I'm not a scout, I don't know if he's going to be any good or not, but I always like when other teams get in the mix and make a splash like this, so good for Oakland, who I am always beating up on for not even trying. I'm glad they snuck in there and stole him from the Cubs and Marlins.
Yoenis Cespedes *Signs with Oakland*
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I'm not a scout, I don't know if he's going to be any good or not, but I always like when other teams get in the mix and make a splash like this, so good for Oakland, who I am always beating up on for not even trying. I'm glad they snuck in there and stole him from the Cubs and Marlins.Comment
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I'm not a scout, I don't know if he's going to be any good or not, but I always like when other teams get in the mix and make a splash like this, so good for Oakland, who I am always beating up on for not even trying. I'm glad they snuck in there and stole him from the Cubs and Marlins.
We'll see. He got a nice chunk of change.
I forget who said it in this thread, but I like the comparison of his potential to that of BJ Upton right now. If you love BJ Upton, that's fine...but he's the type where you're like "damn, he's leaving a lot of potential on the table."
I guess for $36M, its not the worst deal in the world, despite it being the highest for a Cuban defector.Comment
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A's have a lot of outfielders now.
Might they be willing to deal one?The king was shaken. He went up to the room over the gateway and wept.
As he went, he said: "O my son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom!
If only I had died instead of you
O Absalom, my son, my son!"Comment
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I'm not a scout, I don't know if he's going to be any good or not, but I always like when other teams get in the mix and make a splash like this, so good for Oakland, who I am always beating up on for not even trying. I'm glad they snuck in there and stole him from the Cubs and Marlins.Comment
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Originally posted by MattUM2"It stinks to be an American in this way:Annual salary paid out for Cespedes is almost at the level of 10-round draft cap under new MLB rules"Comment
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Here's a reasonable take by KLaw. Kind of highlights the best case scenario but keeps things pretty tempered:
The Oakland Athletics surprised everyone by signing Yoenis Cespedes to a reported four-year, $36 million deal when they hadn't been publicly linked to the Cuban outfielder before the news leaked out Monday morning. For their investment, they're getting a tooled-up hitter in his prime years by age but whose inexperience has led to some questions about how soon he'll have an impact.
Just grading out Cespedes on tools, he looks like a monster. His chiseled body wouldn't look out of place in an NFL backfield, but he isn't so jacked up that he's unable to move well. He'll show plus-plus raw power, and on a straight track, he's about a 65 runner (on the 20-80 scouting scale), although it'll play below that when running the bases. He's probably too big for center but should have plus range in right and has plenty of arm for it. His bat path isn't great, but he does have tremendous bat speed with a pull-oriented approach that, when he squares something up, produces enormous power. It's not hard to see him hitting 30 homers in the majors if he can hit enough to get to that power.
Cespedes hasn't faced a lot of good pitching and has faced very little pitching of any sort since defecting, so he'll probably be best served spending a few weeks or even months in the upper minors to shake off the rust and get used to facing better-quality off-speed stuff. The pull-happy approach leaves him very vulnerable on the outer half, and that kind of effort makes it hard to stay on the ball unless you've got superb hand-eye coordination. He also showed in his brief stint in the Dominican Winter League that he struggled to pick up spin out of the pitcher's hand, so adjusting to breaking balls probably will be the biggest obstacle between him and major league impact.
The other question on Cespedes is his age. Even assuming he's actually 26 -- the ages of Cuban ballplayers are difficult to verify -- that puts him right in his peak years, and by the time this contract is up, he'll be 30 and entering a decline phase. Yet some of those peak years will be spent making up for lost development time, so the A's probably will have to get most of their return on this deal in the final two to three years. That fits their organizational philosophy of building toward 2014-15, but it also will increase the risk that they don't get sufficient bang for their buck.Comment
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The thing that boggles me about trading those two away is they were still under contract for multiple yearsComment
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Yep, and through the time that Oakland wants to compete, and when Cespedes will finally be hitting his stride in the majors if they do a good job developing him.Comment
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Originally posted by MattUM2"It stinks to be an American in this way:Annual salary paid out for Cespedes is almost at the level of 10-round draft cap under new MLB rules"Comment
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I don't really wanna expect too much out of Cepedes this season. But he's one of the only interesting thing about the As this season, so its hard not to at least hope for something. Didn't pick a great season to get back into follow baseball closer, being an As fan...Comment
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