The Red Sox have signed a bunch of people to 1-year deals. In the last few days they have reached agreements with pitchers Brad Penny, John Smoltz and Takashi Saito. They have also signed OF Rocco Baldelli and OF/1B Mark Kotsay. All but Kotsay are coming off seasons in which they have had injury or illness problems. What is going on here?
The Red Sox are putting together a roster that has the ability to compete with the Rays and Yankees THIS year. They are not locking themselves in to any long term contracts, so if any of these guys doesn’t recover, it is not a huge hit. Particularly in terms of the pitching, these moves allow their prospects to develop and they won’t have to trade someone at a discount (like they did Coco Crisp) if/when the particular prospect is ready.
For instance, let’s say Bowden or Buchholz shows he is ready to take up a spot in the rotation in 2010, they won’t have to trade Smoltz or Penny. However, if Brad Penny has a great year the Red Sox could decide to commit to him long term. I like the flexibility this provides. Unlike the Yankees, they have not locked themselves into anything for the next 4-8 years. They can adjust on the fly.
These guys have all shown they have major league tools. All we actually need from Rocco is to start against lefties and be ready to pinch hit in the late innings of tight games. We lose nothing when it comes to defense with that late substitution. The guy can also hit and run the bases.
If he can’t bounce back as well as hoped, we have the insurance of Mark Kotsay should Drew or Ellsbury suffer an injury. We aren’t having to dip into the minors like last year and bring up guys who either can’t hit or can’t field.
In the case of Saito, we have a proven closer just in case something happens to Papelbon. Redundancy, or insurance, depending on how you look at things.
They Red Sox will also have the salary flexibility, as Gammons noted, to pursue a player another team deems too expensive as the trade deadline approaches. Imagine one of our starters in the outfield gets injured. He notes that Detroit may decide to dump some salary. They could pursue Magglio without entering luxury tax territory. Financial prudence in these tough times, with a commitment to win.
Yes, they didn’t get the big bat they wanted. But they have the bats needed to ‘protect’ Big Papi. The problem was injuries, not talent. If Papi and Lowell are healthy we have a line up to compete with any other AL team. I don’t buy this fear about being unable to produce runs. Lowrie can hit, he slumped after an injury to his hand. The only weak link in the line up will be catcher.
Theo provided some solid depth without breaking the bank or tying up resources for years to come. He’s sticking to the plan to develop prospects. All we need now is a catcher.
Rice is in!
Great news, isn’t it? Long overdue thanks to the inflated numbers of the steroid era. He was a player you didn’t appreciate unless you watched him regularly- a beast.