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Sunday, November 22, 2009
Madden takes a stand! (after pounding a dozen cod liver oil-dipped cataflimflam poppers into his system, of course)
Unbeknownst to me, Boras, with whom I have not exactly enjoyed a warm and fuzzy relationship through the years, threw those figures out last week, only to have Manfred, baseball’s VP of Labor Relations, fire back, saying: “He completely made those figures up,” adding that the Avenging Agent was living “in a fantasy land.” Manford also told Foxsports.com’s Ken Rosenthal that “no one club is getting $80 or $90 million in combined revenue sharing and Central Baseball funds,” even though the Florida Marlins, in fact, got $40 million from each, to top all teams with $80 million., according to my sources This prompted Boras to counter: “There is factual merit to the facts Madden reported and that is why Rob didn’t address it in August. Why did it take him three months to comment on it?”
In the meantime, Pirates President Frank Coonelly insisted that the $35 million Central Fund figure Boras is using is “inaccurate” - and to that I must confess Coonelly is right. When I first reported the $75 million booty the Pirates received, I broke it down to $35 million in central fund monies and $40 revenue sharing. In fact, it was just the opposite, but the bottom line is, it still adds up to $75 million. And here is another figure Coonelly will probably want to refute: According to my sources, the Pirates were one of the teams to make a profit this year - approximately $14 million, which is not bad for a team with 99 losses and 17 straight losing seasons. What we do know is Pirates chairman Bob Nutting is not re-investing his revenue sharing in payroll, although there are disturbing rumors in Pittsburgh that he’s using the Pirates’ money to subsidize the hemorrhaging at his Seven Springs Ski Resort in Champion, Pa. If Coonelly and Manfred continue to insist that these figures my buddy Boras and I are putting out are a bunch of hooey, all they have to do to prove us wrong is show us their ledger. It would be the first time MLB ever showed anyone its books.
Repoz
Posted: November 22, 2009 at 01:39 PM | 70 comment(s)
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1. phoenixscienter Posted: November 22, 2009 at 06:20 PM (#3393936)Welcome to BTF. If you just throw out one-liners, and don't provide support, people are going to tell you that you're full of ####.
Where, Bill?
As a Yankee fan, my experience with FAs has been that the big-money ones sometimes work out, but the moderate-money ones almost never do. Sometimes you hit a David Ortiz-like jackpot, but more often you sign Tony Womack.
I'd argue that those guys are, at least in some ways, much better bets than second-tier free agents who are often established mediocrities whereas while you'll probably get 10 (or 100) Wooten's for every Ortiz, at least there's a chance of an Ortiz, and it will cost a lot less cash to find him.
Occasionally, but only to fill a hole or two, and only if the deal is kept to a reasonable length. For an organization like the Mets, which have a whole pile of holes (C, 1B, at least one corner OF position, the back of the rotation), it's a huge risk.
I have solid information from having lived 30 years on this planet that you're pulling #### out of your ass.
I think this may have changed a little bit the last year or so, since the 2nd tier guys aren't getting the big deals anymore. Yeah, Jeff Suppan on a 4/40 deal will kill you; but Jon Garland for 1/6 is just fine.
Given the number of holes the Mets have to fill, and the budget ($20-30M), I don't think they have a choice besides 2nd tier guys. And it might work out. They have enough stars if they are healthy, and as long as they keep the contracts in the 1-2 year range, they shouldn't really get hurt too badly.
I gather from the article that a "second-tier free agent" is anyone not named Holliday, Bay, or Lackey, while being more attractive, somehow, than Paul LoDuca. So, instead of aiming to fill "a hole or two", why not aim at filling a hole or five, as long as your condition of keeping the deal to "a reasonable length" (which I wholeheartedly agree with), is met? I mean, I don't trust Minaya to get it right, but the gaping wounds on the Mets roster at the moment are C, 1B, the OF corner not manned by Pagan, and 2 SPs. There are cheap, average C's to be had for short deals, Marquis is available and I'd have no problem giving him 2 years with a vesting option; Bronson Arroyo's durable and available for his salary; Cameron can apparently be had for 2/20... so that's 4 of 5 holes and a platoon 1bman shouldn't be impossible to find, or you can take (another) flyer on Delgado. IOW, five holes for short or reasonable deals.
But you know who we're going to wind up with? Chone Figgins at 5/45, and Bengie Molina at 2/12.
"2nd-tier" FA's are the new mark of inefficiency.
But is your solid information from ownership?
Of the house? Or of the meteor?
