When I started this series, I said, “With that in mind, I
also don’t want this to become stale.” Ten days later, it has. Due to this, I plan
on keeping things much shorter from now on.
Impact Shortstops to
Be Traded
Michael Young would be here, but he has a no-trade clause in
his contract. Can you believe that he’s scheduled to make $16M every year from
2009 to 2013?
Contenders Needing a
Shortstop
As I mentioned in my last article about the second base
market, the Cubs should go after Mark Ellis instead of Brian Roberts as has
been rumored. Without making a move, their best options up the middle are Mark
DeRosa and Ronny Cedeno. With Roberts, they could move DeRosa over to short,
but I think a duo of Ellis at short and DeRosa at second would be a better
solution. Whether or not Oakland will give up Ellis in a trade is a different
story, but I think they should.
Next
Year’s Free Agents
The Dodgers should try to extend
Rafael Furcal. Sure, they’ve got a major-league shortstop in the minors with
Chin-Lung Hu, but they’ve also got a second base spot opening up after the
season with Jeff Kent’s free agency. One of them can move over to second, and
Furcal is the type of guy worth an extension.
David Eckstein, Juan Uribe, and Orlando
Cabrera are also free agents following the year, but none are worth worrying
about before the season ends. Eckstein wasn’t worth a multi-year deal two
months ago, and nothing’s changed since. The same can be said about Uribe three
months ago. As for Cabrera, he’s a good player when he keeps his batting
average up, but when it drops like it did in 2004 and 2005, he’s a below
average shortstop. That’s not the type of guy that gets a new deal before his contract
expires.
Pre-Free
Agent Stars
Obviously, Hanley Ramirez deserves a
contract similar, yet more lucrative, than the 4-year, $23.5M contract Jose
Reyes got in August 2006, but something tells me that the Florida Marlins aren’t
about to fork out anything more than they have to pay him in 2008.
J.J. Hardy will be a free agent following
the 2010 season, and he has exchanged arbitration figures with the Brewers
($3.05M/$2.4M) for this year. Until he proves that he can stay healthy and
productive for consecutive seasons, I wouldn’t worry about locking up his
future. If he can put together anything resembling his 2007 in 2008, it will be
time to open the check book for a three-year deal.
Recap
Michael Young has a surprising
amount of guaranteed money coming his way. The Cubs need to improve their
shortstop, and Mark Ellis is the guy for the job. Rafael Furcal and Hanley
Ramirez deserve a contract extension, but J.J. Hardy needs to prove himself one
more time. David Eckstein, Juan Uribe, and Orlando Cabrera should all become
free agents before they sign their next contract.
This is baseball. Let's have some fun.
Recommended Websites:
MLB Trade Rumors, Baseball Prospectus, Cot's Baseball Contracts, Fan Graphs, Football Outsiders