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Archives for July 2006

Phillies Trade Rumors: Cleaning House

By Tim Dierkes | July 14, 2006 at 4:39pm CDT

According to Gotham Baseball and other sources, Pat Gillick is ready to cash in on 2006 and free up some payroll.  The Dodgers, Mets, and Yankees should be involved.

Here’s a look at the team’s contract obligations. 

Bobby Abreu makes $15MM next year and then has a $16MM club option with a $2MM buyout.  Maybe he’ll demand that it’s exercised upon a trade.  He’ll still be a 5-7 win player annually for a little while, but that salary is a beast.  The 32 year-old Abreu is willing to waive his no-trade, and my gut tells me that he’d do it for any contender.  Perhaps Gillick mirrors his Thome deal – acquire a solid outfielder and some decent prospects, eat some salary.

Pat Burrell is set to earn $27MM for 2007-08.  The slugger turns 30 in October.  That’s a painful obligation for a player projected to be worth just $8.5MM during that span by Baseball Prospectus.  The Phils might have to swallow half of this contract to move him.  I feel like it would be Burrell or Abreu but not both – that’s a lot of offense to replace next year.

Randy Wolf makes $9MM this season in his walk year.  He’s just finishing up rehab for Tommy John surgery.  He’s a week or two from rejoining the Phils, and a deadline deal seems a long shot.  However, if he returns and stinks maybe Gillick can pass him through waivers and trade him in August.  The southpaw turns 30 next month and will probaby get decent interest as a free agent.

Mike Lieberthal’s lengthy Phillies career should come to an end as this is the last year of his deal.  He makes $7.5 mil, so I’m sure the team would love to move him from a financial point of view.  He should be activated from the DL tonight after a strained hip.  The Rockies could use a backstop if Gillick wants to do yet another salary dump with the fan favorite.

Jon Lieber makes $7.5MM next season in the last year of his deal.  He’s a 36 year-old control artist who probably has a few decent years left.  I think there’s a good chance he’s moved, and the bounty could be decent if he shows well in his next start or two.  Makes sense at the back end of the rotation of various contenders.

Arthur Rhodes makes a whopping $4.8MM this season in his walk year.  However, the A’s and Pirates are paying more than a million of that.  Rhodes turns 37 in October and has pitched poorly this year after dominating last year.  Gillick probably won’t get much for him, though we’ve seen that the reliever market appears inflated this summer.

David Bell, making $4.5MM in the last year of his deal, is one of the worst-hitting third basemen in the game.  He’s a good glove man but wouldn’t make much of a spare part for a contender.

Tom Gordon is the best available reliever this summer.  He gets $7MM in ’07, $5.5MM in ’08, and a $4.5MM option with a $1MM buyout for ’09.  He’s still getting it done at age 38 and could give a nice stretch run/playoff boost to the White Sox or Yankees.

Cory Lidle makes $3.3MM this year and has a solid 2.4 K/BB ratio.  The 34 year-old is far from impressive, but he still adds a couple of wins compared to replacement level crap.  The Phils should definitely trade Lidle.

Brett Myers is a few years removed from free agency, but the team has that whole domestic abuse issue sitting there.  It’s a tough situation because the team needs Myers to front their rotation for the next few years.  But if you’re gonna rebuild, why hold back?  Myers won’t bring a Josh Beckett-sized bounty, but even with the baggage you’d think the Phils could get one good prospect in return.

Aaron Rowand, a fan favorite, really ought to stay put.  Bit players like David Dellucci and a host of relievers certainly could be traded as well.  I have a feeling this will be a very, very different club in 2007.         

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Philadelphia Phillies Bobby Abreu Pat Burrell

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Rubin: Mets Could Get Garcia Or Vazquez

By Tim Dierkes | July 14, 2006 at 9:37am CDT

According to Adam Rubin of the New York Daily News, the Mets may be able to acquire Freddy Garcia or Javier Vazquez from the White Sox.  He says:

"The White Sox have been calling around to clubs – including the Mets – letting it be known that Javier Vazquez or Freddy Garcia would be available. The price: top-notch relief help, which would allow the Sox to fortify their bullpen leading to closer Bobby Jenks, sources told the Daily News. Chicago has 23-year-old Brandon McCarthy ready to step into its rotation."