DB
2005 White Sox. They traded Carlos Lee and let Magglio Ordonez walk to help clear salary for Dustin Hermanson, Jermaine Dye, Tadahito Iguchi, A.J. Pierzynski and Orlando Hernandez, all of whom played a big part in the season.
If the payroll is in fact this limited, then I don't even want Arroyo/Marquis types. Let's get Harden/Nick Johnson types. Adding $25M of averageness to this team is not going to be enough to beat the Phils and Braves. We would need to add $25M that is capable of yielding $50M. (Or, of course, $0M, but that's the chance you take.)
I would be extremely surprised if the "OF corner not manned by Pagan" were not manned by Francoeur. We could have a "what I would do" discussion, of course, but in terms of what actually will happen in 2010, I am pretty sure that is it.
Thanks, #########.
Well, now. First of all, the Mets (unfortunately) don't view "the OF corner not manned by Pagan" as a gaping wound. They view it as a spot to give Francoeur either an arb raise or a multi-year deal. Second, if the Mets acquire Bronson Arroyo, there goes most of the $20M Madden is positing Minaya has available to spend. He and Cameron (for example) would exhaust the pot of cash, and you would have done nothing to deal with 1B, C, and 2B, and little if anything to add power. No way the Mets could add Marquis, Arroyo, and Cameron for that amount, much less the decent, additional second-tier FAs for other positions.
Facts are facts. Unless the market collapses even worse than it did last winter, the Mets simply won't be able to fill ALL or even most of the holes for the dollars they appear to be willing to spend. Period. It might take upwards of $50M to do it, and certainly at least $40M. The question is whether you want to fill ALL the holes with dreck, or follow my advice, which is to give up on the idea of filling all of them, and fill some of them with something that resembles high-quality players, and wait for next off-season to deal with the others. Use three criteria to decide which holes to attack now: (1) where does quality present itself now, v. where can you reasonably project it will be next off-season; (2) if you must fill Position A or Position B with cheap dreck, which one are you more likely to be able to get by with in 2010, or with what you already have internally; (3) if you don't fill one or two positions, and suffer for it 2010, which ones can you most hope to have an actual GOOD internal solution by 2011 to make the waiting worth it?
Making it a two-year plan is the way to deal with this and get away from the illusion you can contend (a) on a (relative) shoestring (by which I mean when you have neither the $$$ to spend on this year's class, nor -- it can be argued -- are the ideal players there to spend on, at least at some of the positions, such as C, 1B, and 2B) and (b) with a GM who is not the best-equipped to make six good decisions and get them all right, but is less likely to mess up two relatively simple decisions.
Am I the only Met fan on the Frenchy bandwagon? Because if I am and he does have a good year, I am going to be insufferable (even more than usual). I am willing to eat crow if he has a bad year.
That makes you more of a bandwagon member than most.
Good year for Frenchy: Plays 150+ games, plays average to above defense, hits .290/.325/.475.
This is more a reflection of your insufferable -- oops, I mean, eternal -- optimism than it is anything else.
I'm with the D.A. As long as it's a one-year arb thing, it would be palatable, largely because it would be consistent with my view they just can't hope to fill every hole this off-season, and doing a one-year French Toast patch in RF would postpone having to deal with that one (and let us all hope that F-Mart will prove in 2010 that he will be a good internal answer by 2011). More money to devote to other problems, and hopefully to real-live strong solutions.
A multi-year deal for Francoeur would make me scream with unadulterated rage.
Oh, I agree 100% with that. Even my optimism only goes so far.
If he was making $1M next year, that would be a reasonable position.
But he's going to make something like $4M. That's a big chunk of the Mets available budget.
If they use $4M on Francoeur, and push Pagan to the bench with another acquisition, that's a horrible use of resources. Pagan can almost certainly outproduce Francoeur at a fraction of the cost.
Good year for Frenchy: Plays 150+ games, plays average to above defense, hits .290/.325/.475.
Even at his best Francoeur has never put up an 800 OPS over a full-season. That would be a phenomenal year.
According to snapper.
He made $3.4M last year, he ain't getting much less. Even if the Mets have $30M to spend, $4M is a nice chunk of change.
Bobby Abreu got $9M. You can probably get a real nice player this off-season for $5-6M.
He hit .340/.440 in 2007 which is probably better than what I am hoping for.
Bobby Abreu got $9M. You can probably get a real nice player this off-season for $5-6M.
He also got another year at 10 million. Usually good players can expect more than one year on the free agent market although there will always be one or two who end up getting team friendly contracts.
