Thursday, July 31, 2008

More thoughts on the Bay Trade

I've seen a lot of reactions to this trade and I'm getting a ton of traffic, so I'm going to start this post way back at the beginning. If you're a regular reader and the first two paragraphs or so seem obvious to you, bear with me.

One year ago, Neal Huntington inherited a wreck. He was handed a baseball team built for 75 wins through 2009, at which point it would be completely disbanded, and a minor league system that was so barren that Steve Pearce hit his way to being the #2 prospect in the organization with only one good season. Faced with a choice, he decided to try and let his players maximize their value before trading them off to rebuild the entire organization from square one.

The key piece in doing that has to be the best player on the major league team. That is, of course, Jason Bay. Trading Jason Bay today is not a salary dump, because the Pirates can afford to keep him. Because of the sins of the past, the Pirates have no choice but to look to the future. After 2009 Bay is a free agent that commands $10 million + per year. The Pirates can afford that, too, but to them, a team that's undeniably on a budget, he won't be worth that money. Trading Bay for prospects at this trade deadline is a necessary step towards some day contending again. It's hard to look at a team like the Pirates that's been hitting so well this year and say that, but it's really the truth.

So we come to the trade. The Pirates' position all month has been that they don't have to trade Jason Bay. I've written this before and I'll write it again: that's only technically true. In reality, with two teams in one division needing Bay right now, his value was never going to be higher. The Red Sox wanted Bay partially to replace Manny Ramirez and partially to keep him from going to Tampa. The Rays wanted him partially because they need a right fielder and partially because they wanted to stick Boston with Manny for the rest of the year. In a situation like that, Bay's value was never going to be higher. Huntington knew that and for at least two days, I've had the sense that Bay was going to be dealt to one of the two of them. If you can't strike when the iron's hot, there's not much reason to strike at all.

In the end, the return that we pulled for Bay was better than any single one of the rumors I've read online in the past two days. Andy LaRoche is real hitting prospect that was stuck in an awful situation in LA with a team that had no appreciation for him. Prior to this year, he OPS'd over .900 in his three previous minor league seasons. He's capable of having the career that we all wish his brother would have. Bryan Morris is a great buy low pickup. He's a very promising pitcher in A-ball that missed all of last year with Tommy John surgery, but seemed to be bouncing back very nicely this year. He's good good strikeout and walk rates and might rise pretty quickly once everyone's convinced he's healthy. He's the type of pitching prospect this organization doesn't have and desperately needs. Brandon Moss and Craig Hansen don't have the upside of LaRoche or Morris, but that doesn't make them bad pickups. Moss's minor league numbers kind of remind me of Steve Pearce's, possibly with less power but more consistency. He's hit very well with limited action with the Red Sox this year. He's still only 24, and he's someone that the team can plug in and give a chance to right now while they're bridging the gap to the prospects they've acquired recently. Hansen has electric stuff and hasn't put it together for the Sox, but his minor league numbers are mostly very good and he's a young guy that can step into our pen right now. Seeing as he's probably the player I'm the least excited about in this trade, I think that makes it a very nice haul for Bay.

It's also important to look at aspects beyond the trade. The truth is, we're out from underneath a lot of money that would've gone to him. If we use that money to make sure Alvarez signs, sign Robby Grossman, maybe one more high upside pick from this year, and another pick or two next year, then we get to add all of them to the minor league system, as well. They're not direct results of the trade, but they're indirect acquisitions as well.

I know lots of people are rolling their eyes today and saying, "Here we go again, more rebuilding for the Pirates," but the reason we've been rebuilding for fifteen years is that nobody's actually managed to do it right. Huntington's still got a long ways to go and a tough job ahead of him, but this trade is exactly what he needs to be doing.

Trade Deadline Thread

Ken Griffey's already been traded to the White Sox. The Bay talks seem pretty intense after everything that happened yesterday and he's probably headed to somewhere in the AL East. I'll update this post all day as things happen and if really big things happen, they'll get their own posts as soon as I can work them up. You can use this thread to talk, speculate, leave me links, etc. Starting at 1 PM, I'm going to be helping with FanHouse's Deadline Chat, but I'll be updating here all day as well. Also, I will be at work, so if I'm not right on the ball, bear with me. This is going to be a wild day.

10:47- Most things I can find about this trade seem to peg it at about 50/50 (there's about ten links I could give you to that). One of the sticking points is certainly what prospects the Pirates are getting and another is that Manny Ramirez is insane. (UPDATE: and five minutes after I posted this, DK put up an update confirming my guess that Huntington and the Pirates are the ones holding up the three-way talks in an attempt to play the Rays and Sox off of each other ... which is exactly how this sort of thing should be done)

Noonish- Ken Rosenthal and Nick Cafardo agree that the Pirates are the ones holding this trade up and that it could still fall apart. I haven't heard a lot of new news lately. Four hours until the deadline. (both links came from MLB Trade Rumors and Tim Dierkes, who works harder than anyone to pull these links together)

1 PM- Peter Gammons says the three-way deal is close to dead.

1:09- Dejan says it's not dead, it's getting closer, and we might be ditching Ronny Ballgame.

1:19- FanHouse chat is rolling.

1:49- Things don't look so good on the Marlins/Pirates/Sawx front. It seems like this is falling apart over money, but it's hard to know at this point.

2:11- Both DK (at his blog) and Jayson Stark say that we're talking to the Rays again.

2:20- Apparently the Jays are also interested in Bay. I'm not sure how serious it is or what they have to give up for him. It might be Huntington trying to stall with the Rays. (UPDATE: DK says Toronto isn't real. Sorry, my internet at work today is awful. Not a great day for that to be happening.)

2:35- Nick Cafardo at the Boston Globe says the deal's not dead yet. The Pirates have shifted their focus, according to DK, but it may be simply because they can't do anything about the Sox/Marlins deal at the moment and don't want to be caught with their pants down if the thing doesn't go through. Counting on the Marlins when money issues are involved is not smart business.

3:11- MLB.com says Bay is going to the Rays for Niemann, Brignac, and minor leaguers. They don't have any confirmation, though, and Dejan seems to think that the talks are still going. Take with appropriate dosage of salt. Dejan says if such a deal happens, there's going to be some serious quantity involved.

3:19- I should probably mention that if the deal is Niemann and Brignac with two minor leaguers for Bay and those minor leaguers aren't Davis or Hellickson, it's probably an awful trade.

3:39- Jennifer Langosch says a source in Pittsburgh has confirmed the trade. Again, take it for what it's worth. The MLB.com people seem to be the only ones that think this trade is done.

3:46- That above link has been updated to say that we're only getting one of Niemann and Brignac. **thump**thump**thump**thump** That's my head hitting the table.

3:51- Langosch just updated again to say that as of about five minutes ago, there had been no deal confirmed. This might not happen at all.

4:00- Just because there's no official word of a trade yet doesn't mean it hasn't happened. The names have to be in to the commissioner by 4 PM, but it can take up to an hour or so for last second deals to leak out.

4:06- About ten minutes before the deadline, Ken Rosenthal put up an update saying that the Red Sox thing might not be completely off. He says our demands for Bay was still what was holding things up. Still waiting on the final word to leak out on everything.

4:12- Rosenthal updates again to say that the three-way trade is definitely dead. Probably.

4:17- It kind of seems like nothing happened, but it's still too early to tell.

4:28- There's some indication that Manny has been traded to the Dodgers and that Bay has been traded to the Dodgers. May be a new 3-way. Manny seems definitely traded, though.

4:33- John Heyman says Manny to the Dodgers, Bay to the Sox, four minor leaguers to us.

4:39- Rosenthal says Andy LaRoche, Bryan Morris, Brandon Moss, and Craig Hansen to us. I'll have more when every site on the internet isn't crashing.

4:51- I like this trade. LaRoche is a big pickup, Morris is promising, Moss and Hansen will be useful to us and they're both only 24. I'll have more later when I get home.

The Bay Trade

Is this going down? Is this not going down? There are a million variables and a million rumors being passed around tonight. The main tenants of this deal right now are: 1.) Manny Ramirez to Florida, 2.) Jason Bay (and maybe Grabow) to Boston, 3.) Jeremy Hermida and prospects to the Pirates. Will Carrol says it's almost done, but the Commish has to approve and that we might want more for Bay.

What to take from this? Where there's smoke, there's fire, and there's smoke all over the place right now. There are some things to consider, though. Hermida is an incredibly promising young player, but he's 24 and he's got 2-3 seasons worth of major league time. As centerpieces for players like Jason Bay go, I don't know that he's who I'd have my eye on because of service time. And it's possible that Huntington is using all of this Red Sox talk to drive up an offer from the Rays. The Rays have so much young pitching that they can almost certainly afford to send Hellickson or Davis (among other prospects) our way for Bay and refusing to do so and letting him go to the Sawx would just be poor business for them. It's hard to know what will happen, but seeing Bay linked to two American League contenders with good minor league systems in the same day brings a smile to my face.

My guess at the moment is that Bay won't be a Pirate by four o'clock tomorrow, but that there's a lot more going on behind the scenes than anyone knows.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The game is secondary again

Aaron Cook and Zach Duke take the mound tonight in a game that will be secondary over the focus on Jason Bay, as talks between the Pirates and Rays seem awfully serious. I don't have a lot to add about the game, but I will say this: if Huntington isn't getting the offer he wants from the Rays, he should be waiting to see if the Sox pull the trigger on a Manny Ramirez trade. If they do and are suddenly in the market for a corner outfielder, we can write our own check for Bay, likely to either Tampa or Boston. Just something to think about.