Seems like relievers are the hot ticket item of this particular trading season.  They’re always a popular deadline commodity but the price seemed quite high yesterday.  My Mets source is adamant that New York would not give up Duaner Sanchez (2.45 ERA, 1.24 WHIP, 6.4 K/9) for Garcia or Vazquez.  He tells me that Aaron Heilman is an option.  To me, sounds like just the pitcher Don Cooper could fix after he’s stumbled a bit this season.

This year, the Mets have seen fine work from Heath Bell (0.83 ERA in 21 Triple A innings plus a 3.68 ERA in 22 big league innings) and Royce Ring (1.53 ERA in 29 Triple A innnings).  Henry Owens jumped up from Double A after 25 innings of 1.08 ball.

Rubin’s story also indicates that the Sox could have some interest in Tom Gordon, the best reliever on the trade market.  Flash has pitched for both Chicago teams.  He posted a 3.16 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, 12 saves, and 11.0 K/9 in 74 innings for the Sox back in 2003.

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Chicago White Sox New York Mets Aaron Heilman Freddy Garcia Javier Vazquez Tom Gordon

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Reds Send Kearns, Lopez To Nats In Blockbuster

By Tim Dierkes | July 13, 2006 at 4:27pm CDT

I was fairly baffled by this trade.  How in the world does swapping out Austin Kearns and Felipe Lopez for Gary Majewski, Bill Bray, Royce Clayton, and Brendan Harris make the Reds a better team this year?  (Ryan Wagner and Daryl Thompson were also swapped in the deal).  Let’s analyze.

Lopez is a below average defensive shortstop.  He’s probably amongst the five worst defensive shortstops in the game, as indicated by The Fielding Bible.  The Reds are ranked just 12th in the league in defensive efficiency this year.  Still, Royce Clayton is no defensive whiz at this point – he’s probably only a shade better than Lopez.  So unless Krivsky has some fielding metrics that say otherwise, the gains on defense are minimal.  And if both players keep hitting like they have been this year, the Reds lose a full win on offense.

As for the bullpen additions, I’m less impressed after I look more closely.  Majewski is a 26 year-old reliever who does not miss bats (career K rate of 5.3 per nine).  He’s also generous with the free passes.  While he may have squeezed into the list of the ten best setup men last year, he’s not the most reliable option.  23 year-old southpaw Bray is more potential than results thus far, and he hasn’t shown much ability to shut down left-handed hitters. He’s got good stuff, but he’s still just a reliever. 

Brendan Harris is a good little player; maybe he’ll be starting at second base for the Reds next year if Brandon Phillips moves over to shortstop.  Righty starter Daryl Thompson is just 20, and adds needed depth to the Reds’ farm system.  Still, neither has been making anyone’s top prospect list.

I tried to defend Wayne Krivsky a bit at first, but this trade just looks bad.  The more I dig in, the less I like the players he acquired.  And if the Reds – 1.5 games out of the wild card – don’t make the playoffs by a couple of wins, this trade is the reason.

For the Nats, Kearns would not be a bad option at all in center field.  He’s got good range and a good arm.  His power potential remains huge, and though RFK will dampen his stats.  Great American Ballpark inflates right-handed home runs by about 15% while RFK deflates them by over 20%.  This could cost him 5-6 homers annually.

Lopez is seeing his power numbers slip this season as he continues to pound the ball into the ground more than half the time he makes contact.  The steals don’t add much value.  Strip it down and mostly you’re left with one asset: the ability to draw a walk in 10-12% of his plate appearances.  That’s a good thing, but it doesn’t outweigh the negatives.  The idea of unloading Lopez made sense, but the execution was poor.

Click here to see the fantasy take on this trade over at RotoAuthority.

Go over to the Hardball Times to see Aaron Gleeman’s excellent take on the deal.

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Cincinnati Reds Washington Nationals Austin Kearns Felipe Lopez

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Reds Send Kearns, Lopez To Nats In Blockbuster

By Tim Dierkes | July 13, 2006 at 4:27pm CDT

I was fairly baffled by this trade.  How in the world does swapping out Austin Kearns and Felipe Lopez for Gary Majewski, Bill Bray, Royce Clayton, and Brendan Harris make the Reds a better team this year?  (Ryan Wagner and Daryl Thompson were also swapped in the deal).  Let’s analyze.

