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By Ben Nicholson-Smith [November 7, 2009 at 10:54am CST]
Remember all the trades that went down this summer? Now that the World Series is over, we have lots of deals to track once again. We'll be monitoring all the rumors this offseason, and when trades become official, we'll add them to this list, which will be under the 'Features' sidebar. Here's a look at the moves we've seen so far:
- The Pirates acquired Akinori Iwamura from the Rays for Jesse Chavez on November 3rd.
- The Red Sox acquired Jeremy Hermida from the Marlins for two minor league lefties on November 5th.
- The White Sox acquired Mark Teahen from the Royals for Chris Getz and Josh Fields on November 6th.
- The Twins acquired J.J. Hardy from the Brewers for Carlos Gomez on November 6th.
- The D'Backs acquired Aaron Heilman from the Cubs for a pair of minor leaguers on November 19th.
- The Red Sox acquired infielder Tug Hulett from the Royals for cash or a player to be named later on November 25th.
- The Rays acquired catcher Kelly Shoppach from the Indians for a player to be named later on December 1st.
- The A's acquired Jake Fox and Aaron Miles from the Cubs for Jeff Gray, Ronny Morla and Matt Spencer on December 3rd.
- The Nationals acquired reliever Brian Bruney from the Yankees for Rule 5 pick Jamie Hoffmann on December 7th.
- The Rangers acquired lefty reliever Clay Rapada from the Tigers for a player to be named later or cash considerations on December 7th.
- The Tigers, D'Backs and Yankees completed a blockbuster on December 8th. The Tigers obtained Max Scherzer and Daniel Schlereth from the D'Backs and Phil Coke and Austin Jackson from the Yankees. The Yankees obtained Curtis Granderson from the Tigers. And the D'Backs obtained Ian Kennedy from the Yankees and Edwin Jackson from the Tigers.
- The Orioles acquired Kevin Millwood and $3MM from the Rangers for Chris Ray and Rule 5 pick Benjamin Snyder on December 9th.
- The Astros acquired Matt Lindstrom from the Marlins for minor leaguers Robert Bono and Luis Bryan and Rule 5 pick Jorge Jimenez on December 9th.
- The Rays acquired reliever Rafael Soriano for reliever Jesse Chavez on December 10th.
- The Red Sox acquired pitcher Boof Bonser from the Twins for a player to be named later on December 10th.
- The White Sox acquired Juan Pierre and cash from the Dodgers for two players to be named later on December 15th.
- The Blue Jays, Phillies and Mariners completed a three-team blockbuster on December 16th. The Phils acquired Roy Halladay, prospects Phillippe Aumont, Tyson Gillies, Juan Ramirez and $6MM. The Mariners acquired Cliff Lee and the Blue Jays acquired prospects Travis D'Arnaud, Kyle Drabek and Michael Taylor.
- In a separate, but related deal, the Jays sent Taylor to Oakland for Brett Wallace.
- The Mariners sent Carlos Silva and cash to the Cubs for Milton Bradley on December 18th.
- The Yankees acquired Javier Vazquez and Boone Logan from the Braves for Melky Cabrera, Mike Dunn and Arodys Vizcaino on December 22nd.
I want more!!!!
Posted by: Arock1234 | November 07, 2009 at 11:36 AM
Wow, that JJ Hardy for Gomez deal was straight up robbery for the Twins. Hardy is a guy coming off two 30 hr years. He could probably go .260 22hrs 65RBI a year. Gomez is fast, but this aint track. Hell go .250 6HRS 50 RBIS. Hell play good defense but hes a 4th outfielder. Just my opinion.
Posted by: yankfan1 | November 07, 2009 at 11:39 AM
yankfan1:
Just informing you that Hardy's career high is 26 HRs in 2007. He hit 24 in '08.
------------
I like the action so far, but it can go two ways from here:
The best trades have happened, now everything will tail off; or it can only get better.
Posted by: soxfan93 | November 07, 2009 at 11:50 AM
^ my bad. I was looking at doubles when i looked at ESPN.
Posted by: yankfan1 | November 07, 2009 at 12:25 PM
@yankfan1, .250, 6 homers, 50 RBI's? I'll take it, so long as he plays amazing defense (as he does), is still fast (speed never slumps), and strikes out less than Mike Cameron (who struck out 298 times in his TWO seasons in Milwaukee).
I think this is a fair trade for both teams. The Twins get two years of Hardy, who might rebound from a god-awful season in 2009. We get Carlos Gomez, who is a center fielder under team control through 2014, and has plenty of talent to go around. Not to mention, while the Twins take on just under $5 million in salary, the Brewers are removing about $20 million (Cameron, Hardy, Weathers) from the books, plus maybe another $6.5 million from Looper's option, which can then be spent on good pitching. That cap space can also be used to make a trade for a good pitcher, so that we have room for his salary.
So, all in all, that was a good trade for both sides.
Posted by: Sage | November 07, 2009 at 12:38 PM
Sage
You know better than me, so ill take your word for it. I just never was a Carlos gomez fan, dont think hes anything special. It would have been nice for the Brewers to get a pitcher of some kind. The Brewers have to have somone that could produce those numbers, they've been very good in producing position players in years past.
Posted by: yankfan1 | November 07, 2009 at 12:45 PM
The Brewers were aiming to get pitching. They were in talks with the Red Sox, but Doug Melvin didn't want anything they were offering. They offered Michael Bowden, and that was it. He hasn't had any success in the Bigs yet, and I don't blame Melvin for not making that trade.
