Worst Deals in Diamondbacks History
http://www.azsnakepit.com/story/2007/1/23/145816/458
雖然不怎麼正面的話題XD 但我覺得滿有趣的
1.
Russ Ortiz: 4 years, $33m. By the time we finally get him off the books,
Ortiz will have been paid more than a million dollars, every time he took the
mound for Arizona. Or, to put it another way, $240,000 per inning. Pardon me
while I vomit. He made 28 starts, posting a 5-16 record and an ERA of 7.00,
before being dumped half-way through the second year.
2.
Richie Sexson: 1 year, $8.7m. Thanks to a couple of injuries, he had just 90
at-bats for Arizona. Was on pace for a 50-homer season, but missed 139 games,
then bolted to Seattle at the end of the year. And we also traded Lyle
Overbay and Chris Capuano, among others, for him. Overbay has posted OPS+ of
127, 113 and 126 in the three seasons since, while Capuano was an All-Star in
2006.
3.
Todd Stottlemyre: 4 years, $32m. Hardly worse than Ortiz's contract was the
Stottlemyre one, especially allowing for inflation since 1999. Over its
lifetime, he started just 39 games, with an ERA of 4.77. Stottlemyre tore his
rotator cuff two months in, and an apparently endless list of ailments
followed. He missed all 2001, getting a nerve relocated because of
tendonitis, and never made a dozen consecutive starts without hitting the DL.
The sorry saga ended in June 2002, when he had surgery to remove bone chips
in his elbow.
4.
Matt Mantei: 4 years, $22m. We paid Mantei for four seasons as our closer,
2001-04, and got a single, half-decent one: in 2003 he had 29 saves. The
other three years, he managed a total of six, injury limiting him to a mere
43.2 innings of work. Including his "good" year, we got less than a hundred
innings for our $22m, rivalling the Huge Manatee on a cost per pitch basis.
5.
Bernard Gilkey: 2 years, $10.5m. The figure quoted here is approximate; when
we traded for him from the Mets in mid-1998, cash went in both directions. We
got 161 games from him before dumping him mid-2000, eating the remainder of
his contract. During his AZ time, Gilkey batted .246, because of eye
problems, with less than thirty extra-base hits and eleven HR for all that
cash. We should have taken heed of his Men in Black cameo, where he gets
nailed by a fly-ball.
6.
Travis Lee: 4 years, $10m. Back in October 1996, before we'd ever played a
game, we pounced on Lee after the Twins failed to give him a contract,
signing someone who'd never played in the majors to an eight-figure contract.
Expected to be the franchise face, Lee fizzled, posting an OPS+ of 90. The
most valuable thing he ever did for Arizona, was be part of the trade that
brought Curt Schilling here.
7.
Jason Grimsley: 1 year, $825K. Though paying that much for 27.2 innings of
below-average relief pitching isn't good, this makes the list less for
financial reasons, than the staggeringly-awful nature of the off-field
scenario which unfolded. Previously, AZ fans could snigger complacently at
the BALCO-infested locker-room over by the bay, but Grimsley's exposure by
the Feds single-handedly derailed the entire 2006 season.
8.
Shawn Green: 3 years, $20m. The trade which brought Green to Arizona in
January 2005 was not awful in itself, with Green filling a need in RF.
However, the contract extension tied into it proved to be a complete
albatross: Green had lost more than 130 points of OPS from 2002 through 2004,
and even the move to a hitter's park only delayed the inevitable. The team
also failed to notice the presence of a younger, cheaper, better alternative
of Carlos Quentin. Pawning Green to the Mets, even with $6.5m in cash, was
near-miraculous.
9.
Luis Gonzalez: 3 years, $30m. This extension Luis got in 2003 would
undoubtedly rank higher, except it was, to some extent, a make-up deal.
Gonzo's 57 homers [if you exclude the tainted Sosa, McGwire and Bonds - and I
know I do - the eighth-most all-time] in 2001 cost just $4.3m. While
unquestionably nice, the results proved more charitable than a wise
investment of resources. Gonzo hit only .268, with fewer homers over the
three years combined than in that World Series season.
10.
Matt Williams: 5 years, $45m. Like Lee, this was one of those contracts
signed before the Diamondbacks started play, and was clearly intended to make
a statement. Unfortunately, the statement turned out to be that Arizona were
an easy mark for players past their prime. OPS+'s of 99, 121, 85, 94 and 102
followed, which averages out at almost exactly 100. Even allowing for
Williams' good hands, definitely far short of being worth $9m a year.
Honorable mentions: Jay Bell (5 years, $34m), Mark Grace (3 years, $7.75m, 96
OPS+), Shane Reynolds (1 year, $1m, 2 innings). The good news is how clear we
currently are of many contenders for future inclusion on the list. The
Johnson contract could end up rolling snake eyes, but equally, may end up a
brilliant move. If Tony Clark has another dismal season, then his contract
extension might merit honorable mention, but basically, the cash only counts
as a misuse of pocket change in the baseball scheme of things.
--
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