UPDATE: I know it's just the MLB.com guys, but seeing what I wrote above, this is worth a look. The rumor is a Pirates/Marlins/Red Sox three way trade that would include Hermida coming our way. The players aren't important. What's important is that Huntington is working every angle of this Bay trade and it sure seems like he knows what he's doing. If you're looking for more sources on this one, Will Carroll is in on it as well.

Bay talks still going

Lest you were worried that Neal Huntington was done after last Friday's trade:

The Pirates are deep into trade talks with the Tampa Bay Rays and other parties regarding left fielder Jason Bay, one team source with direct knowledge said yesterday, but it remains far from certain that Bay will be moved by Major League Baseball's deadline tomorrow afternoon.

DK says it's a slightly better than 50% chance that Bay stays in Pittsburgh, but geez, a deal with the Rays just makes SO MUCH SENSE for both sides that I find it hard to believe that Huntington and Friedman won't find a way to make it happen.

UPDATE: From ESPN's trade deadline blog:

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Wednesday that the Pirates are deep into talks with the Rays about Jason Bay. Separately, with about 29 hours to go before the trade deadline, sources indicate to ESPN that while nothing is imminent, the two sides are talking constructively and trying to bridge the gap.
We won't get Price, but Huntington may be able to pull a good amount of prospects out of Tampa in a trade like this. Rather than shooting for one or two uber-prospects, casting a wide net isn't an awful idea when your farm system is as empty as ours is.

UPDATE #2: Dejan is following closely on his blog and makes things sound pretty serious. Apparently Brignac and Hellickson's names have come up. I doubt we can pry Hellickson, but I'd be trying like hell if I was Huntington.

Game 107: PIrates 6 Rockies 4

So ... another ugly start, another decent recovery by a starter, another comeback against a shaky Rockies starter and another win. I didn't get to see much because I was busy being extorted by the people that towed my car in an evil alliance with my apartment complex ("Wait, so I owe you $180 ... in cash ... even though I can see places on the bill that clearly say I can pay with a check or a credit card ... how is this different from you stealing my car and holding it hostage?"), but it looks like Herrera was not particularly great last night and was bailed out the Pirate offense and good luck. I'm sure he's not complaining too loudly.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The Pirates?

Glendon Rusch and Yoslan Herrera start tonight. Also, my car got towed. By my own apartment complex. Because they sent me a letter telling me that the parking lot would be resurfaced in "August" when they really meant "July." And I have to pay to get it back. Also, other bad things are happening that I can't talk about right now, but if you are an avid reader of the internet, you've probably stumbled upon yourself during the day today.

Go Bucs. Woo m$%&#@#@$%ing hoo.

Links and stuff

Adam LaRoche goes on the disabled list, which is a shame because he's finally been hitting like the guy we traded for two winters ago. His line is currently at .265/.343/.470 and his .390/.472/.805 line in July to go with his 7 homers would probably make him a player of the month candidate if he didn't get hurt and didn't play for the PIrates.

In his stead, the Pirates are calling up Brian Bixler. Reaction #1 is of course, "OMG! Jack's getting traded!" The question, though, is who else were we going to call up? Pearce is already up after the trade and McCutchen isn't on the 40-man and I don't think the team has any intentions of putting him there this year unless Bay gets traded. Bixler's it and he hasn't really been hitting terribly at AAA since we demoted him.

That being said, Nomar Garciaparra is probably headed to the disabled list again (via Baseball Musings) and the Dodgers are about to get really desperate for a short-stop. Just sayin'.

Game 106: Pirates 8 Rockies 4

If you can think back to the late part of 2006 and the first half of 2007 when Ian Snell was a budding ace for the Pirates, you might remember the one thing that was repeatedly said about Snell before his starts: "Get to him the first time around or you're not getting to him tonight." It's actually something that people say about most good pitchers and like most old baseball sayings, it probably doesn't have a whole lot of basis in fact. It was certainly applicable to Snell tonight, though, as he struggled through two innings, giving up six hits (including a homer to Matt Holliday) and only being spared from a deficit greater than 3-0 by an absolutely insane laser beam of a relay by Jack Wilson from shallow center-field to nail Troy Tulowitzki at the plate. In his next five innings, he only allowed two hits and a walk and he struck out seven. That gave the Pirates plenty of time to rally against Valerio de los Santos (who I failed to recognize from before the game as the crappy Brewer reliever that we regularly pummelled in the earlier part of this decade) and the Rockies' bullpen. I've been asking for baby steps from Snell all season, but tonight was a full-fledged turn-back-the-clock outing that made it pretty easy to see why we once had so much hope for the guy.

Monday, July 28, 2008

The Rockies again?

Two teams that are headed in opposite directions face off at PNC tonight, with Ian Snell and Valerio De Los Santos taking the mound (most places are saying Jason Hirsch is starting, but DK says de los Santos). Both Adam LaRoche and Freddy Sanchez are going to be on the bench for this one with the back spasms that they suffered in Sunday's game, so we don't need to fire up the trade rumor machine just yet when they aren't on the field to start this one tonight.

The Rockies have won nine of ten since the break and we're sputtering pretty badly with three straight losses to the Padres. Snell hasn't showed much since his return from the DL beyond some increased velocity. To be honest, if this one doesn't look promising in the first hour, I'm probably flipping to the Brewers/Cubs game. You can decide on your own if that's the Ian Snell insult or just a sad statement of fact.

BS Detector

I've been sent this link a couple times and I see it being discussed in the comments. I wasn't really planning on weighing in because I don't think it has much substance, but people seem kind of panicky over it, so I'll toss my two cents into the hat.

The rumor is that the Pirates and Braves had mostly agreed on sending Jason Bay to Atlanta for four prospects, most likely including Brett Lillibridge and Brandon Jones, only to have the deal nixed by ownership. Let's put this one through the ringer:

  • It's from Mark Bowman, the Braves MLB.com beat writer. You know what MLB.com beat writers can be like.
  • Lillibridge has been terrible since being traded to the Braves and is maybe a fringe prospect at this point, if we're being kind. Jones is a semi-promising 24-year-old outfield prospect. Given what Huntington just traded for, does it seem like either one would be on his radar?
  • The Braves are almost certainly shopping Mark Teixeira and looking to sell at this deadline. Why would they be interested in Bay?
  • The deal was nixed by the ownership? Has Bob Nutting seemed even remotely interested in the day-to-day baseball operations since he hired Coonelly last year?
Now, I don't have any inside information and I don't pretend to be inside of Neal Huntington and Frank Coonelly's head and this rumor could very well be true, but looking over just about every aspect, I don't see a whole lot of traction for this one.

A draft update

There's some good news from the PG today regarding the remaining unsigned picks in the draft; apparently the Pirates are still targeting all of the remaining unsigned players in the top ten. Beyond Alvarez (who I'm still confident will sign, despite everything that's recently happened) the most important player in the group is Robby Grossman. I had kind of thought things were bleak on that front, but he came to PNC Park recently and apparently things are looking up:

Grossman, a California high school player considered to have potential above his sixth-round position, said during a brief visit to PNC Park Saturday that he considered himself "50-50" between signing with the Pirates and honoring his commitment to the University of Texas. A team official gave much the same chances of signing him.
The word on Scheppers remains the same as it has since draft day: the Pirates want to see him throw before deciding to sign him, presumably because he's going to cost first round money and the Pirates want to know he's healthy before giving it to him. I could be wrong, but if he doesn't sign I think unsigned second round picks are compensated with a similar pick next year. Things even seem to be looking better with Justin Wilson, who's supposedly decided he's worth more than a fifth-round pick after a great start in the College World Series final (he's not).

Oh, and while we're at it, the same notebook reports that John Van Benschoten has been sent to AAA and will work out of the bullpen (where I still kind of think he might be able to be effective), Jason Davis is up to take his place on the roster, and Jeff Karstens will start in his place next week. But you could've guessed all those things were going to happen without me having to tell you.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Game 105: Padres 3 Pirates 1

As anyone could've guessed before the game, Maholm and Peavy cruised through seven innings apiece this afternoon, each holding their opponent to one run and four hits with Maholm striking out nine and Peavy striking out ten. From there, the difference was the bullpens. As bad as the Padres have been this season, Heath Bell and Trevor Hoffman are much better than what the Pirates have to offer in the 'pen. They shut us out over two innings while John Grabow gave up home runs to Scott Hairston (who somehow has 17 bombs this year) and Josh Bard, presenting us with our final score.

Anyways, if there were any lingering thoughtst that this team could contend this year, losing three out of four at home to the Padres should pretty much take care of that. The worst part about this loss today is that it deals yet another blow to Grabow's trade value. Speaking of which, go work those phones, Neal. Give us all something else to talk about.

Get out your radar gun

Peavy and Maholm at 1:35 today. Given the way these two can work and the offenses at hand, we might have a really quick game this afternoon.

Some more trade talk

It's amazing that I'm still finding new things to read about the trade, but almost two days later, I am. There's two more things that I think are important reads about this move. The first is from Joe Sheehan at Baseball Prospectus:

While 2008 is a lost year for Tabata, he represents the type of talent the Pirates have generally had problems getting into the system: young, high-upside with superstar potential and some risk involved. It’s not clear what he’s going to become, but what he could become is more impressive than any other Pirate prospect’s ceiling. This is the type of deal Neal Huntington needed to make. Considering that he flipped an impending free agent (Marte) and a player having a career half, this is a very good deal for the Pirates; first-year GM.