Lopez is a below average defensive shortstop.  He’s probably amongst the five worst defensive shortstops in the game, as indicated by The Fielding Bible.  The Reds are ranked just 12th in the league in defensive efficiency this year.  Still, Royce Clayton is no defensive whiz at this point – he’s probably only a shade better than Lopez.  So unless Krivsky has some fielding metrics that say otherwise, the gains on defense are minimal.  And if both players keep hitting like they have been this year, the Reds lose a full win on offense.

As for the bullpen additions, I’m less impressed after I look more closely.  Majewski is a 26 year-old reliever who does not miss bats (career K rate of 5.3 per nine).  He’s also generous with the free passes.  While he may have squeezed into the list of the ten best setup men last year, he’s not the most reliable option.  23 year-old southpaw Bray is more potential than results thus far, and he hasn’t shown much ability to shut down left-handed hitters. He’s got good stuff, but he’s still just a reliever. 

Brendan Harris is a good little player; maybe he’ll be starting at second base for the Reds next year if Brandon Phillips moves over to shortstop.  Righty starter Daryl Thompson is just 20, and adds needed depth to the Reds’ farm system.  Still, neither has been making anyone’s top prospect list.

I tried to defend Wayne Krivsky a bit at first, but this trade just looks bad.  The more I dig in, the less I like the players he acquired.  And if the Reds – 1.5 games out of the wild card – don’t make the playoffs by a couple of wins, this trade is the reason.

For the Nats, Kearns would not be a bad option at all in center field.  He’s got good range and a good arm.  His power potential remains huge, and though RFK will dampen his stats.  Great American Ballpark inflates right-handed home runs by about 15% while RFK deflates them by over 20%.  This could cost him 5-6 homers annually.

Lopez is seeing his power numbers slip this season as he continues to pound the ball into the ground more than half the time he makes contact.  The steals don’t add much value.  Strip it down and mostly you’re left with one asset: the ability to draw a walk in 10-12% of his plate appearances.  That’s a good thing, but it doesn’t outweigh the negatives.  The idea of unloading Lopez made sense, but the execution was poor.

Go over to the Hardball Times to see Aaron Gleeman’s excellent take on the deal.

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Cincinnati Reds Washington Nationals Austin Kearns Felipe Lopez

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Angels Trade Rumors: Alfonso Soriano and More

By Tim Dierkes | July 13, 2006 at 10:02am CDT

I spoke to my Angels source recently, and he had all sorts of good info about the team.

A recent hot surge has landed the Halos just two games out in the AL West.  Because of this, GM Bill Stoneman is upping his demands and won’t cave in and send any of his future stars to the Nationals for Alfonso Soriano.  The Angels are pleased with 28 year-old Juan Rivera and think he’s developing into a big bat in his own right.  Rivera is hitting .277/.337/.505 on the season and has had a blistering July.  Baseball Prospectus considers him most similar to Lou Piniella at the same age, though Rivera has more power.

Most of the Angels’ top prospects are untouchable: Nick Adenhart, Jose Arredondo, Howie Kendrick, Joe Saunders, and Brandon Wood won’t be moved (click their names to view their minor league stats this season).  A couple of excellent young players who could be used in trades this month or in the offseason: Jeff Mathis and Erick Aybar.  Aybar’s big league showcase didn’t generate the interest Stoneman wanted, and a Mathis became expendable with the emergence of Mike Napoli.

Some other players who have a good chance of being dealt are Brendan Donnelly, J.C. Romero, and Dallas McPherson.  On McPherson, my source says he "would’ve been the centerpiece of a Soriano trade had he not been hurt."  Mathis, Aybar, and McPherson will bring a fine bounty eventually, whereas the two relievers will be used more to acquire spare parts.

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Los Angeles Angels Washington Nationals Alfonso Soriano

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New To MLB Trade Rumors?

By Tim Dierkes | July 13, 2006 at 9:28am CDT

With the trade deadline nearing and rumors flying all over the Internet, I’m sure many of you are finding MLB Trade Rumors for the first time.  Welcome!

