"I wouldn't be shocked if the Red Sox traded him by Saturday," says one league official -- after signing JD Drew.
Olney says the Giants, Padres, Dodgers, and Rangers are talking seriously with Boston.
Executives with other teams say that in order to move Ramirez, Boston will have to come to grips with the idea that they will not get back major league talent equal to that of Ramirez; rather, they might have to settle for a deal much like the Gary Sheffield trade the Yankees made early in November, when they got three pitching prospects from Detroit. ... [T]he recent salary explosion -- Alfonso Soriano's $136 million deal, Carlos Lee's $100 million contract -- has cast Ramirez and his [high and possibly previously untradeable] salary in a different light.Obviously the front office on Yawkey Way knows more about the Manny situation than I do, but with Boston's trade demands dropping, and obvious need for Manny's bat, I don't see getting rid of Manny as a good move from any perspective. And if recent contracts make his salary more of a bargain, shouldn't that also work in Boston's favour to keep him?
Could the Red Sox make the playoffs in 2007 with improved pitching (some bullpen help might come in a Manny deal), Lugo and Drew replacing Manny and Gonzo, and a more normal set of player injuries? Maybe, but it's no sure thing.
One scout says David Ortiz "will draw about 200 walks next year without Manny hitting behind him. I don't care who it is who bats fourth instead of Manny -- JD Drew, or Wily Mo Pena, whoever -- he won't be as dangerous as Manny was, because Manny can hit good pitching."
The cynic in me -- not having figured out if the probable replacements parts could produce an aggregate benefit -- says the team is punting for 2007 and getting set for a strong 2008 (they may get some "almost ready" prospects for Ramirez). ... Perhaps the front office strongly suspects that Manny will miss big chunks of playing time in 2007 and 2008.
Too many questions at this point.
P.S. Don't forget to VOTE.
It does make sense, which is why the Red Sox will trade him.
ReplyDeleteThat's true, because everything the front office does makes sense.
Except the stuff Jack doesn't agree with.
I think when we say goodbye to Manny, we can say goodbye to our Tiz hitting 50 HRs. He'll see one good pitch a game if we're lucky.
Let me get this straight. The Sox couldn't give him away on waivers a few years ago because of his contract. Allegedly, they next tried to trade him, but could never get close to his value. Now, in this crazy, over-heated market, the next 2 years of his contract are considered a 'bargain'. So now people think the Sox are going to get equal value in return? Or the value doesn't matter because the FO is sick of him? Is everybody nuts?? Does he still have knee issues? Or did he fake the whole thing? Or is it all mental? Then who's going to take him, unless it's for next to nothing? Again,is everybody nuts? We don't even know whether the reason for Manny's alleged request may simply be his and his agent's way of leveraging somebody to pick up his option years. Is it hardball? Yep. Is Manny really happy in Boston? Who the fuck knows? Gordon Edes? Tony Mazzarotti? Anyway, Manny is paid to play ball--if he is healthy. Anybody ever heard Manny say he didn't understand this?
ReplyDeleteWay too much speculation at this point, but based on what we do know--for chrissakes--keep Manny.
And Jack, the Sox only won one WS with Manny? They didn't win anything with Ted Williams. Just what is your point?
I'll wait to see who the Sox get in a trade before I'll condemn it or praise it. But at this point, if they get value, I can't blame then for making a deal.
ReplyDeleteI agree with this. If they get value ... sure.
SoSHers talking up LA as a good fit for Manny -- and for a dumb FO that might send a couple of top prospects our way. (Though I think Manny has said he wants to stay in the AL, and he does have 10-5 rights.)
L-Girl, no qualm with the use of the term "punting"?:)
ReplyDeleteI love Manny even with all his quirks....
ReplyDeleteIf you trade him for prospects and no real major league talent ...that's crazy...
I assume they trade him for prospects then they are almost backed up against a wall to sign Trot,right.
And JD Drew who averages 125 games a year and 27 hr's and 86 rbi's is the poor man's Manny, Christ he is not even that...
Not for nothin, Jack, Manny has played in 3 world Series and Barry Bonds has played in 1....
I will take my chances with Manny, pissed of or not...
I'd rather they keep Manny, but if they can move him for some MLB ready prospects I wouldn't be terribly upset, either. The Sox seem determined to get rid of him, which given the market right now doesn't seem to make much sense, so they must be convinced they can either get enough pieces to replace him or that the team would simply be better off with his distractions somewhere else.
ReplyDeleteThe team to watch is the Giants. Olney said they'd need a third team to make a deal work (since they won't part with Matt Cain), so I'm sure the Sox, ideally, would like that third team to be the Blue Jays, so they'd end up with Wells, the Giants with Manny, and the Jays with prospects.