This is an indelicate comparison, but if you want the optimistic viewpoint, think about Hanley Ramirez, who put up a desultory 2005 season in Double-A, creating whispers similar to what we’ve heard about Tabata. Three years later, Ramirez is as close to untouchable as any player in the game. That’s the kind of talent Huntington is trying to add to the Pirates, and if the name and the performance aren’t thrilling to Pirates fans, the thought process and the approach should be.

The second is from Wilbur Miller:
What’s significant about this trade is the break it represents from the model that Huntington inherited from his incompetent predecessor. What he’s found out this year, both from the collapse of the major league pitching and the poor performances of many of the team’s already-dubious prospects throughout the farm system, is that the Pirates can’t finesse the post-2009 talent vacuum. He and Coonelly both have stated many times that they’re not aiming at just reaching .500, but at building an organization that will be competitive over the long term. This is the first tangible sign that they meant it.
They're both worth a full read (the BP article is free until tonight).

I know that my gut reaction to this trade is that it wasn't a great one, but the more I look at it, the more it seems clear the most important aspect of this trade isn't necessarily the players we got, but the thought process involved. I may disagree with Huntington on the value of Tabata, but the point is that he's a very young and very talented and that's what the Pirates need . Not only did Huntington manage to make this deal, but by making this deal six days before the deadline, he sent a message that he's willing to work with other GMs and he's not going to cave Littlefield-style as the deadline approaches. Buster Olney, Joe Buck, and Tim McCarver can blabber on about whatever they want on TV, but it's clear that Huntington got what he wanted in this move.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Game 104: Padres 9 Pirates 6

Things of interest from this game (and other games):

  • Steve Pearce: 1/4, 1 BB
  • Adam LaRoche: 2/5, 1 HR- His batting line is now better than last year's and there's actually a chance that he could finish 2008 with a better OPS+ than 2006.
  • Xavier Nady: 0/3, 1 BB, 1 HBP, 1 run scored
  • Damaso Marte: struck out David Ortiz. Has the bizarre career arc of being traded from the Yankees to the Pirates to the White Sox to the Pirates to the Yankees.
  • John Van Benschoten: 1 and 2/3 innings pitched, 6 H, 7 R, 7 ER, 4 BB, 2 K, 2 HR
  • I heard Jeff Karsten described as, "probably better than Van Benschoten."
  • Gulp.
  • Wreck Specs: 2 solo homers allowed
  • Jason Michaels has 29 hits and 29 RBIs this year. Very fluky.
  • 15 runs in two games to the Padres. That's no good, my friends.
That's all from this one. Actually, I'm surprised I remember this much, what with Greg Brown and Bob Walk not mentioning anything but the auction after the second inning.

They still play games

Apparently, the Pirates still have to take the field tonight, even after yesterday's trade. Allegedly, they played last night and lost. John Van Benschoten starts tonight, putting the Padres awful offense to the true test, while Steve Pearce is in Pittsburgh and batting sixth tonight. I kind of imagine that the team is very distracted right now and curious who's on their way out the door next, so it seems kind of likely that we might be about to enter an ugly stretch of baseball. I guess that's all relative when you consider the last sixteen years for the Pirates.

Fixing the roster

After last night's trade, clearly some work had to be done with the roster. Dejan followed all the moves closely. Ohlendorf and Karstens will be on the 40-man roster, while Dan McCutchen won't, as of yet. John Van Benschoten is still starting tonight and Steve Pearce is taking Nady's place on the Pirates roster. There's no word on who's going to fill Marte's slot, but I'd guess it'll be Ohlendorf. If he can't get to Pittsburgh in time, we might roll with 24 guys in tonight's game.

I won't lie, I'm excited to see Pearce get the call. He hasn't hit all that well in AAA this year, but he's made it pretty clear that he was frustrated by being stuck there after the year he had last year. I still think that he can hit and am happy he's going to have a chance to try and do it on a major league level before we completely write him off.

The Deal Is Changing

Apparently, the Pirates/Yankees trade wasn't nearly as set in stone last night as we thought it was. According to Ken Rosenthal, the deal is going to change from Marte and Nady for Tabata, Ohlendorf, Coke, and Kontos to Tabata, Ohlendorf, Daniel McCutchen, and Jeff Karstens. They're both 25, both in AAA, and both have decent but not great peripherals. I'd say they're both better prospects than Coke, but maybe not as good as Kontos. The change in the deal makes Huntington's intent incredibly clear. His goal with this move was two-fold; to get Tabata and too add pitching depth at the highest levels of the minors, where we very clearly have none.

I have, of course, been spending a lot of time thinking about this deal since it happened. I've mostly been trying to talk myself into not hating it, then yelling at myself for trying to talk myself into another Pirate trade that I don't really believe in, then countering in my head that this is a much better trade than Littlefield would've ever made, then pleading with myself to leave Littlefield out of this, then going back to the beginning and doing it all over again. Regardless, there are some good aspects to this trade that I like, even if I'm not entirely happy with the outcome. A day's perspective on things never hurts either.

Huntington's not afraid to roll the dice. His goal in this deal was obviously to get Tabata. The guy's had his problems, but he's still a 19-year-old good enough to be in AA and without those problems, he's not available in this deal. Huntington's taking a ball of clay and handing it to his player development staff to mold. Much like the first Nady trade, there's nothing that Nady or Marte can do to make or break this trade; it's all in Tabata's hands.

That speaks volumes about both Tabata and Nady. Nady, despite his .330 average this year, hasn't convinced me that he's a better player than I thought he was prior to the seasons when I argued that the team would be better off non-tendering him and calling Pearce up. He has hit righties much better in the past two seasons, which makes him a useful everyday outfielder, but he's not an all-star. He's a cog in the machine that needs a .365 BABIP to put his OPS over .900. If I know that, you can bet that the smarter GMs in the league know the same thing. I argued before the season started that a good year from Nady wouldn't do much to change his trade value, so being upset that it didn't seems a little short-sighted of me.

That being said, I do still feel like a trade for Nady AND Marte could've netted the Pirates something a little more solid in the prospect department than a 19-year-old full of ephemeral upside. I'm still not entirely sold on Tabata given the way the last two years have gone for him. Still, he's who Huntington wants and he's who Huntington got and at least he's not Ty Wigginton or Shawn Chacon or Matt Morris. If anything, his trading for a 19-year-old has helped to assuaged my fears about the team being hellbent on trying to finish .500 this year or next year at the expense of building for the future. If this is the deal Huntington's making on the Friday before the deadline, I'm not convinced he's done yet. This could be an interesting week.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Nady and Marte to the Yankees

It's looking more and more like Nady and Marte to the Yankees for Tabata, Coke, Ohlendorf, and George Kontos. The conversation on this trade begins and ends with Tabata, who might be a super star and might not ever make it to the majors. More later.

MORE: Here's the deal; this is Nady and Marte for Tabata's upside. Ohlendorf is a warm body to fill the roster out with, Coke probably isn't much more than that and neither is Kontos. (ETA: I'm selling Kontos short here. He's got good strikeout numbers and is age appropriate in AA at 23. He might turn out to be a decent starter.) This is a trade for Tabata. The thing is, it's really hard to project Tabata. His minor league numbers are awful, but they're also practically meaningless because he's extremely young. Prospect guys like John Sickels LOVE Tabata, but he really hasn't done much and he's suffered a wrist injury this year that seems to be pretty serious. He's a huge talent, but he's a million miles away from being a sure thing and that puts this awfully close to being a terrible trade. Still, it's hard to judge a trade when high upside prospects are involved. That means I'm going to try and be vaguely positive about this, because if I can't find some upside in this deal I might have to stop being a Pirate fan forever (I'm only vaguely kidding).

In the past couple years, Tabata's name has come up every time the Yankees do their trade deadline panic. They've always held off on dealing him because they believed he was the real thing. Clearly, Huntington believes that as well, because he just traded two of the better players available on the market this week for three virtual nobodies and Tabata. It's certainly possible that we just got a future superstar for Nady and Marte, which makes this an awesome deal for us. It's also every bit as likely that we got absolutely nothing for them. I will say this for Huntington: it's incredibly ballsy to put all of your eggs into one basket like this. It's a huge risk. I'm not incredibly optimistic about this risk paying off for him, but the possibility does exist.

Bottom Line: This really looks like a bad deal to me. Like, a really, really bad deal. I'm not sold on Tabata at all, even in the least bit. The best I can say for him is that the potential exists for him to be a star player and he's waaay to young to write off entirely and that GMs don't ever get anywhere without taking risks. Given the current path of Tabata's career, I'm not certain this is a risk worth taking.

Tabata injury update: Charlie seems to have some evidence that Tabata's hand injuries are in the past and he's out with a hamstring injury this year. That's a really big difference. Hamstring injuries can almost always be overcome, especially by such a young guy. Hand problems are much more serious.

UPDATE: Oh, and there's a poll now. Vote.

The streak is on the line

Zach Duke is putting the four-game winning streak on the line tonight against Cha Seung Baek and the Padres tonight. We saw last night how bad the Padres offense is, so I'm vaguely optimistic about a good start from Duke tonight. Of course, sometimes the Pirate pitching staff is just what the doctor ordered for slumping offenses. As for Baek, I'm going to be honest, I don't know anything about him. He doesn't seem to be very good away from Petco, though.