Marlon Byrd is an example of a guy who could probably be had for 6 or 7 million. Of course, he was someone who was a bad baseball player before he figured out things some the last 2 or 3 years with Texas. The same could happen with Frenchy.
There's really no reason to have the same argument over and over. Snapper isn't very optimistic about Frenchy, some agree, some disagree. No need to have the same discussion every Met thread.
What chance does Francoeur have to reach that level? Your answer to that probably ends up depending on how much you think his problems were caused by immersion in the "let's build up the local boy... whoops, built up the wrong guy, let's tear him down" saga in ATL. I think there might be something to that theory.
Francoeur's upside is limited, though, because he will never have an above-average OBP. He has less than a 50% chance to become Cody Ross, which, when you put it that way, is a pretty sad statement. And $4M is not super-duper-cheap. So I do see what you're saying. It's not the chance I'd have freely chosen to be taking, but now that we're here, I'll go for it. I guess this is all just a long-winded way of saying something very simple, which is that it all depends on 1) how likely you think it is that Francoeur can be decent, and 2) how big a deal you think $4M is.
Pagan of course would presumably still be on the team, and if Francoeur reverts back to '08-Braves '09 Frenchy, the switch could be made. Of course, we might lose enough games in the meantime to cost the pennant. But to me, that's something you worry about more when you figure you're the favorites going in. That is certainly not the Mets' situation.
What I don't understand is why the fanbase (at least the fanbase here and on the various blogs and sites related to the Mets) isn't screaming bloody blue murder at the idea that the payroll is going to be substantially under $150 million. The Mets are a largest-market team in the middle of a running PR nightmare, who apparently didn't get particularly scalded in Madoff's scam, and who were just given an $800 million stadium. And this is time to reduce payroll? And that's acceptable? Particularly in what is largely a buyer's market, and with a core of stars it is not difficult to fill around? [voice escalating to high pitched squeak]
It's because the ownership hasn't said that - Madden and phoenixscienter made it up. The last word from ownership is that the payroll will be "whatever Omar needs." If it is substantially under $150 million, I and many other fans will be upset.
I don't think the Mets bring back Delgado and they will not offer or fail to make an incentive-laden deal with him.
Since we're talking about the Mets, I predict the other holes will be filled with Marquis, maybe one other F/A SP (so not Arroyo), Frenchy (or one of Minaya's geriatic cases), and an overpaid F/A catcher. Unfortunately.
That strikes me as a team with at least some shot at making the postseason; at least some reasonable chance of reaching 90 wins. It's a team with a chance to be average or close enough at LF, RF, 2b, 1b, and C; very good to great at ss, 3b, and cf, and above average for each slot in the starting rotation. It moves one of Niese or Maine and perhaps both, to the pen, strengthening it. And it doesn't completely piss away yet one more year of the Mets core, nor does it trade any minor leaguers.
My understanding is the Reds will let Arroyo go for nothing (2 D prospects is the usual cover in a deal like this), and may even wind up picking up some small part of his $11m salary--so unless the grapevine is way off, Arroyo's effectively a FA since he can be had for the price (or less) of his contract. Of course, whether you want his contract ($11m in 2010, $11m club option for 2011, don't recall the buyout--$1 or $2 million, probably) is another matter entirely
He's put up a 100 OPS+ in 829 career PAs, so we have some data. He's a switch hitter without a terrible split (802 OPS vs RHP, 717 vs LHP), so his performance to date should project fairly well.
I think he's a really good bet to give you at least a 100 OPS+. UZR has him as an average CF, and an excellent LF/RF which makes sense for a CF.
I think he's an excellent bet to give the Mets above average production in a corner, something like 2.5-3.0 WAR, at almost no cost.
I'm surprised Mets fans aren't more excited about him.
HERESY! STRANGER TO THE INTERNETS! BURN THE WITCH!
Wait... I mean... wait, what?
I am a little excited about him but it's important to remember, as is the case for Frenchy, that his BABIP was pretty high (.350). And he his never going to hit a lot of homers so it's hard to get too excited about him as a corner outfielder. Still, I think he has a decent shot of being an average regular in 2010.
Woo Hoo!
Oh, and the A's tried the Mark Kotsay, Jason Kendall, Esteban Loaiza route and it was a very bad idea. Kendall wasn't even that cheap.
Sure, but he doesn't have to repeat his 2009 production to be a really nice player.
If he can put up his career average 100 OPS+, and be a +10-15 fielder in LF or RF, which is what his career UZRs indicate, and which makes sense for a converted CF, he'll be above average at minimal cost. It's really hard to believe that he's the OF the Mets are looking to replace.
