Vidro Passes Physical
Nation resumes weeping.
(Nationals do not.)
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That explains the echo
man...
In which case Bavasi is brilliant.
But I wouldn't bet on it.
Weeeeell ok, I'll bet a buck, cause I like to think positive.
by Bearskin Rugburn on Dec 18, 2006 2:03 PM PST reply actions
That would suck
by Graham MacAree on Dec 18, 2006 2:11 PM PST up reply actions
all the best to Chris
by Bearskin Rugburn on Dec 18, 2006 2:14 PM PST up reply actions
How does Doyle doing badly help us out?
by Graham MacAree on Dec 18, 2006 2:27 PM PST up reply actions
by making the deal
by Bearskin Rugburn on Dec 18, 2006 4:27 PM PST up reply actions
quotes
Willie is a professional hitter.
Sam Rockwell is not a professional hitter.
by Jeff Sullivan on Dec 18, 2006 2:25 PM PST up reply actions
Bret Boone is a three-time All-Star second baseman
Yup.
by PositivePaul on Dec 18, 2006 3:10 PM PST up reply actions
fire them now
'Makes contact'
Hello, grounders to second with two outs and Ichiro on third.
by Graham MacAree on Dec 18, 2006 2:28 PM PST up reply actions
We need the official M's dictionary:
Hello, grounders to second with two outs and Ichiro on third
'Hits with power'
Lots of fly balls die at the warning track
'fast to first base'
Can't hit it out of the infield
good fit for the safco
I think the real plan
by anky on Dec 18, 2006 2:52 PM PST reply actions
Okay
by Scruffy Lefty on Dec 18, 2006 3:01 PM PST up reply actions
This F-ing Team...
I have no idea what the Mariners were thinking. None. I had to take two ibuprofen tablets after I learned about the deal so that I could write this analysis.
Jose Vidro is an old 33: His knees are shot, he can't play the field anymore, and his power is gone. He'll be one of the worst designated hitters in the American League, and he just bumped a superior hitter, Ben Broussard, out of that role. Yes, Chris Snelling is a Man of Glass, and he's out of options, but he has actual ability and is still just 25 years old. Yes, Emiliano Fruto has below-average control, but he's 22, has a plus fastball and solid-average change, and has less than a year of major league service. And to make this even more ridiculous, the Mariners apparently are going to pick up Vidro's option for 2009 -- by which point he'll need a walker to get to first base without help from two teammates.It's one thing to get worse by attrition, as your best players leave due to free agency or retirement. It's another to get worse as part of your core strategy, giving away talented young players in exchange for oft-injured mediocrities, just making things that much harder for your successor in the GM chair.
Sounds about right...
I was going to say
Al Cowens
I can visualize Jack Perconte, Bruce Bochte, Spike Owen, Julio Cruz, and The Inspector - but Al Cowens had faded from memory.
by KC @ Lookout Landing on Dec 18, 2006 11:00 PM PST up reply actions
The glasses
Visualize Al Cowens!
Nah.
Either that or she just spontaneously combusted from excessive laughter, and mocking "I Told You SO!"'s.
by PositivePaul on Dec 18, 2006 4:02 PM PST up reply actions
Going to watch Snelling play...hopefully
"The Norfolk Tides have announced that Harbor Park will host its first-ever Major League Exhibition game on Friday, March 30. The game is scheduled to begin at 2:00 pm, and will feature the Baltimore Orioles against the Washington Nationals. Ticket prices for the exhibition game will be announced at a future date."
www.norfolktides.com
ESPN's take
http://insider.espn.go.com/espn/blog/index?name=law_keith
I did hear back from the Mariners and it turns out that my season ticket deposit is refundable until Jan 22. I'm giving myself a week or two to cool off from the insanity of the offseason moves, but still very much plan to get my money back for 2007.
I've been thinking...
My theory:
-Bavasi, in wanting Jose Guillen so badly to be a Mariner (as THAT was a very sensible signing with good upside), sealed the deal by promising Guillen that he would bring in his best friend as well -- Jose Vidro. When it came time to talk to the Nats about Vidro, the Nats sensed a position of poor leverage and fleeced Bavasi accordingly -- because to break a promise with Guillen would mean his primary offensive acquisition would all of the sudden become a clubhouse-rotting shit storm.