UPDATE (7:22): Nady just got pulled from the game after the first inning for apparently no reason. He might be hurt, but the announcers don't seem to know and it's hard to know when he might've gotten hurt. Keeping an eye on this one.

UPDATE #2 (7:41): Marte's hugging people in the dugout and the PR department has confirmed that a deal is in the works and is pending "medical review."

UPDATE #3 (7:49):
Rotoworld mentions that Reid Brignac isn't starting for Durham tonight. Brignac and some of Tampa's pitching prospects for Nady and Marte? It seems possible. It's still all speculation though.

UPDATE #4 (7:55): Lots and lots of people are saying Yankees. Austin Jackson and/or Ian Kennedy, anyone?

UPDATE #5 (7:58): Will Carroll says Yankees. This better be one hell of a haul.

UPDATE #6 (8:06): Russ Ohlendorf is one of the players (as per the updated Carroll link above). Phil Coke appears to be another, as he left his start early tonight. There's at least one more player involved, and if it's not Honus Wagner reincarnated, I don't like where this move is headed.

UPDATE #7 (8:08): SI says that Jose Tabata, the most overrated prospect in the history of baseball, is also included with an unnamed prospect. Vomit, puke, gag.

Boras Speaks

It's not terribly surprising that Scott Boras felt the need to address the Pittsburgh media after Frank Coonelly's comments the other day, and it's also not surprising that he didn't talk much about Pedro Alvarez. For all of the things people say about him, he's really good at his job and that's why guys with Pedro Alvarez sign on with him. Check his statement to Dejan today:

"One thing that fans should understand about the draft is that we've only asked for 11 players, in my 36 years of doing this, to get bonuses that have exceeded $4 million or $5 million. All 11 of those players are highly successful in Major League Baseball," Boras said. "And we've only asked for bonuses that exceed $7 million or $8 million a couple of times, and those players are Mark Teixeira, J.D. Drew, Stephen Drew and people of that nature who are all either stars or coming stars. I think it's important to have that context of the work we've done in the past. Our elite players have all turned out to be successful investments for their teams."

Boras traditionally has identified certain amateur players as "special" in advance of a draft. Teams get a fairly firm grasp of what that player will cost, and they know, as a result, whether to let the player drop lower in the order to a team willing -- or able -- to pay that much.

It's such a simple and direct statement that says so much without saying anything. Boras is saying, "Pedro Alvarez is going to cost you a lot of money, but only because he is very good. Either you will pay it and he will play for you, or you won't pay it and he will play well for someone else." People hate Boras, but no one does what he does as well as he does it.

That's what you need, man, and you need it bad

What do you believe at this time of year?

Do you believe Jayson Stark's story about teams getting frustrated with the Pirates high asking prices? That thing might as well be cut and pasted from a story about Dave Littlefield. Do you believe Danny Knobler's story at Sportsline that teams should be knocking down the door for the Pirates' players, if only Neal Huntington and Frank Coonelly could just get along? (Incidentally, do you believe that there's a bald sportswriter named Danny Knobler? Because I'm skeptical) Do you believe either of them? Or neither of them? Is the truth somewhere in the middle? Is it more extreme?

I don't know the answers to those questions. The trade deadline is a fun time of year to be a blogger and a fan, but it's insanely stressful trying to separate the crap from stuff that's useful. I can tell you the following things for sure:

  1. Xavier Nady is the best outfielder that is definitely available on the market
  2. Jason Bay is the second best outfielder that is theoretically available on the market (behind Matt Holliday)
  3. Damaso Marte is the best left-handed reliever available in the universe
  4. The Dodgers are stupid and desperate for a shortstop
  5. Jack Wilson is a shortstop
From there, things get murky. Huntington's favorite bargaining point is that he doesn't have to trade any of these guys. That's technically true, but it's not realistic. Nady's having a great year, but he's got a BABIP of .362 this year and after Coonelly's hissy fit about Pedro Alvarez not signing this week, I'm guessing that it won't be a secret that Frank and Scott Boras are not BFF and Nady's chances of resigning are slim. The Pirates don't HAVE to trade Nady this week, but if they don't then they're not going to get much more than Shawn Chacon for him. A similar scenario applies to Bay, although it's possible for us to resign him (even if it's not wise). Marte doesn't have to be traded since we can pull the draft picks for him, but I'd take two decent minor leaguers over two first round picks and I think a lot of teams would if given the choice.

The problem that we're coming up on for Huntington is this; he's had his job for almost a year and he hasn't done anything. I mean, yes, the draft was better than the previous regime's drafts (assuming Alvarez signs, but not necessarily dependent on anyone else). If Huntington is planning on rebuilding strictly through the draft, he'd better be ready to watch someone else reap the fruits of his labor, though, because that's a process that's going to take years he doesn't have. That's not to say that he should make a trade for the sake of making a trade, of course, but rather that at this point in his career as GM, he should know what his players are worth and he should know what his franchise needs, and the lame answer that, "We'll listen to offers for all of our players and see if there's anything interesting," needs to go out the window. There's a difference between negotiating to get a certain value for your players and being obstinate. Dave Littlefield was obstinate and it cost him. Huntington is treading a pretty thin line right now.

What do I want to see from this time of year? It's simple. I want to believe that the Pirates have a front office in place that knows what they have to do to make the Pirates winners. I want to be able to hope that sometime in the near future, the Pirates aren't going to be a punchline. The only thing that's going to do that is for Huntington to competently navigate this deadline, and that doesn't involve waking up on August 1st with the roster intact.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Game 102: Pirates 9 Padres 1

Watching the Socialist Splitter take out the Padres tonight, two things occurred to me. One was that while I'm not convinced that Herrera will ever be an effective major league pitcher, I could at least see what made people interested in him tonight. His off-speed stuff can be pretty nasty and it's good enough to keep a team full of terrible hitters guessing. That brings me to the second thing: the Padres are really a terrible hitting team. Remember the Pirates last year? Remember how they'd make terrible pitchers without great control look awesome by flailing at breaking pitches that were clearly not strikes as they dove out of the strike zone? That's exactly what the Padres did to Herrera tonight. I'm happy for Yoslan. He's come a long way for this chance to pitch in the bigs and he's got a win now, which is more than a lot of people can ever say. I just don't want people to mistake this game for more than what it was; a really poor performance by the Padres offense.

That being said, it's nice that the offense has decided to show back up after the Colorado series, giving the finger to people like me who said they were overrated. I still think they are, but hey, I like it when the Pirates score runs. Because I'm a Pirate fan. Bay, McLouth, and Nady all continued their assault on pitching tonight with home runs. If Bay and Nady aren't traded, it's possible that all of the Pirates' starting outfield will end up with more than 20 home runs. Has that ever happened in team history? That's something that I'm not certain has ever happened in team history (no, Bonds, Bonilla, and Van Slyke never pulled it off).

Anyways, the win tonight officially erases the ugly Rockies' series from the books, which means that the 100-loss people can get down off the ledge and we can spend the next three interminable days while the overreactionary people on the other side of the fence try and determine whether or not this team can contend this year. They're still a 67-72 win team, folks. It's all they've ever been.

More Bad Teams

After a series with the Astros, we're going back to PNC for a series against one of the few teams with a worse record than the Astros, the Padres. It's a good thing it's the Padres, too, because Yoslan Herrera is starting tonight and his WHIP is 3.84. That's not a typo. Herrera is actually allowing nearly 4 base runners an inning in his two starts with the Pirates. His problem has been well laid out just about everywhere; he's got good off-speed stuff that he's over-reliant upon, but he's over reliant upon it because his fastball is terrible. That's a catch-22 with absolutely no answer. Herrera is, quite simply, very bad and there's not anything that anyone can do to fix it.

Coonelly Speaks on Alvarez

In the negotiations between the Pirates and Pedro Alvarez, it looks like the Pirates are blinking first by going forward with their frustrations with Alvarez and Scott Boras:

"I am frustrated that negotiations haven't concluded of yet," Coonelly said last night by phone from Pittsburgh. "We were very hopeful to have Pedro playing for one of the Pirates' affiliates by now. Other premier college players who signed early, like Troy Tulowitzki, Ryan Braun and Evan Longoria, have used the additional year of development as a stepping stone to get into majors within 10-12 months of being drafted, and we tried to work Pedro into that situation."

This is the first time I've felt even vaguely concerned about signing Alvarez, and it's not for obvious reasons. The Pirates have the money to sign Pedro Alvarez. That's not the question. The money for Alvarez is there. The Pirates also have to sign Pedro. There's no real question there. Even if they knock the trade deadline out of the ballpark, failing to sign Alvarez is going to be a huge failure in the eyes of the fan. Boras and Alvarez have Coonelly and Huntington over the coals on this one. I know, you know it, Boras knows it, and Coonelly should know it. Playing these kinds of games isn't going to get anyone anywhere.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Game 101: Pirates 8 Astros 7

There's no better way to close out a delightfully weird series of bad baseball and wins against the Astros than with a horribly pitched nightmare of a game that saw Obi-Wan Mientkiewicz pulling in four hits for the first time since 1862 and the one and only Wreck Specs Osoria throwing two scoreless innings to stem the tide of the Astros' awful offense and pick up the win. If there was ever a series that took place entirely in the baseball twilight zone, this three-gamer against the Astros was certainly it. I would be encouraged, but the Astros are actually worse run than we are at this point, so rather than being encourage, I'm just happy to know we're better than someone.

