The M's should trade Brandon League
http://prospectinsider.com/view/the-m%27s-should-trade-brandon-league/
Among the decisions the Seattle Mariners will have to make this offseason is
whether or not to entertain trade offers for right-hander Brandon League. Let
me rephrase that; the M's have to decide whether or not it's in their best
interest to seriously look to move League this winter. Of course they should
listen to trade offers, they should listen on every player on the roster,
even Felix Hernandez.
With League, there are a few factors that suggest keeping him is the best
move. For one, he's affordable. The M's aren't strapped for payroll
flexibility to the point that League has to be traded in order to create the
necessary available monies to land the impact pieces GM Jack Zduriencik and
his crew need to acquire to take a large step toward contention in 2012.
League made $2.25 million in 2011 and is arbitration eligible for the final
time this winter. He'll be tendered and should earn at least $4 million next
season, perhaps even $4.5-5 million. For a closer, that's reasonable, but
that brings up the key question: Is League a legit closer?
Overall, he was this past season, but it was his first and only season in the
role, and his road splits are awful, suggesting he can close at the Safe but
in a neutral or hitter's environment he struggles, thanks to below-average
command and inconsistent secondary pitches.
Home
36g, 35.1 IP, 24 H, .190 BAA, HR, 0.51 BB/9, 7.9 SO/9
Road
29g, 26 IP, 32 H, .296 BAA, 2 HR, 2.07 BB/9, 4.85 SO/9
Even at his very best, League is but an average closer. He misses bats, but
not at the level of a premium reliever, and rarely has the kind of control
and command of a Joakim Soria or Mariano Rivera, or even the median closer in
the big leagues.
League will be a free agent at the end of the season too,, at which time he
will certainly be priced out of Seattle by way of the club's available
payroll and young relief corps, one more reason to move League this offseason.
Sure, contending teams need closers, but they need really good ones, and
League doesn't appear to qualify. Spending money -- especially north of $4
million -- on average late-inning options isn't what smart baseball teams do.
The new agreement between the owners, the league and the Major League
Baseball Players Association may impact League's trade value in one direction
or the other. Under the new rules, part of which will be implemented
immediately, Type-A free agent relievers will not cost the signing club a
first round draft pick, making them much more affordable. Still, it's often
going to be more plausible to trade for a Brandon League or Huston Street
than it is to sign a Matt Capps, a comparable talent, to a multi-year deal.
Where League fits
Wile League doesn't carry elite trade value by himself, he could be a
valuable piece to a trade package that brings in offensive help. One of those
clubs could be the Cincinnati Reds, whether it has anything to do with
bringing in a hitter from the Queen City or not.
The Reds, who are transitioning left-hander Aroldis Chapman to the starting
rotation, declined the option on closer Francisco Cordero who told ESPN
Insider's Jim Bowden on SiriusXM Radio this past week that the Reds' best
offer to date won't get him to re-sign.
This could send the Reds on the search for a replacement.
League could also fit, as a relatively inexpensive option for the ninth
inning or as a setup man, in Boston, Tampa Bay, or either Los Angeles club.
The San Diego Padres may be the best fit of all, as they look to shore up a
relief corps that figures to lose Heath Bell and Chad Qualls to free agency
after trading Mike Adams to the Texas Rangers in July.
What League is worth in trade is almost irrelevant, but he's certainly
valuable enough that it's not a worthless venture to tender League a contract.
Where the M's turn in the ninth
If the Mariners trade League, they'll have to look to another arm to handle
the ninth inning. Perhaps there's a free agent on the market that can help --
someone like Jonathan Broxton, who struggled mightily in '11 may be left to a
low-base salary plus incentives -- or perhaps the M's simply turn it over to
their young kids.
Tom Wilhelmsen was terrific in his second call-up last season, allowing just
six earned runs in 23 frames while posting a 22-4 strikeout-to-walk ratio.
The M's may also have an option that didn't pitch in the majors last year in
Stephen Pryor, the club's fifth-round pick in 2010.
Pryor started 2011 in High Desert, struggled with his command and mechanics
and began June with an ERA of nearly 20. From that point on the former
Tennessee Tech flame thrower was nasty in 17 2/3 inning in Adelanto and 22
2/3 innings at Double-A Jackson, yielding just six earned runs on 21 hits and
16 walks while whiffing 51 batters.
Pryor issued just seven of those bases on balls in his last 28 innings and
did not issue even one in his past six games, covering 6 2/3 frames.
He's big and strong with terrific arm strength. His fastball has reached
triple digits in the past, but he sits in the mid-90s with a slider that
improved from fringy to average, perhaps slightly above average. He's also
throwing a changeup and has improved his overall control by at least a full
grade since early last season.
Can a team that expects to contend toss a rookie into the closer role and
succeed? The Los Angeles Angels used Jordan Walden last season and contended
until their offense failed them too many times.
Pryor hasn't touched Triple-A yet, but Walden has just 6 2/3 innings of
experience at Class-AAA before last season. He wasn't perfect, but using
Walden was much better for the Halos than spending more free agent money on a
veteran.
Why would a team trade for League?
League, unlike Capps, Bell, Ryan Madson, Cordero and Frank Francisco, is only
guaranteed a salary of about $4-4.5 million, rather than a multi-year deal
that could pay those free agents that much -- more in the case of Cordero,
Bell and Madson -- for two or more seasons.
And unlike Nathan, League is not coming off any kind of injury where
durability is any kind of concern.
Even if more clubs see League as a setup man, the lack of a long-term
financial commitment is certain to make him at least moderately attractive
versus the free agent route, and it's not like the M's are going to ask for
premium talent in return.
They should, however, get one solid player or a few interesting prospects.
For those that prefer to keep League because of the chance the M's make some
noise in 2012 -- adding Prince Fielder or another big bag or two ... or not
-- consider the fact that relievers are the most volatile commodities in the
game and League has but one season as a closer under his belt.
It was just two seasons ago that league was a solid, yet unspectacular, setup
man, and the year before that was a mediocre version of a late-inning arm.
League could very well regress some the first half of 2012, killing any value
he may have in July, when his value in trade will already be crippled due to
his pending free agency -- the acquiring club would only have him for two or
three months.
I'd bet the M's include League in a package deal this winter or move him in
January or February when the free agent market is dry and Street and any
other trade-available setup man or closer has been dealt.
For me, what they get in return doesn't matter a whole lot. Spending $4
million or more on him next season is almost a reckless decision by the M's
at this stage in their rebuilding plan.
If they find themselves in the race in June and the bullpen needs a veteran,
they can go out and make a deal to land one -- there are always several
available.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 140.112.25.133
推
11/28 01:18, , 1F
11/28 01:18, 1F
推
11/28 01:49, , 2F
11/28 01:49, 2F
→
11/28 01:49, , 3F
11/28 01:49, 3F
Mariners 近期熱門文章
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章