Unpredictability marks Tigers' offseason
看板DET_Tigers作者Westmoreland (Five Tools/Seven Skills)時間16年前 (2010/02/23 16:16)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20100222&content_id=8115838
Once thought of as sellers, club turns tables as buyers
LAKELAND, Fla. -- Plans change. So do the Detroit Tigers.
Two months ago, the club left baseball's Winter Meetings seemingly set
for a payroll purge after trading away Curtis Granderson and Edwin
Jackson for younger, lower-salaried players, and watching Placido
Polanco and Brandon Lyon leave as free agents. Team president/general
manager Dave Dombrowski talked about making "adjustments," and with the
Michigan economy looking like a mess, the Tigers seemed headed for an
era of trying to do more with less.
Fast forward to Monday, as the Tigers introduced Johnny Damon to the
Detroit media, and the club stands poised to open the season with about
the same level of payroll as it had last season. They're set to start
the year with rookies at center field and second base and some unproven
talent in their bullpen. But they also have a one of the best closers in
the game and now one of baseball's prolific offensive catalysts over the
past 12 years. They also have a pitching rotation where their top three
starters, including their Cy Young Award candidate, are under team
control for at least the next five years.
Nobody's asking anymore if the Detroit Tigers were buyers or sellers
this offseason, because they've basically defied a label. They were a
team in flux, but they enter the 2010 season with potentially as good or
better of a chance to contend as they had last year.
Dombrowski called it "the most complicated offseason I've had" in his
two decades as a general manager, topping the sell-off he had to do with
the Florida Marlins after their 1997 World Series title. But he also
said it was an offseason with a plan.
"We needed to make some adjustments," Dombrowski said, "not only for
this year, but as we go forward. The moves we made earlier in the year
allowed us to make some adjustments, not only now but in the future. It
also brought in some young talent."
When reports emerged from last October's GM Meetings that the Tigers
were willing to listen to trade interest on Granderson and Edwin
Jackson, speculation turned towards a potential fire sale that could
rival what Dombrowski had to do after '97. The signs were there, from a
high-payroll team that didn't make the postseason last year to a handful
of bad contracts to a city with a sagging economy.
Dombrowski insisted that they weren't in sell-off mode, and that they
wouldn't make a deal they didn't like simply to shed payroll. But
Granderson and Edwin Jackson were the two players most likely to draw
the best return package of any Tigers short of Justin Verlander and Rick
Porcello.
Granderson batted .249, but also hit 30 home runs, and he has a track
record to suggest his hitting will rebound. He's also under contract for
at least the next three years plus a club option, though his salary
escalates quickly. Jackson was coming off his most successful season,
but the 26-year-old also was on track for an arbitration raise and free
agency in two years. He appeared more likely to choose free agency over
a long-term extension, and Verlander's situation made it almost
impossible for the Tigers to sign Jackson long-term anyway.
The Tigers dealt both in the same three-team trade and gained three
young pitchers -- Max Scherzer, Daniel Schlereth and Phil Coke -- plus
the center-field prospect Austin Jackson, who was key to the deal.
Dombrowski talked afterward about the Tigers getting back to developing
young players.
"We didn't trade those guys and give them away," Dombrowski said. "We
always said we weren't going to do that. We brought in, to me, four
young, talented players that are ready to help us right now or in the
near future."
Dombrowski said they chose not to offer Polanco arbitration because they
didn't want to be forced into a one-year contract worth potentially $9
million. A few days later, Polanco signed a three-year, $18 million deal
with the Phillies, who did not have to give up a first-round Draft pick
as compensation as a result.
The Tigers made contract offers to Lyon and Fernando Rodney, but
wouldn't match other teams. Detroit didn't go beyond a two-year offer
with Lyon, who signed a three-year, $15 million deal with the Astros.
The Tigers never offered a multi-year contract to Rodney, who signed a
two-year, $11 million contract with the Angels.
Had they kept some of those players, Dombrowski said, they would not
have been able to make the moves to come -- some of which was budgeted,
some of which was not.
A contract extension for Verlander -- who would've otherwise been a free
agent in two years -- was always in the plans, Dombrowski said, but they
had to reassure Verlander that they were still serious about contending.
Signing closer Jose Valverde, Verlander said later, helped convince him.
The Tigers planned on adding a closer, Dombrowski continued, whether it
was Lyon, Rodney or someone else. They also looked at the closer's
market against the number of teams seeking a closer and expected someone
to be able later in the offseason.
That turned out to be Valverde, which turned out to be a bigger signing
than they might have planned. They agreed to a two-year contract in part
to ward off interest from teams that might have signed him as a setup
man, but also to justify the cost of a first-round Draft pick to sign
the Type A free agent.
"He worked with us in making that work for us at the time," Dombrowski
said. "But he was the guy that was left out there, and we were very
fortunate, we thought, to be able to add that quality type of reliever.
But that was always part of the plan."
Signing Damon, Dombrowski admitted, was a last-minute adjustment. When
he told reporters in mid-January that the Tigers had not expressed
interest in Damon, it was for financial reasons.
"It was not based upon the ability of player. It was basically knowing
that I was at my budget limits," Dombrowski said. "I didn't have any
more finances at my point, on how we had drawn up my offseason.
"Now, I will tell you, we have a unique owner."
Owner Mike Ilitch was the difference that allowed the Damon signing to
take place by expanding the budget.
"Once he gave the OK, by all means, we were thrilled to see if we could
make it happen," Dombrowski said.
By signing Damon to a one-year contract, the Tigers preserved some
flexibility for next year, when they'll shed a slew of payroll thanks to
expiring contracts. Jeremy Bonderman, Dontrelle Willis, Nate Robertson,
Gerald Laird and Brandon Inge are all eligible for free agency at
season's end, as could Magglio Ordonez depending on his vesting option.
"Anyone looking at our situation can see that our contractual situation
changes dramatically at the end of this year," Dombrowski said,
"allowing us to make some further adjustments that we need to going
forward."
That doesn't mean that the Tigers won't go after free agents, Dombrowski
said. But it's clear that they want to base their team around young
talent. Jackson and second baseman Scott Sizemore are part of that.
By Jason Beck / MLB.com
02/22/10 8:06 PM EST
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