By assuming that Jose Guillen wouldn't have come to Seattle without Vidro, I'm rationalizing the trade by saying we got Vidro AND Guillen for Snelling and Fruto. Slightly less bad.
And this also shifts the GM screwup from being a comically bad talent evaluation to an error in negotiating tactics, which I believe is more believable and inline with Bavasi's mediocrity.
Thoughts?
Bavasi
He viewed Fruto as very expendable because of the depth we had with relievers. He probably thought of the trade as basically Vidro for Snelling. In his mind, Vidro is probably a better hitter. He is proven in the majors. I think the biggest deciding factor is that Bavasi needs to win now. Vidro may be a slightly better DH than Snelling next year (very debatable - maybe more dependable is better). If he doesn't win now, he is likely out of baseball for many years.
Snelling has a lot of potential but is always hurt. The other reason this trade could have happened is because Bavasi is such a kind soul and wanted to see Snelling play OF somewhere every day.
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 18, 2006 11:16 PM PST up reply actions
Also
Well...
All I'm saying is I think my baseless speculation is better than your baseless speculation. ;-)
"I'm rationalizing the trade"
Humor me...
I refuse to believe that.
All I have to say is that if our GM is so bad, how did we get such a great deal on Guillen? It was almost too good, and the Vidro is way too bad. It can't be a coincidence that Vidro and Guillen are best friends -- the deals must have been related somehow.
The Guillen deal was good, but not great.
by Graham MacAree on Dec 18, 2006 11:29 PM PST up reply actions
The Guillen deal
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 18, 2006 11:32 PM PST up reply actions
The thing is
If that'd happened, would anyone have had a problem?
by Graham MacAree on Dec 18, 2006 11:34 PM PST up reply actions
No but the
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 18, 2006 11:37 PM PST up reply actions
Not too amazing?
Soriano got $100,000,000
We gave Guillen $5 mil and change.
It was a great deal.
Umm
First, the contract Soriano got was absurd. If we used contract size to determine player value then we would conclude Meche is one of the top starting pitchers in MLB.
His arm was injured. His arm may be one of his biggest assets. We don't really know how much this will effect him. Hopefully very little. I'm expecting about 100 OPS+ or basically him to give us league average production. I also think there is probably a +/- if 10 on that. Basically an OPS of something around .800 would be nice and I would be happy.
Guillen isn't that amazing of a player. His numbers make it look like he's declining. Its difficult to tell what kind of production we can expect because he was injured last year. If you look at his numbers, he had an amazing 2003 and then good years for 2004 and 2005.
Its also more likely that Guillen will get 17 mil over two years. This isn't bad as long as he plays well.
What I'm trying to say is that its nice that its a short deal but it will only be a good deal if Guillen is healthy and plays well. He took a discount because these are not guaranteed.
I guess I'm a little happier with the move than I put off. I guess I'm just depressed about our offseason in general and wish none of it would have happened.
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 19, 2006 12:26 AM PST up reply actions
No, the Cubs got a horrible deal
by Graham MacAree on Dec 19, 2006 12:49 AM PST up reply actions
Look at the lineup
Our organization may be "notorious" for judging prospects by their "on-field" performance, but bloggers are notorious for overvaluing prospects. It's natural really... we've watched such a crappy MLB product, that we can't help but look at the farm for hope and heros. But that makes us suckers when it comes to overvaluing our homegrown talent. Put another way, Felix isn't the second coming of Dwight Gooden. Felix is looking like the next Bartolo Colon (which still makes him a fine pitcher.) Snelling isn't the second coming of Edgar Martinez. He'll be lucky to put up the career numbers of Carmelo Martinez. How many "can't miss" prospects do you have to watch flame out before you start to realize that only a special few lucky and determined souls actually cash in on their potential. Vidro has already proven something, and that makes him more valuable than a prospect that you think will eventually be a better player. Bavasi realizes that. And, like a few people have noted... he's got to make some moves to save his bacon. Fans and ownership want a 500+ season next year, not a rebuilding year with an eye toward 2009.
What you say may well be true...
