Re: [討論] 對總經理Theo Epstein的評價
http://tinyurl.com/n8qhtz
Epstein, Sox can afford to write off mistakes such as Lugo
BY JIM DONALDSON
Theo can afford to be wrong.
That's the bottom line.
In more ways than one.
Because Boston's bottom line is considerably more lucrative than that of
most other clubs in baseball – not including, of course, the ludicrously
loaded with lucre Yankees of New York – Epstein can afford to overpay for
underachieving players. He can afford to make mistakes that most other GMs
cannot. And, when he makes a costly mistake – the most recent being Julio
Lugo – the Red Sox, unlike the majority of teams, can afford to write it off.
It's what makes evaluating Theo's job performance as tricky as Lugo trying
to field a hot grounder.
How good a GM is Epstein?
That's the $122-million question. Which, by the way, happens to be the
approximate amount of the Red Sox payroll this season.
The Red Sox have the second-highest payroll in the American League, although
far behind the $201.5 million the Yankees are shelling out this season. Both
clubs have actually reduced payroll – the Yanks down from the $209 million
they spent last year, while the Sox are well below the franchise-record $143
million they spent while winning the World Series in 2007.
Speaking of the World Series, the Sox hadn't won one since 1918 until, with
Epstein as GM, they finally broke through in 2004. They now have won two
championships in the last five years, and have qualified for postseason play
in five of the six years since Theo took over prior to the 2003 season.
So, one might legitimately ask, how can it be said he's done anything less
than a stellar job, especially considering that the Boston farm system is
stocked with talent, from Triple-A Pawtucket to the Single-A Lowell Spinners?
Here's how:
The shortstop position has been problematic for Epstein since his gutsy deal
that sent Nomar Garciaparra to the Cubs in 2004 and brought Orlando Cabrera
and Doug Mientkiewicz to Boston.
The following year, Theo signed Edgar Renteria to a 4-year, $40 million,
free-agent contract. Instead of a long-term solution at short, Renteria
lasted just one season in Boston. He was traded to Atlanta, where the Sox
picked up nearly one-third of his salary over the three remaining years of
his deal.
Lugo was signed as a free-agent in 2007, the Sox luring him away from Tampa
Bay with a 4-year, $36 million deal. He hit .237 that season, played in just
82 games last year because of injury, and this season lost his starting job
to utility man Nick Green, who has only been holding down the position until
Jed Lowrie got healthy.
Epstein, to his credit, didn't hesitate to acknowledge that signing Lugo was
a mistake.
“It was a free-agent signing that didn't work out,” Epstein said after the
Sox released Lugo last week. “We ended up paying for past performance, not
current performance. Sometimes the best organizations make mistakes. It was a
mistake and, as the decision-maker, that’s on me. We'll move on, and we'll
make better decisions going forward.”
The Red Sox are, without question, one of the best organizations in baseball.
And I wouldn't hesitate to say that they make more good personnel decisions
than bad ones. But, again, the huge advantage Epstein has is that he can
afford to make mistakes.
J.D. Drew is the kind of ballplayer every team would like to have. But not at
$14 million a year, which is what the Sox are paying him on a five-year
contract that runs through 2011. He’s currently hitting .239.
If you're Jason Bay, whose contract is up at the end of this season, it
would seem that the minimum you ought to get in a multi-year deal is an
average of $15 million a year.
Is there any question that Bay, whose 72 RBI and 20 homers rank him among the
league leaders, is more productive, and more valuable, than Drew? Overpaying
for one player certainly doesn't justify overpaying for another, but it
stands to reason that somebody – the Yankees, for example – will meet that
lofty figure. And, if you're Bay, how can you sign with Boston for less than
fellow outfielder Drew is getting?
Then there's the disabled Dice-K, for whom the Sox shelled out $103 million
–– $51 million to obtain his rights, and another $52 million to sign him to
a six-year contract that runs through 2012. After posting what may have been
the least impressive, 18-3 record in baseball history last season, Matsuzaka
is 1-5 this season with an 8.23 ERA, and has been on the DL since late June
as a result of arm problems from throwing too much, too soon while pitching
Japan to the World Baseball Classic title in March.
While, in relative terms, veteran pitchers Brad Penny and John Smoltz have
been bargains at, respectively, $5 million and $5.5 million, the fact is that
not many teams could drop more than $10 million on pitchers perceived as
projects because of arm woes.
Although Penny is 6-4 for the Sox, his ERA is 5.02 and he hasn't won a game
in over a month. Smoltz, who wasn't able to join the team until late last
month, is 1-3, with an ERA of 6.31 in five starts, after having been rocked
for three homers in Monday night's loss to the Rangers.
Despite an 8-0 record against the Yankees, the Sox went into last night's
game in Texas tied for first with New York. With the trading deadline fast
approaching at the end of the month, the focus is on Theo to make the moves
that will keep Boston, if not atop the A.L. East – although that should be
the goal – then at least in firm control of the wild-card spot.
The good news is that, in terms of money, Epstein and Sox can afford to make
mistakes. The bad news is that, in terms of Boston making the playoffs again,
Theo can't afford to make a mistake in judgment now.
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※ 編輯: Belladonaa 來自: 118.160.71.231 (07/22 16:08)
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