Afternoon game

It's getaway day in Houston as the Bucs and Astros are playing at 2:05 this afternoon with Ian Snell and Brian Moehler taking the mound. The Pirates have had an impressive ability to kick the crap out of the Astros this year, so hopefully they can continue that into this afternoon. This is Snell's fourth start since coming off of the disabled list and he hasn't really been all that impressive in any of them. If he's going to start turning the corner and earning the right to be insulted by me every fifth day, it's going to have to happen sooner rather than later. But hey, at least we'll all have something to do at work this afternoon.

Game 100: Pirates 8 Astros 2

I think the Pirates have stumbled upon a new, foolproof plan for victory. The plan is simple; hit three home runs a night. The Pirates have tried that each of the last two games, and they've won both times. I don't know why no one's thought of this before, but it seems like a solid plan to me. Of course, that's always aided by a starter that only allows six base runners in eight innings. Paul Maholm has made some good starts against the Astros in the last two years and he made another good one against them last night. If you're keeping track, the formula is (home runs) + (good start) = win. Seems easy, right?

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

No more losing to Ed Wade

After last night's fun win, the Pirates and Astros tee it up again at 8 tonight with Paul Maholm and Jack Cassel taking the mound. Today Ed Wade traded for Randy Wolf for no particular reason at all. I am in no way kidding when I say that as big of a disaster as the Pirates seem to us right now, the Astros are a trainwreck of epic proportions. Wade has this team headed down the dumpster so fast it's actually kind of mind blowing. Losing to them is no longer an option.

Your daily deadline update

From Newsday:

Manuel has made it no secret he'd like to see general manager Omar Minaya pick up a big bat for the outfield. Matt Holliday, Jason Bay and even Xavier Nady are probably out of the Mets' reach, so he might have to "settle" for Seattle's Raul Ibañez or Cleveland's Casey Blake.
The Mets farm system isn't very good, so that sounds about right.

Meanwhile, everyone keeps saying the Yankees are interested in our outfielders. For some reason, people seem to be upset when Ian Kennedy is mentioned as a potential return. I know the Yankees have soured on the guy a bit and he had a rough stint with them this year, but he's only 23 and his minor league numbers (including his numbers at AAA this year) are sterling. And that's my two cents on that (sorry, very busy in lab today).

Game 99: Pirates 9 Astros 3

What a weird, weird baseball game. John Van Benschoten and Runelvys Hernandez took part in some kind of bizarro, awful pitcher's duel in which both starters were terrible (both guys put 10 people on base, Hernandez in 5 and JVB in 5 and 1/3) but didn't give up a ton of runs. The bullpens then proceeded to shut the other teams down and the Pirates looked destined for a sixth straight uninspiring loss, thanks mostly to their sputtering offense. Then with one out in the ninth, the offense clicked to life on a Jason Bay solo home run (and I hate to bring this up, but how many huge hits does Bay have this year? I don't know off the top of my head, but I think the answer is "a lot"). Xavier Nady followed with a single and the red-hot Adam LaRoche hit a homer of his own. It all eventually ended with Freddy Sanchez's inside the park home run, which I think is like the millionth of the year in that goofy little bandbox in Houston. On the ninth inning, Ryan Doumit went 0/2 with a strikeout, the rest of the team went 6/7 with three home runs. What a weird inning to cap off a weird game.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Rated R for Excessive Violence

I don't know what the Pirates did to the schedule makers, but they got quite the bum rap having to play on the road both the Thursday after the All-Star break and the following Monday. Being on the road and not getting days off is a great way for a team to fall into a tailspin. Another great way to fall into a tailspin is to give a start to John Van Benschoten smack in the middle of a 5-game losing streak. He's made three awful starts this year and there's no proof that #4 is going to be any different than the first three. The only thing he's got going for him is that he's facing Runelvys Hernandez, who's been just about as terrible as JVB this year and has even been lit up by the Pirates once. If you're planning on watching this one tonight, make sure you're in front of your TV for the first inning, because the fireworks are going to start early.

What to talk about?

The season's in a tailspin, the players are frustrated, and Huntington and Coonelly are playing everything about the deadline pretty close to the vest. Is there anything worth talking about in Pirateland at the moment? Gorzelanny's latest AAA debacle? The lack of talk about Pedro Alvarez? The return of John Van Benschoten? This picture?

Sunday, July 20, 2008

The weekend recap

Sorry for the complete lack of posts since yesterday afternoon. Between the family picnic, meeting up with some friends, and flying back to NC, I really haven't had much time to be near a computer until right around now. Luckily, watching the Pirates would've done a nice job of ruining what was a fun weekend for me, so I don't feel too bad about having missed the games over the past two days. There's nothing that spoils a decent first half like a four-game losing streak to a bad team to start the second half. The Rockies stomped Yoslan Herrera yesterday and they kicked the ever-living crap out of Zach Duke today and suddenly we're 10 games below .500 and buried in last place in the Central with the third worst run differential in the National League. The sad thing is, I have a sinking feeling that things aren't going to get a whole lot better in the immediate future.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Things are not improving

At a family reunion today, but Yoslan Herrera's taking the mound today at Coors Field. I've got a bad feeling about this.

Game 96: Rockies 5 Pirates 2

I didn't see a whole lot of this game beyond the replay (which I didn't even know existed but discovered on FSP last night), but it looked like more of what we've seen from Snell since he's come off the disabled list, decent stuff with rough spots in his control that sabotage the outing. The problem with this game was that Glendon Rusch the Rockies pen mostly shut the Pirates down last night, leading to the loss. Not exactly a great start to the second half.

Friday, July 18, 2008

A potential shootout

Ian Snell looks to keep moving past his arm trouble and back towards productiveness tonight against the Rockies, who are sending Glendon Rusch out against him. That's right. Glendon Rusche is still in baseball. If it seems like he's made a million starts against the Pirates in his career, it's because he has. He's faced us 24 times in 15 starts. He's also a guy we've beaten up pretty good on throughout his career (he's 2-7 with a 4.45 ERA against us). He's been terrible this year and we should probably beat up on him pretty well tonight. If Snell doesn't bring his A game (Ian Snell insult of the night: HEY, Ian ... do you even still HAVE an A game???) we could have a shootout on our hands tonight. Of course, I'm going to see The Dark Knight, so I won't see it either way.

Polls

There's a new poll in the sidebar dealing with the trade deadline. It's a bit labyrinthine and SAT-like, but I'm curious where people are really at on this trade deadline stuff. You know the drill, vote on the right, talk in the comments.

Trading Weapon X

I will admit that I'm often baffled by what to do with columns like this one that ran in the Post-Gazette a couple of days ago. After doing this blogging thing for three years, I've learned that getting worked up by little thing that's written about the Pirates in the media only leads to high blood pressure. Still, I can tell that this particular column by Smizik has lead to a lot of consternation among fans and I feel like ignoring it gives the impression that I agree with it. I don't agree with it. Signing Xavier Nady to an extension is one of the five worst ideas I've heard this year, and that's not limiting things to the Pirates. If the Pirates sign Xavier Nady to an extension, I'll probably quit this blog entirely and I'm not even close to kidding.

There's a number of reasons for that, but we can start at the top. Nady is 29 years old and having a career year. That's because that's what happens when players are 28 or 29; they peak. I'm slow to make this comparison because I've seen it made in about ten different places, but on a local level Kevin Young is a great example of what happens to a middle of the lineup guy with moderate power and on-base skills that are mostly tied up in batting average. The extension he signed was for his age 30-33 years. Oops. If we keep the comparison going, Nady's top comps by age on Baseball Reference are Leon Roberts, Craig Monroe, Jeffrey Hammonds, and Hal McRae. McRae kept hitting well deep into his 30s, but Roberts, Monroe, and Hammonds combined for one season with an OPS+ of above 100 after their 30th birthdays. Roberts was out of the league at 33, Monroe's struggling to hold on at 31, and Hammonds was done at 34. Players like Nady just don't have long, productive careers.

On top of that, it's easy to see where Nady's production this year is coming from. In the big leagues, he's a career .279 hitter with a .335 on-base percentage. This year, he's hitting .321 and his OBP is .377. All of his increase in production is tied up in that raise in batting average. A quick glance at his Hardball Times page shows that his BABIP (batting average on balls in play) is an almost impossibly high .351. He's hit more line drives this year, which is where some of the increase in average is coming from, but thinking he's hit a sustainable peak is fooling yourself. He's a decent hitter having a good year at his peak age, because that's what decent hitters do at their peak ages.

The entire rationale behind keeping Nady this winter was to get him to try and increase his trade value. He can't possibly increase his value more than he already has. He's got one more arbitration year, but it's almost impossible that he'll be worth more at this time in 2009 than he is right now given his career arc and the peripherals around his 2008 numbers. There are a million reasons to trade the guy now and we've gone over several of them in the past couple days. The pitching staff, even with Snell and Gorzelanny healthy and pitching well, is more than one or two pitchers away from being a good staff. The offense has been good, but is also a good candidate for a second half drop-off. The main chunk of this Pirates team is built around guys that are Nady's age and that are gone after 2009. People don't like to hear this, but what we're seeing from this team right now is probably their ceiling. I know there are people that will scoff at that statement, but it's something that I absolutely believe is true. Extending Nady and hoping to cobble together a pitching staff from fairy dust and rainbows to maybe make a run at .500 is exactly how the Pirates were run under their previous front offices and it's not something that I plan on sitting through again.