You say "Fans and ownership want a 500+ season next year, not a rebuilding year with an eye toward 2009".
This is true, but how exactly are the likes of Jose Vidro going to get the M's to be a .500 team next year?
We had a younger, more productive, and far, far cheaper way to help the M's get to .500 in-house, and Bavasi traded him away for Jose Vidro. This doesn't sound like a team that wants to get above .500 any time soon.
Bavasi is betting...
Bavasi also thought
What brought me to that conclusion...
And then, with Snelling, there's the whole injury thing. I know Veege gets hurt too, but Doyle's had a series of major injuries that set him back year after year. He was turning into our very own Griffey in Cincy story.
I don't think the biggest issue here
by Jeff Sullivan on Dec 20, 2006 10:34 AM PST up reply actions
Or not ...
Jose Vidro is obviously not worth trading two prospects for the luxury of taking on his contract for a spot in the batting order that could be easily replaced by any number of AAA hitters. Heck I'd take Adam Jones over Vidro for the DH spot. Even if he whiffs on everything at least I know he's gaining some experience, whereas a 33 yr. old station-to-station slap-ball DH is highly unlikely to suddenly emerge as the second coming of Edgar or Julio Franco.
The fact that we threw in Fruto as well just makes this trade even MORE puzzling. I don't see how trading two potentially useful pieces of the organization improves the club when the return is mediocre at best.
In terms of Vidro proving anything ... are we talking about the Vidro of recent times or the Vidro of Expo years? I mean back then Bret Boone was doing pretty well and Joel Pineiro wasn't such a bust. I don't think your comparison works when it's taking the best years of a veteran and comparing them to some random potential "flaming out" of a prospect.
Just my 2 cents.
Exactly
Bavasi is not interested in watching Adam Jones get his experience by striking out 160 times while wearing an M's uniform next year. It might be a good strategy for the M's long term. But right now, Bill has to try to get the team to .500 to save his job.
I hate it as much as y'all, but right now the M's are striving desperately for credibility/mediocrity. All the armchair GMs out there think we're a laughing stock for dumping talented youth, but the casual fan will show up for a 500+ team.
Meh.
While many stars started from Day One as a star, many, many more struggled their first year or two. Like, um, Edgar Martinez.
We've seen this before...a LOT. With MANY other teams THis striving simply doesn't get you credibility or mediocrity--it just gets you that many more years of bad baseball.
Airchair GMs who ignore history and think these are good moves are like the suckers who bet on roulette in Vegas---they think they're beating the system, but they're just getting fleeced by the house.
RE: johnbai casual fan remark
He is just delaying the inevitable.
by Scruffy Lefty on Dec 19, 2006 11:43 PM PST up reply actions
I think Lopez was a good #2 last year
You're right in saying that Snelling is no "can't miss" prospect, but you've got to admit that Vidro is no "can't miss" veteran. To me, the best case scenario with Vidro is that he stays healthy and hits like Lopez, but with a higher OBP. Okay, great, but we already had that hitter, minus the low K rate, in Snelling. And he was able to play the field, and he was cheap, and he was young, and he didn't cost us a live arm. If you assume every rookie is going to fail, you'll end up with the 2004 M's. I don't think anyone's arguing that we shouldn't try to contend, I think a lot of people believe Snelling will out-hit Vidro in 2007. Which means that we paid millions of dollars and Emiliano Fruto to lose production.
And anyway, I don't think the M's need a #2 hitter at all. I think they need a #3 hitter and a #1 pitcher, the same things they've needed for four years.
I agree
And if the FO plans to blow the money, please at least do so on a Matsuzaka rather than picking up a ragtag collection of expensive #5 pitchers, declining DHs, and utility outfielders. Please.
goes to corner to cry
John Bai
It's hilarious
You're "awesome". Go away.
by Graham MacAree on Dec 19, 2006 10:30 PM PST up reply actions
Its Stretching....
by billy1 on Dec 19, 2006 10:41 PM PST reply actions
The gamble that Snelling will perform
I too wouldn't be surprised if
This trade was bad. I hate Bavasi. I want Snelling back. I hate Bavasi (I know I already said that but it bears repeating). Vidro may do better than Snelling next year. All these things can go together.
