Welcome back everyone! Apparently my failure in assessing the Johan Santana trade market sent me into hibernation for a few weeks, but alas, I am back with some predictions for the 2008 season. Hopefully I'll have better luck this time around so I won’t be too embarrassed to continue posting regularly. Let the countdown begin!!!
30) San Francisco Giants, 58–104, (5th place in NL West)
Nobody deserves their 2008 fate more than the San Francisco Giants. The way that the Giants have abandoned Barry Bonds, the man responsible for the construction of Pac Bell Park (or is it AT&T Park?), is embarrassing. After years of sucking every possible dollar out of him, Brian Sabean throws him to the wolves, even though HE WAS STILL THEIR MOST PRODUCTIVE PLAYER IN 2007!!!! He led the league in on base percentage AGAIN! His OPS was just 20 points lower than the great Alex Rodriguez!
For Sabean to act like he is doing this team a favor by eliminating Bonds from the equation is absolutely absurd. It’s not even like he’s replacing Bonds with a trio of 24 year olds who are pushing their way into the lineup. From left to right, the Giants are starting Dave Roberts, Aaron Rowand, and Randy Winn. It’s inexcusable. The rest of their lineup is atrocious and their farm system is even worse (Angel Villalona, their one elite prospect, is still YEARS away). I feel as if I am doing them a favor by listing them with 58 wins.
Hopefully, the press continues to write all these stories about how great their team chemistry is without Bonds in the middle of June, when the Giants are setting all-time records for ‘earliest date eliminated from playoff picture”. The lone bright spot for the Giants are their pair of young right-handed flamethrowers Tim Lincecum and 2007 winner of the “Pitcher Win-Loss Record Means Absolutely Nothing” Award, and likely back to back recipient in 2008, Matt Cain. Sadly, I don’t even think this duo can save the Giants from 100+ losses.
*$ Hint- Register on bodoglife.com right now and put down everything you own on San Francisco going under. Their win-loss over under is 71 ½. Also, list nxouris38@aol.com as your referral. :)
29) Florida Marlins, 61–101, (5th place in NL East)
If history is any indication, the Marlins are one year away from winning the World Series again. After dismantling their 1997 World Champion team, the Marlins responded six years later with an upset of the New York Yankees for another championship in 2003.
Truthfully, their return to glory is going to take a little bit longer this time around. The Marlins’ big move this offseason sent LHP Dontrelle Willis and 3B Miguel Cabrera to Detroit for six prospects, the most noteworthy being OF Cameron Maybin and LHP Andrew Miller. Miller has frontline starter potential but he has been rushed through the minor leagues to compensate for being awarded a major league contract out of the draft. Maybin, a scout’s dream mixture of tools and performance, still needs more time to develop in the minor leagues before the Marlins can trot him out in center field every day. Plus, it makes no sense to keep his service time running when you have no chance to compete anyway.
One nice thing about the Marlins in comparison to the other lousy teams is that the Marlins might have the best player in baseball in Hanley Ramirez. That’s certainly more than the Giants say. From a storyline standpoint, the most interesting aspect of the Marlins will be watching Ramirez as he approaches arbitration. Will he become the franchise superstar that the Marlins decide to build around when their new park opens in 2011, or will he follow the path of Miguel Cabrera and Josh Beckett before him? On a side note, how sad is it that a question like this is one of the most important things a Marlins fan has to look forward to in 2008? Ouch.
28) Baltimore Orioles 62-100, (5th place in AL East)
The first non Quadruple-A team on the list is the Baltimore Orioles. Like the previous two teams, the Orioles are headed for a last place finish, their first since 1988. However, for the first time in quite a while, I’ve actually been impressed with the Orioles offseason.
Owner Peter Angelos has finally taken a step back from baseball decisions allowing Andy MacPhail to focus on bringing a winning team back to Baltimore. MacPhail’s first goal was to rebuild a decrepit farm system. After landing prize catcher prospect Matt Weiters in last June’s draft, the Orioles traded away Miguel Tejada and Eric Bedard for ten players, the jewel being 22-year-old outfielder Adam Jones. I just don’t understand why they stopped there.
The O’s are filled with experienced veterans who could help out teams in contention—guys like Kevin Millar, Aubrey Huff, Melvin Mora, and Ramon Hernandez. There’s really no point in holding on to these players since none of them will be around when the Orioles are ready to win again anyway. Brian Roberts has been rumored to be traded to the Chicago Cubs all offseason. The O’s need to pull the trigger already. Millar would be a great fit with the Mets to split time with Delgado at first base and play a little bit of outfield when Alou is out.
If MacPhail can make a couple more of these trades, and continue the emphasis on player development, the Orioles will take a much larger leap back to relevance in the American League. For now, they’re left with a goal for 2008 of not losing 100 games.