The A's didn't sign Jason Kendall, they traded two of their own tier-two free agents (Arthur Rhodes and Mark Redman) for him. All three turned out to be bad contracts of course.
The A's also traded for Kotsay (and then signed him to an extension after his career year). Of those 3, only Loaiza was a complete waste though he did have a nice stretch in 2006 to help them to the division. Thanks much to the Dodgers for taking the last year of the Loaiza contract.
Ultimately, the Mets have a fairly small amount of money to spend.
It could be that people are repeating the same original theory. We won't know for sure until we see them chase the big name free agents or not.
Well, I think they should be willing to go there, but I'm not sure the players are available in the market to make it worth going there. Depending on where the market goes, I'm not sure it will be worth paying any of the first basemen who are available what they will cost, especially not if it takes more than a one-year deal to sign them, if that would mean spending money unwisely in 2011 and having less money available then -- a year I expect the Mets would be in a better position to contend if they manage things wisely. And I'm just about positive there are no catchers worth a damn, except maybe as a teacher for Thole (depending on your opinion of Thole as a prospect, and the best way to see to his development). Given that this is just not that strong a year for free agents, a strong case could be made to reduce the major league payroll on a number of levels:
1) take $15M or so and spread it around on amateur player acquisition, a rainy-day fund for mid-season trades in case you are in contention, and/or spillover for 2011;
2) not spending on players who are marginal-at-best acquisitions, particularly at positions where you might then block a kid in the system who comes on and proves himself ready;
3) demonstrate that you are not just driven by a desperate need to please the radio jocks and the tabloids, who scream bloody murder every time you don't "make a splash" and "try to win now like you have to in New York." It would actually be somewhat refreshing if the Mets said, "Screw you" to the whole culture and said instead, "We're going to take this our way, and if the NY Post doesn't like it, and decides to call us cheap, the hell with the NY Post."
Even I am not excited about Murphy any more. I am excited about neither of them. At best, they are guys who can make a nice contribution in a good season, as Pagan did in 2009. Neither is a significant part of building a contending or championship baseball team.
I guess that depends how you define significant. Pagan is very,very likely be at least 2 WAR player next year if he plays full time.
That's better than Melky Cabrera. Was he a "significant part" of the Yankees. It depends on your definition.
As if often the case, I will simply let Bruce speak for me on this point.
Well technically yes. Even more technically, they traded Mike Neu and Bill Murphy for Redman, allowed him to become a free agent, then immediately signed him. The point is that FA dollars were not best spent on aging tier two guys.
Can we just fast forward to the point after which the Mets spend $33 million and we have a 150 post flame war about who was right?
Fair enough; that's a reasonable definition.
I will say that in terms of priority of positions to be upgraded on the Mets, I'd put Pagan in LF as 6th behind 1B, C, RF, and 2 SPs.
1) As a shell shocked Mets fan, I'm likely overvaluing the ability to stay in the lineup.
2) The other available options are completely uninspiring.
3) Francouer was possibly the only Met untainted by the vortex of negativity that consumed the entire franchise last year, so I just assume that the combination of Francoeur and Mets blue and orange is some sort of magical alchemy.
Agreed. Of course, it is also true that Pagan may be one of their few tradeable assets (decent player, not costly), so factor that into the mix. If they can sign a LFer, and use Pagan to bring in a guy at a position for which a viable solution doesn't otherwise present itself, that would not be a bad use of their current assets. The devil, obviously, is in the details . . . .
1) SP
2) SP
3) RF (or LF if Pagan is slotted into RF)
4) C
5) 1b
6) RP
7) 2b
8) LF (if Pagan)
No. I'd say SP, RF, 1B, C, SP, LF.
-- MWE
1B and C only need to be stopgaps, IMO.
Yeah, same to you pal.
I was thinking more along the lines of a Nick Johnson or Carlos Delgado, with Daniel Murphy being the fallback option. We also have Chris Carter down below who I think should get some ABs. At least Johnson and Delgado have some upside, and we can move them whenever Davis is ready.
The catchers this winter stink. I'd rather wait and see what's available next winter.
I'm also not too concerned about the OF. If Holliday or Bay come aboard, I'm very happy, but part of me would rather keep the financial flexibility. There's Fernando and Neuwenhuis to fit into the OF in the not distant future.
Actually, one guy that I would resign would be Gary Sheffield, who should be able to adequately serve 1B/corner OF.
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