My name is Tim, and I comment on this site as RotoAuthority and occasionally RumorMonger.  Here you’ll find all variety of baseball trade rumors that I find interesting and worthy of a look.  The rumors may originate from other websites or blogs, newspapers, radio reports, or my own sources (the source will always be clearly labeled).  I’ll also provide trade analysis and suggestions, free agent info, and useful links.  Also, if you scroll down the left-hand sidebar, you’ll see a Browse All Rumors section.  Here you can easily find certain players or teams and everything I’ve posted on them.  I try to write something daily on MLB Trade Rumors, so bookmark www.mlbtraderumors.com and come back every day.

Also, if you’re interested in fantasy baseball, check out one of our partner sites, RotoAuthority.  RotoAuthority is a fantasy baseball blog with a helpful community and daily fresh content for most types of fantasy baseball leagues.  I do all the writing for RotoAuthority currently, though we’ve got an advice guy behind the scenes and a guest writer on the way.

Finally, I’ve got a team of writers contributing to a blog aptly named AllCubs.  If you’re a fan of Chicago’s National League ballclub you should definitely take a look.

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Uncategorized

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Relievers On The Market

By Tim Dierkes | July 12, 2006 at 11:48pm CDT

Sometimes trade deadlines come and go without any phenomenal blockbuster; such was the case last year when July’s biggest deal may have been the Randy Winn trade.  However, one type of player is sure to change hands – contenders will add relievers this month.  Let’s break down the best available.

The reliever who could make the biggest difference this year is probably Tom Gordon.  Trading him now could free the Phillies from the worrisome agreement to pay him $5-7 mil per season as he nears 40 years old.  Gordon has been excellent this year.  A return to the Yankees has been mentioned, and the Brewers or Dodgers could certainly use him.

Joe Borowski has been quite solid in Florida, and he makes less than $400,000.  JoBo’s actually been a lot better than his 3.71 ERA indicates.  He seems a lock to be dealt this month.

Adding a Salomon Torres or Roberto Hernandez from the Pirates doesn’t seem like it could possibly improve a team’s playoff chances significantly.  Still, there’s no reason for Dave Littlefield to keep these guys around given their salaries.

Bob Wickman, an impending free agent, has been connected to the Dodgers in rumors.  LaTroy Hawkins seems like a good candidate to move.  Other possibilities include Brian Meadows, Scott Williamson, Guillermo Mota, Arthur Rhodes, and Gary Majewski.

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Philadelphia Phillies Relievers Tom Gordon

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Astros Acquire Aubrey Huff

By Tim Dierkes | July 12, 2006 at 10:45pm CDT

The Astros finally got their bat, and they didn’t have to give up their top prospects.  Read all about their trade for Aubrey Huff at MLB.com.

If you recall, the Astros have had Huff on their radar as far back as January of this year. The D-Rays got decent prospects in the trade, but Huff’s value has been declining for a while now.

Ben Zobrist is a solid but not spectacular shortstop prospect.  He may be ready to try Triple A for the first time with his new club.  He kind of reminds me of Craig Counsell after reading about him a bit.  Good guy to have around, gets on base, but not a star.  The B.J. Upton as a shortstop experiment has officially ended because of Zobrist, and Upton should be in the bigs to stay by August if he takes to third base.

Talbot projects as a tolerable fifth starter perhaps; he’ll give up a good share of hits but stay around the plate.  He’s got a 1.36 WHIP in Double A right now.

Looking at the numbers, the Astros might stand to gain one game in the standings from this trade when it’s all said and done.  That could be the difference with the team currently 3.5 games out of the wild card. 

I was just reading an excellent chapter in Dayn Perry’s book Winners.  The biggest post-trading deadline gain ever from an outfielder was Jermaine Dye for the 2001 A’s, and that accounted for maybe two extra wins.  Best ever trading deadline acquisition?  Doyle Alexander for the 1987 Tigers, who went 9-0 with a 1.53 ERA after the trade.  Of course, a young nobody named John Smoltz went the other way.  Still, no trading deadline acquisition has ever contributed more than Alexander (Randy Johnson included).