I can't see Toronto doing that, but if they're convinced they're going to lose Wells anyway, you never know.
Sounds like Jack has bought into all that media garbage about Manny "quitting" on the team and "asking for a trade every year".
ReplyDeleteHe didn't ask last year.
Trading him now just doesn't make sense to me.
The only thing I can see Manny getting traded for is a package including a stellar closer.
ReplyDeleteSean - I an excited to see how instructional and winter league play improved Pena's patience and ability to deal with offspeed pitches. WMP is definitely the offensive player I am most interested in seeing develop.
L-Girl, no qualm with the use of the term "punting"?:)
ReplyDeleteNone whatsoever. :-)
Woti, thank you for your brains and your common sense.
It's sad to see "xx team has won exactly xx WS with player xx" here on JoS. Everyone should be well above that ridiculous illogic.
Then again, my Jack Russell Terrier is smarter than Sutcliffe.
I sure hope so! If he weren't, how would he get through the day?
Sorry about the sarcasm, Jack. The first sentence of your initial comment was just begging for it, but I should have resisted the lure.
Exactly 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 good deeds have been performed by someone OTHER than Mother Theresa. Trade her sorry ass to San Fran!
ReplyDeleteL-G, Jack's style of expression has been known to rub me the wrong way from time to time, but even I could see he was just saying that it was possible to win without Manny.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if I agree, though. Sean's overly pessimistic in his assessment of the other hitters, but it seems to me that it's true that there's nothing like having a truly feared hitter in your lineup. How do several medicore-to-good players make up for Manny when you're going to have (at least) mediocore-to-good players out there anyway?
We talked, maybe it was at the trade deadline last year, but it might have been before the season began, about replacement value for Manny. I said that only Tejada could really fill the hole, as there was talk about him at that time. Redsock proved me wrong, showed that Manny was a considerably more valuble hitter than Tejada. (Although if Manny's considered a bargain this offseason, the O's would be crazy to move Tejada at a mere $12m a year.)
My question is: what has really changed? Unless there was some very remarkable pitching to be had for Manny (and there's no indication that's the case), how could be get replacement value for him? Unless the Sox know for sure (and I don't mean fuckin' Shaunghessy-sure) that Manny quit on them last year, I don't see what's changed. He remains irreplaceable as far as I'm concerned.
I'm curious if everyone's in agreement that the "protection" notion is crap. I am statistical-analysis challenged myself.
Allow me to give my unsolicited, speculative opinion on why I suspect the 'Manny for value' argument. Jerry Callahan does a hatchet job on JD Drew in today's Herald and mentions what 'they' say about obscenity. You know it when you see it. I think the same can be said about value. And I don't think that's what we'll see in return for Manny. Whoever we get will be spun, doctored, massaged and projected in front of wiggly mirrors through a haze of stale cigar smoke. That's only Act I. When Manny leaves town, Act II will begin. Edes, Mazz, CHB et al will suddenly find 'sources' with stories about what a cancerous, injury-faking, selfish dickhead Manny actually was. Scripted, of course, by LL and the Dentist. Now I'm being irrational here and maybe just pine for adherence to the old 'bird in the hand worth two in the bush' rule. I'm simply being silly in thinking that 'the bush' is going to be the league in which these guys are currently playing.
ReplyDeleteNice post, JM, though I see real meat only in your reason #1.
ReplyDeleteAs for #2: they put up if he's worth it, and, unless he really did quit without reason last year, he is. #3 strikes me as just doing something just to do something and I don't like it (although on the other side of the coin is the success of the Nomar trade, there may have been reason #1 type logic involved in that.) #4 is nothing to base a season on, although obviously it would be a remarkable triumph for WMP to become a superstar (especially if NL pitchers can somehow tame Bronson Arroyo's bat), it's more of a 2008 hope for me.
Jack - Manny DID NOT request a trade in 2006. Check your sources.
ReplyDeleteWhen Manny is gone, I don't want to hear you crying about how we miss his bat. Or when Ortiz asks for a trade at the end of 2007.
2007 is turning into a worse season than 2006 and we aren't even to spring training yet! I'm losing trust in Theo & Co.
Hmm, seems like my little cry-baby rant yesterday may have been just that. Looks like plenty of suitors for Manny with Sox pulling a Boras and playing them all off against each other. So many different sources, it can't all be bullshit. I still want to keep Manny, but I'll try to curb my dark side and sneak back into the 'wait-and-see' camp.
ReplyDelete