Game 95: Rockies 5 Pirates 3

There's not much that's worse than watching a win unravel in front of your eyes (or ears, in my case, since I listened to this whole thing). The Pirates ran out to a 3 run lead in this game with Maholm cruising and Ubaldo Jiminez doing his best Ricky Vaughn impression, but things kind of shifted with the Rockies two runs in the fourth and you could feel it happen. Then the Rockies scored some more and we lost. I know that's not terribly in depth, but I didn't really catch a ton of this game and I don't really have any overwhelming desire to go back and catch up (forgive my apathy, I was in lab until almost midnight tonight).

Thursday, July 17, 2008

In the Rockies

The Pirates are one of the lucky few teams that only get a three day All-Star break this year, so they're opening up the second half tonight in Denver against the Rockies. This is a pretty unremarkable series in every single way; the Pirates and Rockies have similar records and are in similar situations with the Rox looking to deal Matt Holliday in the next two weeks. Paul Maholm and Ubaldo Jiminez have drawn the starts to kick off this four-game set. With our bullpen and the Rockies pitching, I'd imagine that the string of high school games that we were playing before the break is going to continue in the thin air.

Two links

The first link I've got for today is some pretty sweet news for Pirate fans. You may recall at the end of last Friday's Q&A, Dejan made a remark about coming back next Friday with things being very different. Speculation was, of course, that he meant a trade was going down. He was instead referring quite literally to the Q&A, as he's launched the PBC Blog at the Post-Gazette to allow him center breaking news in one place, feature the Q&A, and point to important Pirate-related links around the interwebs. He's also got some incredibly nice things to say about WHYGAVS, which really means a lot to your humble blogger here. I read a lot of stuff by beat writers for FanHouse and Dejan's work is as informative and insightful as anyone's. His starting a blog can only increase the knowledge that's available to Pirate fans and that's a very good thing.

The second link is borne of the epic All-Star Game liveblog that Will Brinson and I did at FanHouse. He's put together the 2008 Super Hero All-Stars in anticipation of The Dark Knight.

Speaking of which, please remember to go out tomorrow and vote for Harvey Dent for Gotham City District Attorney. I BELIEVE IN HARVEY DENT.

Lincoln to Lynchburg

This happened yesterday, but Brad Lincoln got the call up to Lynchburg yesterday. I'm guessing that the team had a set number of innings they wanted to see from him at Hickory and they moved him along once he hit that number. He pitched very well in his first few starts, but not so well since then (besides his Matt Capps-like control). The most logical reason for him to be moving up at this point is that as a top draft pick that's 23 years old, he simply doesn't belong in low-level Class A. He's either hit an inning number or convinced the Pirates that he's healthy, and so they're moving him along.

Actually, I wouldn't be surprised to see him moved to AA before this season ends, even if he struggles at Lynchburg. Remember that in a draft that was pretty deep with pitching, Lincoln was regarded by a some people to be the best college pitching available that year and most prospect lists had him among the top two or three. He'd likely be in AAA if he hadn't gotten hurt, so maybe we should view his starts in the low minors as rehab starts and keep in mind that the Pirates are probably looking for things other than obvious results with Lincoln as they bring him along this year.

2008 Midseason Review: the Murky

It's the All-Star Break, which I guess means it's time for me to do some kind of mid-season review, even though we're already well into the second half of the season. This year, I'm going to do three review posts and we'll call the "The Obvious" (or things from the first half that we all know), "The Obscure" (or things from the first half that I think I know and at least half of you will vehemently disagree with me on), and "The Murky" (or things that none of us know, but I will make a blind stab at figuring out). Today: The Obscure.

I slacked on this one yesterday because I was burnt out from the ridiculous All-Star Game liveblog that we ran at FanHouse until like 2 in the morning on Tuesday night. As is par for the course with the Pirates, the murky things are the most important.

Are the poor performances of Ian Snell and Tom Gorzelanny driven by poor health?
This is the big one. Watching the two of them pitch all year, I felt like Gorzo was the injured one and Snell was the one who was just pitching poorly. Then Snell went on the DL and Gorzo went to AAA, with Snell showing at least some sparks of hope after coming back. I still think it's worth noting that Gorzelanny's trip to AAA looks a lot more like a rehab stint than a demotion (he's made one start since being sent down on July 5th), but so long as the team plays it close to the vest, we're not going to know what's going on here. Neal Huntington's got his work cut out for him, but he's got a whole lot more work to do if no one can figure out what's wrong with Gorzo and Snell.

So ... this Neal Huntington guy ...
This deadline is huuuuge for him. He's certainly got to try to shop his pieces around, but he's also go to shed the reputation Dave Littlefield built for the Pirates by caving at noon on July 31st every year. If he trades Bay and Nady, people are going to be pissed. If he doesn't trade Bay and Nady, people are going to be pissed. We've watched him for almost a year now, and it's still impossible to know what kind of GM he's going to be. There have certainly been encouraging signs, but that's not enough. We'll know more in two weeks.

Why can't Adam LaRoche hit early in the season?
Too much golf? Not enough golf? Too much hunting? Not enough BP? Too much BP? Long, looping swing? My gut says that the answer lies in the last question there, but I'm no hitting coach. If someone can answer this, LaRoche suddenly goes from being a below average hitting first-baseman to an all-star caliber hitter. That's worthy of a Nobel Prize or something, in my book.

What mystical deity has Ryan Doumit been praying to in order to stay healthy?
Aw, crap. I jinxed him, didn't ?

Steve Pearce: flash in the pan or prospect?
He slugged .526 in June to give him an .844 OPS and things were looking up, but he's been down again in July despite a .319 average (only a .409 slugging percentage on the month, though in 22 ABs). It's not worth writing him off yet and I still think he deserves the first shot at the bigs in the event of an outfield trade, but it's discouraging to see a 25-year old hit like he
has in AAA.

How is the Pirates' offense scoring so many runs?
Last year: .263/.325/.411
This year: .262/.325/.416
Last year: 724 runs
This year: on pace to score 793
Ruh-roh.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Reports: Asking Price for Bay, Nady, Sky High

Reports from all over the place are making it sound like Huntington's asking price for Jason Bay and Xavier Nady are in the neighborhood of two top prospects, with an additional prospect thrown in on the Bay deal. From Joel Sherman's blog at the New York Post (via MLB Trade Rumors):

Jason Bay/Xavier Nady, Pirates – Pittsburgh is demanding a big package: two premium prospects and a second-level prospect for Bay and two premium prospects for Nady. So far, no one is biting and Pittsburgh is not blinking. An executive from an interested team said, "I guarantee if the prices do not change, the Pirates are going to wake up on Aug. 1 with both players."
Buster Olney has a similar report on his blog (insider only).

Whether Huntington makes any moves this deadline or not, this is an incredibly important time for him. Part of Dave Littlefield's problem was that when he'd make a demand for a player in a trade, he had a terrible reputation for asking for the moon and accepting a handful of sand (see: "I DEMAND DAVID WRIGHT! What's that you say? No David Wright? Well, Ty Wigginton will do nicely, then"). What happens this deadline will help shape Huntington's reputation and his ability to deal with other GMs for the rest of his time in Pittsburgh. He's got valuable players. He knows he's got valuable players. Is he going to be unreasonable? Is he going to panic and cave? Is he going to be willing to negotiate and work out a deal? What's the answer to the question of life, the universe, and everything?

WHYGAVS/Bucs Dugout crossover: Dream Deals

What's cooler than a cross-over? After doing some collaborations for various sites in the past, Charlie from the Bucs Dugout and I have decided to try and run a regularly irregular feature where we discuss and maybe even debate the Pirates. Today, as the trade deadline approaches, we talk about our dream trades for Neal Huntington and company and why they might or might not work. Keep in mind that this is almost entirely speculation on our part, and we're talking about what we want to see from the front office, not necessarily what the front office is going to do.

1. Jack Wilson to the Dodgers for Matt Kemp.

Bucs Dugout: There aren't many young hitters in the game as promising as Kemp, who hits for average and power, steals bases, and has a cannon for an arm. PECOTA compares Kemp to Chili Davis, Andre Dawson, Sammy Sosa, Ellis Burks, and Vlad Guerrero. Like Davis and Sosa in their youth, Kemp struggles to control the strike zone, but also like those two players, his other skills are so strong that he may learn to draw walks later in his career. If he does, he'll be amazing. He's far from a sure thing, but his upside is stratospheric. That the Pirates have a surplus of outfielders, and that they don't have a ready replacement for Wilson, shouldn't stop them--they should be acquiring all the high-end talent they can right now. They can shape it into a real ballclub later.

Kemp might be available because Dodgers GM Ned Colletti isn't the brightest bulb in the lot, has a meddlesome owner breathing down his neck, and is desperate to acquire a shortstop. Also, Kemp has been repeatedly and probably unfairly blamed for Los Angeles' inability to contend. The Dodgers are begging to have their pockets picked.

It's possible the Dodgers wouldn't want to trade Kemp not so much because they like him, but because they don't have enough reliable outfielders for their stretch run. In that case, the deal could be expanded to include Xavier Nady or even Jason Bay, perhaps for Kemp and a prospect. That's a lot to give up, but Kemp's worth it.

WHYGAVS: I like Kemp a lot. I was really excited when the prospect of him being included in some kind of trade for Jack Wilson popped up, no matter what kind of basis is behind it. The reasoning for that is Colletti. For years we've watched other GMs take advantage of Dave Littlefield's panic and for once, I feel like we're in the same position of power over someone else.

