Apparently my esteemed colleague HorraceClark66 disagrees with my take on whether or not we should sign Soto at any cost and, to be fair, he makes some excellent points. The two most important being...
“… most
Angels fans were at least glad to see those guys (Othani and Trout) in their
prime. And with Soto, there is the chance of seeing greatness, every game, at
Yankee Stadium.”
And something along the lines of… Brain Cashman cannot be trusted to build a table from Ikea much less a championship roster.
Both points
are undeniable. Although some issue
could be taken with his assertation that,
“Suddenly,
all sorts of suggestions began to spring up from the laptops of our local
Knights of the Press Box about how the Yanks didn't need Yamamoto at all! No,
sir! They could use that money to build a much better staff!”
OK, we didn’t
build a better staff, but we did make it to the World Series and, in the end,
it was the usual suspects that did us in.
But, how could I not agree that Cashman didn’t do anything with the
unspent money except give us Marcus Stroman?
That said… Mr.
Clark66, if that is indeed your real name, while you sit at your desk and
crank out “books” that earn accolades from all across the baseball world for
their accuracy, insight, and entertainment value, I have nothing better to do than actually
watch the games and read the psychotic ramblings of the NY Post’s Yankee
article’s comments section –
“Fire Boone!
Honor the Founding Fathers true meaning of Thanksgiving by bringing back the
Cleveland Indians and Washington Redskins! FJB!”
So who
understands the game better, you or me?
I can see how
you might feel that there is incredible value to having a player who is a
delight to watch. Maybe he's even the next Willie Mays… If Willie was a marginal fielder whose
salary would cripple the team for the next 15 years.
BTW how many
World Series did “The Say Hey Kid” win?
To quote
from the as yet unreleased Volume Two of “The New York Game”… “One”.
(NOTE: I may be
using this quote out of context because I have not seen an advanced copy but I’m
pretty sure the word “one” is in there somewhere.)
"Hammering" Hank Aaron? “One”
Ibid.
Yes, every
Soto at-bat is a thing of beauty, a titanic struggle of wills, but how many
times did the Titanic make it from Southampton to New York City?
Uh...“None” Ibid.
As I mentioned in my comment that spurred this, Soto is truly great, but baseball teams don't require great necessarily. It's not like he's a point guard or a 7-foot center who can clog the paint and score. He's also not Mahomes.
He's not even a #1 ace or a shutdown closer. He gets 4-5 ABs and has to catch
the ball a couple of times a game. Valuable for sure, but worth 50+
million dollars a year?
Look, like I said, he’s
great. His AYGHAB is 9.2. If they sign him I will watch every at bat but we all know how this story goes. Hal will force Brian to dumpster dive to fill out the rest of
the roster.
We’re all
sick of it.
So if
possible get those 3-year contracts
ready because as I wrote the other day…
LF Santander
>>>> Verdugo. Kind of what Verdugo was supposed to be, Plus it puts
Jasson in center where he will not be good but will have Judge on the right and
Santander in Left to reduce the amount of area he has to cover. They did this
for him in the minors.
Walker >>>>>> Than the too old and crippled Rizzo (Who I
like). Do you think Walker doesn't make that play in the 5th? More power.
Better fielder. Three years max.
Willy Adames >> Volpe Also good with Leaving Volpe at short, moving Chaz back
to second, and playing Adams at third because the Yankees MUST have at least one
player playing out of position.
Volpe >>>> Gleyber. He's probably a very good second baseman. Added
bonus No Gleyber!
Tanner Scott Closes with Weaver as set up >>>>>> Weaver with
?? as set up.
Distribute the money!
Incidentally,
in making the case for signing Soto you left out one huge factor in favor of
doing it…
Keefe (keefetothecity.com)
threatened to never watch the Yankees again if they fail to do it.
That is a
major loss right there.
I suppose, even if he doesn’t watch, he can just repost old ones as the Yankees keep making the same stupid mistakes anyway.
I agree with EVERYONE, damn it...sigh...
ReplyDeleteLOL
ReplyDeleteA rebuttal, eh? Well, we'll see about THAT! And your little dog, too! (Hey, where'd you find the George statue? Mme. Tussaud's? Ex-cellent!)
ReplyDeleteIt's in the main Yankee office at the stadium on the ground floor. When my Uncle was "Veteran of the Game" it was where we checked in. It's up on a pedestal. Of course it was. I am actually taller than him but that way he's the biggest guy in the room. The ego is quite astounding.
DeleteAnyone still awake?
ReplyDeletePro-Soto is a safe position because the Yanks won't sign him. Very little chance advocacy will blow up in one's face, if it does somehow work out one looks like a genius, and when Cash's alternatives don't work, one can smugly say "told you so". Biggest risk...Cash's alternatives work. Egg on one's face then for sure. But nothing about Cash's past performance indicates that is even remotely possible.
ReplyDeleteEver see that meme of IQ spread? The ends of the spectrum agree on the simplest approach to a problem, while the bulging middle wants a complicated, convoluted, multi-facet approach? That's what we got here. Idiots and geniuses agree "Sign the best hitter in baseball", while a great middling mass says "spread the money around the roster, be creative, elevate every other position just a bit for greater overall success".
ReplyDeleteResigning Soto and building a strong team about him would be a good strategy. Spreading the money around multiple good not great players and remaining more flexible would also be a good strategy. Neither will work unless there is a strategist to carry them out.
ReplyDeleteIt's a Kobayashi Maru situation. Unless one can change the parameters of the problem, the only winning move is not to play.
I think you have hit it on the head, Kaiser. Re-signing Soto AND getting another starter and a closer would be the best strategy—and well within Hal's means...
ReplyDeletePublius, safe or not, I want to see Soto go on playing for the New York Yankees. Period. And if Hal & Pal spurn that idea, and instead build a World Series winner by coming up with brilliant alternatives...I will be the first to tip my hat and call them my two Daddies! Truly. I will proudly wear the egg on my face (I generally have some there, anyway.)
ReplyDeleteBut since, as you concur, it's highly unlikely that Brian Cashman can do any such thing, I'd like to at least see a great couple of players on the Yanks.
And the bottom line on all of this is that...we won't get either. We won't get Soto, and we won't get even dubious acquisitions filling up the holes in our team.
ReplyDeleteNow that is a statement that we can all agree upon.
Delete