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Houston Astros Tampa Bay Rays Aubrey Huff

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Kevin Towers Trade Profile

By Tim Dierkes | July 12, 2006 at 12:30am CDT

I decided to compile a nifty spreadsheet of all the trades Kevin Towers has made since 2001.  Go ahead – Download san_diego_padres_towers.xls.  From this compilation I learned a few things about Towers’s favorite trading partners.  He works well with Brian Cashman and the Yankees, albeit on mostly minor deals (5 trades since 2001).  Towers also gets along well with Bill Bavasi and the Mariners – they’ve made four trades since 2001.  He’s also made plenty of trades with the Red Sox, whether the GM was Mike Port, Theo Epstein, or the College of GMs.

Towers’s only swap with Dave Littlefield of the Pirates took place a year ago, when he acquired Dave Ross.  However, you do have to wonder if Towers will simply replicate his move from last year: add Joe Randa.  Randa represents only a modest upgrade over the current third basemen, however, and he was lousy with the Padres last year.

Given the Boston connection, Towers could pursue the resurgent Mike Lowell.  The 32 year-old makes $9MM this year and another $9MM in ’07, but he is hitting .307/.359/.516 for Boston.  Epstein could find catching prospect George Kottaras to his liking – Kottaras is hitting .276/.394/.451 for San Diego’s Double A affiliate.  Ben Johnson could be expendable and any team would love to have righty Cesar Carrillo.

Towers acquired Rich Aurilia two years ago, and he could be a useful addition again if acquired from the Reds.  Aurilia is slugging .488 on the season.  Another low-tier option could be Tony Graffanino of the Royals, who has played 26 games at third this year.

Super long shot: Adrian Beltre.  In an April interview with this website, Seattle Post-Intelligencer columnist John Hickey indicated that Beltre could be available if anyone would take a chunk of his contract.  And I already mentioned that Towers likes working with Bavasi.  On the other hand, Beltre’s been awful this season and the Padres don’t typically trade for huge contracts.

I think Towers will make some sort of move, even if it’s far too late to actually make a difference.  I expect something of the Aurilia/Graffanino flavor based on past history.

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San Diego Padres GM Trade Profiles Kevin Towers

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Red Sox Interested In Klesko?

By Tim Dierkes | July 11, 2006 at 8:23pm CDT

A reader passed along a trade rumor heard this morning on WEEI in Boston from Sean MacAdams.  Here’s the report:

The Red Sox would send reliever Rudy Seanez to the Padres for first baseman Ryan Klesko.

Some background seems appropriate.  Seanez is a 37 year-old right-handed reliever signed to a one-year, $1.9MM deal by the Red Sox this winter.  The club has a $2.1MM option for ’07 that can be bought out for $200,000.  Seanez also will earn incentives this year for his number of appearances. 

Last year with the Padres was easily the best season of his career; he was worth more than three wins and had the third best strikeout rate in the game among pitchers with 60 innings.  He’s toiled for eight different teams and a return to San Diego would mark his third stint with the Pads.  Seanez has seen all of his peripherals decline in his 33 innings this year, and he’s projected by Baseball Prospectus to be out of the game by ’08.  He spent time on the DL last year with shoulder discomfort.

I’m sure you’re familiar with 35 year-old slugger Ryan Klesko.  He was once a feared six-win player in the early part of the decade with San Diego.  The left-hander was acquired by the Padres in a blockbuster deal in 1999 along with Bret Boone in exchange for Quilvio Veras, Wally Joyner, and Reggie Sanders.  Klesko has a no-trade clause as a 10 and 5 player as part of his complicated, reworked contract; he makes $8MM in the final year of the deal.  Kevin Towers has already said he will not exercise the ’07 option.

Klesko hopes to return to the Padres around August 1st after having shoulder surgery on his A/C joint in April.  He hasn’t topped 500 ABs since 2002, but remains adept at drawing walks and may owe last year’s career-low slugging percentage to his painful shoulder and a pinched nerve in his neck.  Klesko would certainly clear waivers, so the Padres have until August 31st to deal him.  He’s willing to waive his no-trade rights if he’s not getting playing time with the Padres and he’s being sent to a contender.  That’s probably the main wrinkle in this possible deal – Klesko would only be a bench player in Boston.  In addition, Kevin Towers’s main concern right now is finding a third baseman.   

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Boston Red Sox San Diego Padres Rudy Seanez Ryan Klesko

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