I think they're paying a lot but i for one am excited to see this guy pitch in the mlb.
Hot Stove Rumors Thread
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Weiner: Teams Want International Draft "Right Now"
The title of MLB's new International Talent Committee sounds global in scope, but there's no doubt of the central role the Dominican Republic will play in the committee's upcoming discussions about a possible international draft. It was appropriate, then, that MLB Player's Association executive director Michael Weiner spoke to the press in the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo yesterday, just hours after introducing the committee stateside. Weiner and other MLBPA representatives outlined a number of goals focusing on protecting and helping Dominicans and other Latino players, but they face a growing rumble of criticism about the committee's makeup and its perceived plans for Latin America.
"We're analyzing things to see what is the best solution," Weiner said, as reported in Spanish* by Dionisio Soldevila at the Dominican daily Hoy (link in Spanish). "If it was up to the owners, they'd do it right now. The players are open to that same discussion."
This statement in particular led some in the Dominican press to label the draft "practically a done deal," though some MLB executives sound less categorical than Weiner. "Some teams are for it, while other teams are not," Padres senior vice president Omar Minaya told Andy Martino at the New York Daily News. "For a draft to go into effect, a lot of things would have to be in place." Minaya isn't on the committee, but his Mets successor Sandy Alderson is, and Martino had this to say about the Mets GM:
"People involved with the committee describe Alderson as not quite as avid a proponent of the international draft as he once was. Although he is said to remain open-minded about the issue, Alderson is not expected to play the role of fiery advocate for the league's pro-draft position."
Along with Weiner and Alderson, the committee includes MLB executive vice president Rob Manfred, MLBPA director of player relations Tony Clark, MLB senior advisor Rick Shapiro, Kim Ng from the Commissioner's Office, Rays GM Andrew Friedman, and Stan Javier, a Dominican-born former player who now works as a special assistant for the MLBPA. When the lineup was first announced on Wednesday, several writers in the Spanish-speaking press made note of the fact that Javier is the only Latino. Among the most critical was Arturo Marcano, an ESPN Deportes contributor and co-author with David Fidler of a number of articles and a book that take issue with MLB's history of managing Latino talent. In a column yesterday on ESPN Deportes (link in Spanish), Marcano called it "absurd" not to include more international representation on the committee, writing:
"There is just one Latino in the committee, in spite of the clear fact that the principal objective is to study a market that is largely centered in Latin America. I find it hard to believe that the only available Latino prepared to take part in this committee was Stanley Javier." Marcano pointed to the the objectives the committee laid out in a recent press release, noting that most deal specifically with issues related to the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Mexico. But there's also the simple matter of language, he wrote:
"The only way that the members of the committee can properly analyze many of these issues, including the legal aspects and socioeconomic realities of countries like Venezuela and the Dominican Republic, is to have a full mastery of what has happened up to now, and to speak Spanish, since many of the affected and interested parties don't speak English. Unless Google Translate is an honorary member of the committee."
As if in response to such concerns, two Dominican players, Miguel Batista and Jose Veras, accompanied Weiner, Clark, and Javier at the event in the Santo Domingo. Batista told Soldevila, "The players are trying to protect the interests of all these young men. There are many things we're trying to achieve to help latino muchachos, including better educational programs, not rejecting 18-year-old Dominicans like happens now, and that they have more opportunities."
An additional concern for the committee is that, as Minaya concisely put it, "countries do not want to be Puerto Rico." The island was absorbed into the American/Canadian draft in 1990 and has produced declining numbers of players ever since, which Weiner addressed at the press conference, saying, "With the draft in Puerto Rico, some precautions weren't taken, and for that reason the number of signings decreased dramatically. Now, with this committee, we're going to watch so that the flow of players from the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, and other countries doesn't decrease."
Once the committee starts meeting in January, Puerto Rico will finally begin to be more than just a cautionary tale. One of the group's objectives is to discuss whether the nation should be absorbed into an international draft, or stay on equal footing with the US and Canada.
