger talent (Crawford, Zobrist, Garza, Shields, whomever), and perhaps their other soon-to-be-free agents (Pena and Crawford)into long-term, team-friendlier deals. In fact, I think most teams would take $19 million for one year of Roy Halladay, unless they honestly thought he was the difference in winning it all in 2010.

One last point. I love fangraphs, but if they really calculate that Halladay was worth $33 million last year, then it is a vacuum that has nothing to do with the current payroll structure of baseball. Nobody makes $33 million a year, even ARod, and nobody but the Yankees would ever pay $33 million for a baseball player in 2009. The impact any player - even the greatest players in the game - would have on the team's ability to construct a 25-man roster, especially given the luxury tax threshhold, makes that figure completely out of context with MLB in 2009.

Economics 101 - in a free market, how much is a baseball player worth?

Whatever somebody will pay him. Nobody will pay Halladay $33 million for his best career year. In fact, a big part of what makes this discussion interesting is that Halladay is currently making a salary that probably isn't too far off of what his current market value is. He's making almost $16 million in 2010 - any team getting him is not getting a deal (nor are they getting screwed). If he signed a FA contract this winter, he'd probably have an AAV of between $18m and $21m, right?

Compare this to Victor Martinez, whom the Red Sox acquired for 1 1/2 years - not one year - and is paying about $3m for the rest of his 2009 salary, and $7.1 m for his 2010 salary. Most would agree that they got a large percentage discount over what his market value would be if Martinez had been a FA in July 2009. That the Red Sox only gave up Masterson, Hagadone, and a minor-leaguer for this is remarkable, and goes back to my original point: I'm not seeing much recent evidence that a $16m in 2010, 33-year-old stud starter with one year left on his contract, no matter how good he is, is likely to fetch the kind of prospects Toronto hopes...unless they take on a similar amount of 2010 contract in return.
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