So, we got Gomez to take a bunch of money off the books to spend on pitching. I can understand, though, why you haven't really been a fan of Carlos Gomez. He hasn't exactly impressed with the bat in his young career. But, he has a long career ahead of him to improve. I could see him as actually a Mike Cameron type of player, but with a few less homers.
Posted by: Sage | November 07, 2009 at 01:10 PM
I just don't get how the Brewers wanted Buchholz or Bard from the Sox and then go get Carlos Gomez.
Posted by: QueensKing | November 07, 2009 at 01:43 PM
"Wow, that JJ Hardy for Gomez deal was straight up robbery for the Twins. "
Hardy is coming off a back problem, so who knows if he can rebound at all.
Given the back issue. I'm surprised the Twins took a chance on Hardy after the abysmal failure Joe Crede was for them...
Posted by: notin | November 07, 2009 at 01:49 PM
I think the Pirates, Red Sox, Royals and Twins all got the better end of the deal on these. But, then again, only time will tell.
Posted by: WS2009 | November 07, 2009 at 02:57 PM
WS2009, I think when evaluating deals we have to consider more than the talent involved. We have to consider context and the needs of each team.
For example, in the Pirates/Rays deal, I don't think there is any doubt that the Pirates got the superior talent. But from the Rays' perspective, they could not keep Iwamura, they did not need Iwamura and they could either let him go for nothing or receive something. By getting a reliever, an area of need, they have a chance to come out ahead, not of the Pirates but of the situation.
The same goes for the other deals. It is not who got the better end but whether each team achieved something it needed to do, whether it is financial relief which can be turned into talent in some area of need or a particular type of talent that fits their current needs.
Posted by: Bob R. | November 07, 2009 at 04:46 PM
Yeah, Iwamura and Hermida were given up for basically nothing.
And I did take in more than talent, I considered the things you discussed also. That's why I said 'only time will tell'.
Posted by: WS2009 | November 07, 2009 at 05:07 PM
I suppose I do not see the consideration of other factors in the comment you made. Perhaps it lies behind the statement but I don't see how it is implicit in it.
And again, I don't think the statement that the two were given up for basically nothing is relevant. The issue is what the options were and how the teams that "gave them up" met their own needs. In Florida's case, gaining about $3 million of salary relief is not nothing. Nor is the gain of over $4 million nothing to the Rays. Those savings can be invested in something quite useful.
Of course they each could have simply dumped the player and gotten the same relief (well, not the Rays as they saved something over $.5 million by avoiding the buyout). As everyone knew the dilemma, getting young relief arms is also not nothing, or basically nothing if you prefer.
In both cases the other team clearly got the better talent, but not necessarily the better end of the deal. Of course, time may always tell. (If the Cardinals trade Pujols for Giambi, only time would tell whether it was a benefit to St. Louis.) But looking at the Rays now, we see a team that traded a player who had absolutely no use to the team and received a potential contributor. That means they got a good deal until time tells us something else.
I suppose my objection is that I don't think deals should be evaluated as which team got the better end. The comparison should not be one team's gain to the other's. It is irrelevant to the Rays if the Pirates win a pennant because of Iwamura. What matters is whether each team got what it needed or wanted, whether what they thought they needed was correctly evaluated and whether they could have done better. In these cases, I think the answers to questions one and two are definitely yes and to question 3 is too speculative for us to know, but probably yes.
Posted by: Bob R. | November 07, 2009 at 07:46 PM
I guess it has only been a few days so there hasn't been too much trading but like Arock1234 said "I WANT MORE!"
Posted by: Braden | November 08, 2009 at 11:25 AM
I wanna see much more i mean the yankees just won the world series evreybody should be trying to get better. But i think that carlos Gomez is better than J.J Hardy. The brewers needed a center fielder and they a very fast Lead off man who plays gold glove defence for somebody whos getting old and in slumping....Alot. I think the marlins well make a big free agent that will get evrebody off guard and thats what they need to get over the hill and win the wild card next year. I think Uggla win be a cardnal by the end of the off season and that will also make the cardnals a very good team in 2010. Dont be surprised if the marlins sign a Matt Holiday or a Damon. I see them getting rid of Uggla and moving Couglan to secound and that will opena huge hole in left and the marlins have a lot of money saved up. But i see the yankess making another 2-3 Huge signings and them doing even better next year. The yankees will be the first team to clear the 300 million a year salary and thats when mlb will put a salary cap on baseball. And last but Not least.....LETS GET REPLAY IN BASEBALL!!!!! INVENT A RED BASEBALL SO MANAGERS CAN CHALLENGE AND U GET THREE IN A GAME. ITS NOT TO HARD TO DO...SERIUSLY DUDE.
Posted by: www.myspace.com/jasonjeffrey15 | November 08, 2009 at 05:47 PM
The Pirates tried to get Hardy. Were willing to give up closer Matt Capps.
Posted by: Bucco 23 | November 14, 2009 at 07:29 PM
Does not look like the Pirates will be making any moves they spent all the allotted money on bus fair and the hotel room for ther GM. I guess they did push it and they offerred Holliday a 5 year deal worth 5 million with incentives that could make the whole deal worth 6.5 million.
Posted by: baseballinsidertrader | December 10, 2009 at 01:44 AM
Hey Tim could have a Recent Signings post that is similar to this one. It would really help. You could structure it the same exact way that you do with this one. For example "The Astros signed reliever Brandon Lyon to a 3 year 15MM deal on December 9th" Thank you.
Posted by: Tigers/Reds | December 10, 2009 at 06:32 AM