That being said, let me play devil's advocate here a bit with the idea of a Wilson AND Nady/Bay for Kemp deal. Let me frame it this way: we know Bay's going to be very valuable on the market this year and he should bring in a top prospect by himself. Nady will probably have a decent amount of value (not necessarily on the same level as Bay, but close). If you've got the chance to trade all three of these guys separately, say Wilson to the Dodgers for James McDonald and Andy LaRoche or Chin-Lung Hu, Nady to the D'Backs, and Jason Bay to the Rays for some of their impressive minor league talent, aren't three deals for young talent better than one or two when your system is as bare as the Pirates' is?

Bucs Dugout: Well, I did say Kemp and a prospect. But I take your point. The A's did well, for example, by getting a bunch of players from the Diamondbacks for Dan Haren. When you're trading for prospects, you can increase your chances of scoring simply by taking a lot of shots.

It depends on the players involved. If I were the Pirates I'd love to have McDonald or Hu in my system, but I'd be reluctant to restructure a couple of trades in order to get more players like that and fewer like Kemp.

2. Jason Bay to the Rays for David Price.

WHYGAVS: If we're trying to strike while the iron is hot, I'd be looking to Tampa when shopping Jason Bay. Shouldn't the goal here be Bay for David Price and whatever else we can get? I mean, Tampa's got tons of pitching both in the minors and on their roster and they can use hitting NOW. When you throw in that Bay's signed for next year, I think he's got to be one of the most valuable guys out there and the return for him should be huge. Now, I understand that Friedman's a smart guy and he's got a pretty clear vision of what he wants to do in Tampa, so maybe Price isn't a realistic return for Bay (or anyone, for that matter). Still, isn't this something we should be asking about? I guess we might not get Price, but there's always Reid Brignac, Jake McGee, Jeremy Hellickson, Wade Davis ... geez, I could go on forever with the Rays' farm system.

Bucs Dugout: I seriously doubt the Rays would give Price up, although it rarely hurts to ask, and I think you're right that the Pirates and Rays should be talking. Tampa has gotten good results so far from Eric Hinske in right field and Cliff Floyd at DH, but I think they're too smart to believe that standing pat with those guys is the right thing to do. Putting Bay in right and letting Hinske, Floyd and Jonny Gomes split time at DH would be a nice upgrade for them, for the rest of 2008 and for 2009 as well. Also, surely Tampa could build a heck of a PR campaign around a player named "Bay."

Even if Price isn't available--and Hellickson, whose numbers this year just jump off the page (83 strikeouts and five walks at Vero Beach? Yikes), might not be either--the Pirates and Rays would be a good match because of the Rays' surplus of pitching talent. McGee and Davis, who have both been mildly disappointing in their transitions to AA, might be good buy-low candidates.

3. Xavier Nady to the Yankees for Austin Jackson and Dellin Betances.

Bucs Dugout: Let me begin by saying that, although the Yanks are reportedly interested in Nady, I have no idea what they'd be willing to give up. This is pure speculation. I think this would be a good haul for the Pirates, though, despite the excellent season Nady is having. Jackson is a toolsy centerfielder with a good performance record. He has probably been a minor disappointment in Class AA this year, but he's still only 21, and there's little to dislike. I'm including Betances here not only because he's interested, but because I'm positive that if the Yankees and Pirates have serious talks about Nady, Huntington will ask about Betances. He's only 20, he throws hard, he's enormous (6'8", 245), and... wait for it... he has control problems. If he can iron those out and avoid injury, he'll be ridiculous. Those are big ifs, but remember: right now, it's all about upside.

This may be a bit much to ask for Nady, who Pat and I both had all but dismissed last offseason, but Yankees fans would do well to check his numbers before sharpening their pitchforks--he's got 37 extra-base hits and a 138 OPS+ right now.

WHYGAVS: Ahh, Nady. We come back to him time and time again and he's been great this year, no doubt, but I wonder how many GMs really believe he's a different hitter based on a good first half. I mean, you four seasons worth of evidence and now that the guy's 29 he's suddenly going to "get it?" I mean, maybe he is but that .351 BABIP is awfully suspicious to me. That said, the Yankees are a great fit for him because Cashman has to be on the brink of getting fired by Hank the Terrible and guys like Jackson and Betances seem like they'd be a good return for Nady.

4. Damaso Marte for...?

WHYGAVS: I'm honestly not sure I have a fourth trade to put down here, other than to say that I hope that Huntington is actively shopping Marte. Everyone seems to be interested in Brian Fuentes and George Sherrill and Marte is definitely better than both of them. If I were him, I'd be pressing John Mozeliak hard in St. Louis. He's a new GM who's suddenly found himself in a pennant race and their bullpen is AWFUL, as we saw this weekend. He might be someone that can be forced into a panic deal with the Cardinals and Cubs arming up for the playoffs. I suspect he's smarter than that, but Wayne Krivsky looked like a good GM for almost six months in Cincy, so who knows? If we can't make a trade for him, offering him arbitration and taking the draft picks is a great fall-back plan, especially for a reliever, but I hope Huntington is exploring all his options here.

Bucs Dugout: Me too, and I certainly would shop Marte, but I don't think the Cardinals have a whole lot to offer, except Colby Rasmus, who they'd have to be crazy to deal for a reliever. I would be happy to just let Marte finish the year as a Pirate and collect some draft picks for him. He's likely to be a Type A free agent, and Damaso Marte and a couple million bucks for two top draft choices sounds like a very good deal to me.

In fact, if I were in charge of a team with a terrible farm system like the Pirates', I might investigate the possibility of collecting relievers just to flip them for draft picks. The rules say that the free agent types are based on performance relative to position, so a good reliever relative to other relievers returns the same draft picks as a good starter relative to other starters. Since a good starter is far more valuable than a good reliever, that's a big loophole.

WHYGAVS: I've never looked at it that way before, but that's an interesting plan. It's why the Xavier Nady deal was really a fleecing, because in addition to giving up Perez and Hernandez for one player, we lost the two picks that Hernandez represented when he became a free agent the ensuing winter.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

All-Star Game open thread

Hey did you guys know the All-Star Game is tonight?!? And it's at Yankee Stadium?!?

There's going to be a FanHouse live blog/chat tonight, which I may be helping out with a bit (though I'm taking the night off from actually running it, that was a freaking ordeal), but you can feel free to leave comments/talk about the game here and I should be in and out checking it. Oh, and I have something cool to post in the morning, so keep an eye out for that.

2008 Midseason Review: The Obscure

It's the All-Star Break, which I guess means it's time for me to do some kind of mid-season review, even though we're already well into the second half of the season. This year, I'm going to do three review posts and we'll call the "The Obvious" (or things from the first half that we all know), "The Obscure" (or things from the first half that I think I know and at least half of you will vehemently disagree with me on), and "The Murky" (or things that none of us know, but I will make a blind stab at figuring out). Today: The Obscure.

Adam LaRoche is not nearly as bad as he seems
I know this is not a terribly popular opinion, but it's true. In May this year, LaRoche hit .257/.328/.476. It's not fantastic, but it's serviceable. Since June 14th, he's hit .349/.430/.651, which isn't fantastic, it's MVP-calibur. That leaves us with April and the first half of June in which he didn't hit at all. Last year at the All-Star break he was hitting .239/.324/.439 at the break last year, he's hitting .251/.330/.434 this year.

LaRoche's problem is similar to the one that Jason Bay had a couple years ago. Bay's problem was that his swing is effortless and when he's not hitting it looks like he doesn't care. LaRoche's problem is that his swing is so big that when he's not hitting, it looks like he's never going to hit again. He's not a great first baseman by any means and he's not the savior of the franchise that Dave Littlefield thought he would be, but most of us knew that before the trade even happened. He's just not a guy worth getting worked up over.

Freddy Sanchez is incredibly unlucky
I should've linked to this almost a month ago, but if you check The Hardball Times, you'll see that Freddy Sanchez's batted ball data (LD%, GB%, FB%) is almost identical to his batted ball data from last year, making his huge drop in production kind of insane. Matskralc runs the numbers and you can check them out on his site, but expecting Freddy to hit well (EDIT: well for Freddy, meaning like a .760 OPS with a .300 average or so) in the second half isn't unreasonable.

Tyler Yates is a time bomb
This isn't even that obscure, but if you watch the Pirates broadcast this year and look strictly at ERA, you might accidentally get the impression that Tyler Yates is a good reliever. Good relievers don't walk 33 batters in 47 and 2/3 innings, especially when the have 33 strikeouts, and the certainly don't have a WHIP of almost 1.60. Get ready for this to become a nightmare in the second half.

Tom Gorzelanny and Ian Snell are not the only things keeping us from a .500 season
The statement, "This team would be in contention if they had a mediocre pitching staff," is a true one. It's also incredibly misleading. Last year, with Ian Snell and Tom Gorzelanny pitching very well, the Pirates gave up 846 runs. This is a ton of run and it landed them third to last in the National League. The Pirates pitching staff in 2007 was nowhere near mediocre. It sucked. This year, the bullpen probably worse (I haven't run the numbers so don't hold me to that), but Gorzo and Snell are struggling and the fifth starter spot has been even more disastrous than last year. This year the Pirates' staff on pace to give up in the neighborhood of 900 runs (incidentally, Gorzo and Snell are on pace for a VORP almost exactly 50 runs worse than last year). The offense, for all of its improvement, is on pace to score slightly less than 800 runs. If the offense scores 790 runs and the pitching staff gives up 850, we're still a bad baseball team. The point is simply this: we're miles away from a good pitching staff and having Gorzo and Snell fix themselves is only part of the puzzle.