My big problems with the trade:
The difference between the two is very small.
Snelling has more upside than Vidro.
Vidro costs much more than Snelling.
Snelling is much more likely to perform better over the next three years.
Snelling can play decent defense. Vidro can't.
Vidro is old and chubby.
Snelling is cool.
We had to give up Fruto too.
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 19, 2006 11:31 PM PST reply actions
Not much of a gamble, if your job is on the line
by billy1 on Dec 19, 2006 11:46 PM PST reply actions
Fine, even if Snelling were not a starter in 2007
You say my job would be to make this team win next year. Fine. Then to do that I'm going with the best players possible. Chris Snelling is already better than Jose Vidro. Ben Brouusard, who Hargrove would likely start over Snelling if we kept him, is already better than Jose Vidro.
Jose Vidro is going to hurt the teams chances to win next year, more than Snelling or Brouusard. Therefor he's going to hurt my chances of keeping my job.
vidro will hurt club
by billy1 on Dec 20, 2006 12:15 AM PST reply actions
When was the last time
I'm going with 'never', but hey, I could be wrong.
by Graham MacAree on Dec 20, 2006 5:12 AM PST up reply actions
Careful, Graham
I'm a scientist
by Graham MacAree on Dec 20, 2006 10:38 AM PST up reply actions
To see how the other half lives?
Broadening your skillset?
yeah, I got nothin'.
Its just fun to tell people
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 20, 2006 3:33 PM PST up reply actions
You can't just use his career line
I don't think there is any way you can argue that a platoon of Broussard/Morse would give us less production out of the DH position. If you don't like Morse then replace him with any righty who hits LHP. This would cost less and not require us to ship off Snelling and Fruto. Wasn't there anyone in the FO who thought about this deal before they signed off on it.
by Edgar for Pres on Dec 20, 2006 12:56 AM PST up reply actions
Vidro's career line is irrelavent
I'm not saying Brouusard would be be a productive #2 hitter.He's more like a #6 hitter. But regardless of were he hits, he's still a better hitter than Vidro, even if he's not platooned. And it's not that hard to find a platoon partner for him if one decides to go that route. Much easier than paying for the money and talent that Vidro costs.
Also, Snelling put up a better line than Vidro in 2006. Yes, it's in a 4th of the at bats, but it's still there.
Snelling's SO rate in 2006 is more than likely not a trend. He's never even came close to striking out like that in his professional career before. The chances of him all of a sudden becoming Richie Sexson in terms of strikeouts is not good at all.
Despite his bad September, Snelling STILL put up a .110 ISOP(isolated patience). That's pretty damn impressive if you ask me. It's obvious his ability to get on base is still there.
Not only has Vidro's power dropped continually over the past 4 years, but so has his ability to get on base. His ISOB has gone from .087 in 2003, to .073,.064, to .059.
One last thing
by billy1 on Dec 20, 2006 12:46 AM PST reply actions
Snelling was the only guy on the Mariners
by Scruffy Lefty on Dec 20, 2006 9:10 AM PST up reply actions
Jeff--
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAck!!!
Before Suzi and her twin find out about this place.
Before Logan, Nagol, Mr. X, and all of his subspecies infest this place.
Because I can't resuscitate Munchausen, my twin brother from a different mother, to establish some interesting distracting commentary that, while a bit off-topic, was at least very fun to follow.
Before 3-bills ML finds out I'm hangin' out here and takes out a hit man on me for smokin' his @55 in the PI-blog fantasy baseball league for two years straight.
Like good ol' Archie and Edith would sing:
Those were the daaaaaaaays
(But, really, I don't miss 'em)
by PositivePaul on Dec 20, 2006 8:58 AM PST up reply actions
Just for Old Time's Sake...
Okay. Kill. Me. Now.
by PositivePaul on Dec 20, 2006 11:43 AM PST up reply actions
For someone who claims to not miss 'em...
How can you forget...
It is hard not to forget what is singed into your brain, even when you haven't been there in over a year.
So true, so true...
by PositivePaul on Dec 20, 2006 3:40 PM PST up reply actions
This is what I get
by Jeff Sullivan on Dec 20, 2006 9:30 AM PST up reply actions

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