* In lieu of a transcript or video of the press conference, which the MLBPA informed MLB Trade Rumors it does not have, Michael Weiner's quotes here are re-translations of quotes that were translated from English into Spanish by the Dominican press. Thus, they may differ in minor ways from the original English. The quotes will be changed here as appropriate should such a transcript become available.
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I still think that the Orioles end up with Fielder. Price is definitely going down on him similar to the year we landed Tejada. None of the big spenders need Fielder or seem to want him, and the other teams rumored are dropping their names out of the race. The Orioles have the money, and if there is no bidding war, I think Angelos lets the team get more involved.
I'm not trying to get my hopes up or be a homer, but this is his MO with free agency and it wouldn't surprise me to see Fielder in Baltimore.Comment
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I still think that the Orioles end up with Fielder. Price is definitely going down on him similar to the year we landed Tejada. None of the big spenders need Fielder or seem to want him, and the other teams rumored are dropping their names out of the race. The Orioles have the money, and if there is no bidding war, I think Angelos lets the team get more involved.
I'm not trying to get my hopes up or be a homer, but this is his MO with free agency and it wouldn't surprise me to see Fielder in Baltimore.Comment
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The Reds and Cubs are discussing a trade that would involve reliever Sean Marshall going to Cincinnati in exchange for starter Travis Wood, Major League sources tell Ken Rosenthal and Jon Paul Morosi of FOXSports.com. It's not known whether other players would be included in the potential swap, according to the report.Comment
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If the Reds did this, and Chapman stayed in the bullpen, good luck to left handed hitters at the end of games with Marshall/Bray/Chapman waiting for them.Comment
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The Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds are close on a deal that would send reliever Sean Marshall to Cincinnati in exchange for left-handed pitcher Travis Wood and two minor leaguers, according to a source familiar with the situation.
Wood, who turns 25 in February, was 6-6 with 4.84 ERA in 18 starts last season with the Reds. Wood beat the Cubs in his major league debut on July 1, 2010, allowing two runs on two hits in seven innings. He finished his rookie season 5-4 with a 3.51 ERA in 17 starts. Wood was the second overall pick of the 2005 draft.
Wood pitched 10 games at Triple-A Louisville last season, going 2-3 with a 5.33 ERA.
Marshall, 29, is one of the best left-handed relievers in baseball. Last season he went 6-6 with 2.20 ERA and had 34 holds, tied for second in the majors among left-handed relievers. That was also a single-season team record.
Marshall is set to make $3 million in 2012, and he will be a free agent after the season.
The potential loss of Marshall means John Gaub, James Russell and Scott Maine will have an opportunity to move up as a primary setup man from the left side.Comment
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I'm on the fence too, but ultimately if Walt did that I could get behind it. Reds have seven starters right now if you count Chapman, and Marshall's $3.1M is about what the Reds opened up in the Latos deal. So you'd be adding Latos & Marshall to the team in major roles for the same money you were paying five guys, when only Alonso had any kind of real role out of the five.
If the Reds did this, and Chapman stayed in the bullpen, good luck to left handed hitters at the end of games with Marshall/Bray/Chapman waiting for them.
I guess they are going to be using a closer by committee approach? Not that that matters any except for fantasy purposes, as I would rather have the best person in for each situation.Comment
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Ugh Chapman is not going to be a good starter/if one at all. He couldn't pitch more than 2 innings in the fucking ARIZON FALL LEAGUE without straining himself, and had to be shut down. We really fucked up this kid's development. He should have been groomed to be a starter from Day 1, not this reliever bullshit now trying to change him.
How can anyone forget one of Wood's first career starts where he took a no hitter into the 9th inning against the Phillies? I think Wood should be in the rotation this year no doubt, and to trade him for another LHRP is dumb. What does Marshall bring to the table that Bill Bray can't sufficiently do, honestly? We should just use that money to resign Coco and keep Wood, because he has the chance to be a very solid 3/4 starter in a major league rotationComment
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