While writing the divisional “Moves to Make” series, I
realized that I was usually making arguments based on an abstract market. When
suggesting a player should be traded or that a team should trade for a better
player at the position, I wasn’t considering whether or not that trade
opportunity actually existed. Although I was paying close attention to when
players could become free agents, I wasn’t paying enough attention to their
actual salaries. By looking at the overall positional market, I hope to clear
these things up. With that in mind, I also don’t want this to become stale, so
I’ll try to just point out those things that stand out.
First, we’ll look at the catchers that I feel should be
traded, which will be limited to only those that are among the top 30 at the
position (i.e. worthy of starting). I’ll try my best to explain why they should
be traded and who should be interested.
Trade Market
The trade market at the catching position is relatively
thin. After checking and re-checking the list of major league catchers, the
list begins and ends with Kenji Johjima.
Kenji Johjima is one of the ten best catchers in the major
leagues, but it could be argued that the Mariners’ top prospect Jeff Clement should
also be on that list. In Johjima’s two seasons in America, he has hit
.289/.327/.442, thrown out 69 of 172 would-be base stealers, and played good
defense behind the plate. He also makes $5.2M in 2008. Over the past three
seasons in the minors, Clement has hit .319/.386/.522 at high-A in 2005, .288/.386/.525
and .257/.321/.347 at AA and AAA in 2006, and .277/.371/.500 at AAA in 2007. Here
and here
(the first is free; the second is not, but you can read Clement’s description
for free), Kevin Goldstein mentions that Clement is becoming better and better
behind the plate and his bat makes him an elite catcher. Plus, Clement won’t be
arbitration-eligible until following the 2010 season or later.
To sum that all up, Clement and Johjima will provide roughly
equal performance, but Clement is just under $5M cheaper than Johjima. Even if
they aren’t equal, there’s no way that Johjima is worth $5M more than Clement
to the Mariners, but he’s certainly worth that much to another team. The
Mariners’ best shot at the playoffs is this year as Richie Sexson and Raul
Ibanez enter free agency following the season, and it will be difficult for the
Mariners to keep up with the Angels in 2009 and 2010. The Mariners can enhance
their shot by trading Johjima to improve in other areas, such as their pitching
staff, without much of a drop-off at catcher. The rumored Bedard deal would
change things, but I’d much rather trade Johjima for a #3 or #4 starter than
Adam Jones for a #1; for that matter, I’d rather have 6 years of Jones than 2
years of Bedard.
Three teams that could really use
Kenji Johjima in 2008 are Cincinnati, Milwaukee, and Toronto. Any type of trade
involving Johjima would be much easier if the Mariners were playing for the
future, but that’s not currently the case. The only potential trade I could see
involving Johjima would be with Milwaukee because the Reds and Blue Jays don’t
have the extra pitching from which to trade. Milwaukee’s starting catcher is
Jason Kendall. Kendall only hit .242/.301/.309 last season, and out of 131
attempted steals, he only threw out 20. Both are poor, but the Brewers still
gave him $4.25M this offseason to be their starting catcher. Maybe they saw
something that no one else did, but I think they’ll be looking for a new
catcher once May rolls around. They’ve got surplus starting pitching and just
might be able to work out a deal with the Mariners.
Contract
Extensions
When looking for whether or not a
player should be signed to an extension, I look for players entering the final
year of their contract or young stars without long-term contracts but still in
their pre-free agency years. Catchers meeting the first criteria include Kenji
Johjima, Jason Varitek, Ivan Rodriguez, Gregg Zaun, and Jason Kendall. As I’ve
already covered, I think the Mariners should trade Johjima, not re-sign him. If
he was traded, his new team would be wise to sign him to a 2- or 3-year
extension. Varitek, Rodriguez, and Zaun are old enough that I’d wait until the
end of the season before approaching them about an extension, and I’ve already
covered Kendall above.
Russell Martin fits the second
category. In the past two seasons, Martin has proven that he’s one of the best
catchers in the game. He’#### .288/.366/.454 in the majors while playing good
defense behind the plate. He is not a free agent until after the 2012 season,
but he’s worth signing to a deal similar to the 6 years, $26.8M Brian McCann
got last March. Martin should and would get more, but that type of a deal would
lock up his arbitration years and give the Dodgers more payroll certainty going
forward.
Recap
The Mariners should trade Kenji
Johjima (not Adam Jones) for pitching help, and the Brewers should be first in
line for a deal. The Dodgers should work out an extension with Russell Martin.
Too Late AJ is gone. So the M's don't HAVE to get pitching for Johjima, if trading him is what they want to do.
I would LOVE a Johjima+ for Rios(Toronto) trade. We (the m's) need a solid corner OF bat; Dunn, Rios, Crawford or another impact offensive threat.
Also, this is Sexson's contract year and he was awful in '07, 1B is another spot the M's will need to focus on in the coming years. My 2 cents.
Montucky, your comments are right on the nose. We need to replace HGH man out in right field, and Kenji Johjima would be the perfect canidate for that trade to bring a quality right fielder to Safeco. Now if AJ can just get through his physical and get Bedard in camp, who knows how far he could go with potentially the best bullpen in baseball backing him up?...my 2 cents...
Felix Hernandez and Eric Bedard give us a certifiable #1 righty and a #1 lefty with complimentary #3 & #4 starters to back them up.
Not to mention potentially the best bullpen in bassball. Bavasie is trying to build for his ballpark, he may fail. But he,s making the rational moves and the effort, for which he is to be commended...
Last edited by AllPro71 on February 5th at 10:08 PM.
You talk of the Brewers needing catching---look into their farm system and see ANGEL SALOME--many project him to be the starting catcher in Milwaukee in 2 to 3 years
I wish you were the GM for the Mariners.
In two years, Bedard will be gone, Bavasi will be LONG-GONE, and Adam Jones will be the Starting Right Fielder for the AL All-Star team.
Why doesn't anyone else in the Mariners' Brass SEE THIS!!!
This is baseball. Let's have some fun.
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MLB Trade Rumors, Baseball Prospectus, Cot's Baseball Contracts, Fan Graphs, Football Outsiders