27) Pittsburgh Pirates, 68 – 94, (6th place in NL Central)
I watch a lot of baseball. I watch as many Red Sox games as I can, and the MLB Extra Innings package gives me plenty of alternatives during the rest of my free time. However, I can not remember the last time I watched an entire Pittsburgh Pirates game. Last season, I watched at least one full game of every team in the league except for Pittsburgh.
There isn’t a single interesting player on this team and there hasn’t been one since Barry Bonds left. This is a problem for a team that hasn’t had a winning season in 15 years. The Pirates aren’t a franchise like Oakland or Minnesota that has been stacked with talented players but loses them because of the nature of the market. They haven’t developed one decent homegrown everyday player worth building around (And for the record, I’m not sold on Andrew McCutchen either. I’ll pass any chance I can on your typical toolsy outfielder.) There’s no excuse to have a farm system that terrible when you are a perennial loser. You draft near the top every year! You should make the right decision at least once, on sheer luck alone. Sadly, they haven’t.
Last year, before getting fired, ex-GM Dave Littlefield passed on Matt Weiters in the June draft to select a relief pitcher (Dan Moskos) because he didn’t want to pay Weiters the $6 million signing bonus that Scott Boras demanded. Littlefield followed that decision up at the trade deadline by trading two midlevel prospects to San Francisco for Matt Morris, and the $13.7 million left on Morris’s deal. I can’t understand the rationale behind allocating your resources like that. This is the most poorly run organization in the game right now and hopefully for Pirates fans, this will change under the new administration, now that Littlefield has been fired. Ian Snell and Tom Gorzelanny provide the lone bright spots, but even still, can you ever imagine saying to yourself, “Hey Ian Snell’s pitching tonight. I better dip out of work early to catch that one!”? Yea, me neither.
26) St. Louis Cardinals, 71-91, (5th place in NL Central)
For as long as I’ve followed sports, I’ve always had a few random teams that I hated for no reason. Corny teams like the Minnesota Twins during the Brad Radke/Luis Castillo years or the Sacramento Kings during the Peja/CWebb years—they weren’t rivals of my favorite teams, but they annoyed me enough to dislike them.
The 2002-05 St. Louis Cardinals were another one of these teams. Nothing made me happier than seeing them await the Red Sox in the 2004 World Series because I knew it was inevitable that the World Series drought was about to come to an end. There wasn’t a bigger fraud team in MLB during that time period than St. Louis. After the Red Sox swept them and they lost to the Astros the following season, I figured St. Louis’s window of opportunity to win a championship had passed them by.
Sure enough, the unthinkable happened. The 2006 Cardinals, who barely had any business making the playoffs, shocked the world, by defeating the Detroit Tigers in the World Series in dominating fashion. If you Google Billy Beane’s “Postseason is a Crapshoot” theory, the 2006 Cardinals would be Exhibit A. Sadly, that one run of good luck wiped vindicated their failures in the previous postseasons.
Now what does any of this have to do with 2008? Had the Cardinals simply missed the playoffs in 2006, as they should have, they would have responded to the season differently. Their reaction to winning the World Series is the reason why they are going to be lousy this season. Rather than objectively evaluate their 83-win team, and put into place a plan to get back to the 90-win plateau, the Cardinals were fooled by an extremely small sample size into thinking they were a championship caliber team. They believed the performance of a mediocre pitching staff and aging veteran hitters in a 15 game stretch in October was more indicative of their ability than the previous 162 games. This reactive method of managing, one very similar to that of the Chicago White Sox, has set them back a few years, leaving them one of only 5 or 6 NL teams with absolutely no chance of making the playoffs in 2008.
Part II coming tomorrow....
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4 comments:
I agree wholeheartedly with your analysis thus far. The only question I have is that with a mediocre outfield, why did the Cardinals elect to send down Colby Rasmus, and not give the kid a shot?
I'd guess it's because it doesn't make sense financially to have youngsters earn their stripes at the major league level if you aren't in position to compete. Plus Rasmus is still really young so an extra season in the minors will only help him.
The dilemma is that the seasons where you get the most 'bang for your buck' are during a player's first 6 seasons. If you waste one of those 'cheap' seasons developing a player (See Gordon, Alex) when you have no chance of competing, you lose an extremely valuable year of the player's prime at the end of his contract (at a time when you might be in a better position to compete).
As good as Rasmus might be, rather than bring him up and start his service time clock immediately, the Cardinals are better off waiting until June or July so that they can put off his arbitration for an extra season. Sounds like a cheapskate move but it really is the smarter thing...
That is definitely true. In Alex Gordon's case a friend of mine in fantasy saw that happen to him last year.
Also, I dont undersatnd how the "clock" works. How does bringing him up then save an entire year when you are still bringing him up for the majority of the season?
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