Pedro Alvarez and Washington Heights

Good read in the PG today about Washington Heights the neighborhood that Pedro Alvarez grew up in in New York, and the people that know Alvarez there.

"Pedro will sign and it doesn't matter what his agent says," said Miguel Montas, the owner of a neighborhood restaurant and a close friend of the Alvarez family, through a translator. "His family wants him to sign and they will make the decision. They are just getting everything straightened out right now. Believe me, Pedro will sign with the Pirates."

[...]

"He's like the biggest role model to all the kids around here," said a teen, who would identify himself only as "Ramon," as he stood with his back against an apartment building on a nearby corner.

"Pedro Alvarez will be the best Pittsburgh Pirates player. Ever."

Well, it's certainly nice to read things like that, even if the friends of the Alvarez family in New York have never met Scott Boras before. The Pirates have a month to get a deal done with Alvarez and Boras. I still feel pretty confident it's going to happen, but it might not happen before August 10th.

Monday, July 14, 2008

A quick note

So, lots of people have been asking me about the FanHouse posts that usually appear at the top right. As it happens, the upgrade they did to the site last week has messed with the RSS feeds, especially the blogger specific ones. Until they get them fixed, I've got the feed to the whole MLB FanHouse in the sidebar. If you're just looking for stuff I've written (the feed didn't update after Friday, so there's about five weekend posts that failed to show), you can always go to this page here.

And while we're at it, I'm going to be running the Live Chat at FanHouse for the Derby tonight, so if you're watching it and bored feel free to drop by.

2008 Midseason Review: The Obvious

It's the All-Star Break, which I guess means it's time for me to do some kind of mid-season review, even though we're already well into the second half of the season. This year, I'm going to do three review posts and we'll call the "The Obvious" (or things from the first half that we all know), "The Obscure" (or things from the first half that I think I know and at least half of you will vehemently disagree with me on), and "The Murky" (or things that none of us know, but I will make a blind stab at figuring out). Today: The Obvious.

Our bullpen is really terrible. Osoria, Burnett, Beam, and ¡Romulo! would likely not make any roster other than ours. I'm not sure Tyler Yates would, either. Without Capps, the pen is a disaster area of epic proportions. I don't want to talk about this anymore.

John Russell is never going to smile. He didn't even crack one after Saturday's dramatic win.

Jason Bay's terrible 2007 was definitely injury-related.

Nate McLouth's second half in 2007 wasn't a fluke.

Ryan Doumit is better than Ronny Paulino in just about any meaningful way you'd care to measure it.

It's not worth getting bent out of shape over losing Josh Phelps, because Jason Michaels and Doug Mientkiewicz are always available.

The American League owns us. Except the Yankees.

The Rays are proof that having high draft picks for a decade can actually result in good things.

WHYGAVS Night was awesome.

Rain delays are not awesome.

Blowing four separate leads in one game is really, really not awesome.

Relying on young pitchers is stupid.

Am I missing anything?

Sunday, July 13, 2008

The Futures Game

A lot of people are asking if I watched the Futures Game today. I didn't watch much, but I did tune in long enough to see McCutchen's first at-bat. Every time I see him I'm alarmed by how small he looks, though he quickly got me over that by launching a foul ball into the second deck of the left-field stands in Yankee Stadium. The AB I saw ended in a flyout, but he looked pretty comfortable at the plate. David Pinto at Baseball Musings had a different observation:

Andrew McCutchen just led off for the USA. He's standing at the plate wearing number 24, and he looks just like Rickey Henderson. He's even playing leftfield.
Well, now there's a comparison that should make every Pirate fan smile, even if it was purely superficial. Here's hoping he runs like the wind and refers to himself in nothing but the third person. Reader Trevin also passed a long a link to the fantasy baseball review of the game, which has some very kind things to say about Cutch at the very bottom.

Game 94: Cardinals 11 Pirates 6

Sometimes it's downright unbelievable how much can happen in one baseball game. Once upon a time, many moons ago, Ian Snell took the mound and absolutely dealt for 3 and 2/3 innings. He was snarling, throwing hard, hitting his spots, basically doing what Ian Snell does. Then, he gave up a double and another double and a walk. He started stomping around the mound, pointing to a hole in the ground while Lanny chided him, "The mound was fine when he was retiring ten hitters in a row." He then gave up a walk and a three-run homer to Aaron Miles. The FSP cameras caught him uttering the exact phrase every Pirate fan in the world was thinking at the time, "F--- me."

But the Pirates weren't done. They rallied back to tie the game at four, then went ahead 6-5 against a scuffling Joel Piniero and a second unlikely win seemed possible. Until Wreck Specs (that's Osoria's name now) took the mound in the seventh inning, that is. Emma has sent along a video representation of what happens when Osoria pitches (from the priceless Failblog, please note that there is some salty language, but there is also a ton of hilarity):


Wreck Specs threw 19 pitches. One of them hit Albert Pujols, two of them went for singles, one of them went for a double, and one of them went for a triple (to Aaron Miles!). Completely comebacked out, we rolled over at the 9-6 deficit while the bullpen gave up more runs. Now we go into the All-Star break feeling like we got hit by a truck. That's what the Pirates do to you.

We have to play again today?

Wouldn't it be nice if the All-Star Break started after that win last night? If we could cruise into three off-days with that win behind us? Instead, we have to play the Cardinals one more time today, with Ian Snell and Joel Piniero facing off on the mound. I thought Snell looked a bit better in his last start on Tuesday, but that was only in the relatively subjective terms of TV-reported velocity. Really, he still walked a bunch of people and racked up a huge early pitch count. He can't do that today, as most of the pen worked last night and the two guys that didn't, John Grabow and Romulo Sanchez, are either hurt or so far buried in John Russell's mind that he won't use them unless he's absolutely forced to. If Snell can't give us seven innings today, we're almost certainly screwed.

No pressure there, Ian, so draw your neck out of your collar and let's get this thing rolling.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Game 93: Pirates 12 Cardinals 11

...

What do you say about a win like that? It's pretty rare that I'm rendered speechless by a baseball game, but it happened tonight. I've written and erased several paragraphs already.

Every sport has it's own unique features and quirks. Baseball's biggest quirk is that it's a team sport that lacks a clock. Fall behind by a large margin late in the game in football or basketball or hockey, and you're forced to come back against both the other team and the clock. In baseball, the clock's not there. If you don't make outs, you keep scoring. Because of that, a team that has two hits and is down 9-3 going into the bottom of the seventh isn't necessarily out of the game like they might be in another sport.

And so the comeback started. A single by Jose Bautista to make it 9-4. Huh. The Cardinals took it right back in the eight. A two-run homer by Jason Bay to make it 10-6. Clutch, but still, big deficit. Then Nate McLouth continued his week-long obliteration of doubt that he belongs on the All-Star team with a three run homer in the bottom of the ninth. 10-9. That's a game worth watching. Luis Rivas, single. Ryan Doumit, single. Jason Bay, doubl pla.... wait! NO! RIVAS SCORED! TIE GAME! Denny Bautista pitching. Home run, Glaus. Well, take a game like this this far and you might as well keep watching, even if Raul Chavez, Jose Bautista, and Jason Michaels are up. Chavez, single. That's a start. Bautista, pop-out. Michaels or Wilson has to get on to get Nate back up. Michaels, home run. Let that register for a second.

Michaels ... home run. Maybe it'll take another second.

MICHAELS! HOME RUN!

Sometimes, being a Pirate fan is hard. When you're watching Yoslan Herrera and Franquellis Osoria and Tyler Yates and TJ Beam and Sean Burnett scuffle like crazy on the mound and you realize that there's a good chance that none of them would pitch for any other major league team, it's easy to wonder why you're still watching. Every once in a while, though, we get a reminder. Savor it.

This Could Be Bad

I didn't watch any of last night's game, but I see from the gamethread that a lot of people were upset by JR's decision to let Zach Duke bat with the bases loaded and the Pirates already in a pretty deep hole. The decision made was essentially, "Welp, we're screwed tonight, let's at least try and keep the bullpen fresh." It is a maddening decision, but maybe tonight it'll make sense. To say that I don't have high expectations for Yoslan Herrera's debut would be like saying that the sky is blue. Nothing he's done since starting in the Pirates' system has indicated that he can pitch at a major league level, and yet here we are. If he can give us four innings and give up less than seven runs, I'm going to be pleasantly surprised. He'll face off against Todd Wellemeyer, who's tailed off a bit lately but is still one of the main reasons the Cardinals haven't faded out of the NL Central race yet. After being dominated by Kyle Lohse last night, I just hope we score a run.

'Tis the Season

Wondering what's going on on the trade front? Jon Heymann checks in from SI.com:

The Diamondbacks and Cardinals are among the most ardent pursuers of Pirates star outfielder Jason Bay, SI.com has learned.

The Mets and Rays, who also seek an outfielder, are among other teams thought to have checked in with the Pirates. Pittsburgh also has emerging star Xavier Nady, yet another fine outfielder, as a potential trade target.

The rumors are basically that Huntington is telling everyone that's interested in Bay or Nady that it's going to cost them the cream of the crop in their farm system. That's about where we should be at this point, because besides Adam Dunn, Nady and Bay are probably the best bats available on the market.