An elite starting pitcher was a luxury good for the Dodgers, writes Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports. That’s why Los Angeles passed on talents like Cole Hamels, David Price, and Johnny Cueto despite possessing the prospect depth to acquire their pick of the litter. Instead, the club flexed its financial might to acquire Mat Latos, Alex Wood, Jim Johnson, Luis Avilan, and Jose Peraza. The biggest piece dealt away by the Dodgers was 30-year-old Cuban infielder Hector Olivera. The utility man has not yet reached the majors after signing a six-year, $62.5MM deal with the Dodgers. A full $28MM of that was in the form of a signing bonus.
Here’s more from Rosenthal:
- Cynics may find a way to criticize the Mets deadline transactions. Perhaps they didn’t add enough to the payroll or were too small minded? However, the moves for Yoenis Cespedes, Tyler Clippard, Kelly Johnson, and Juan Uribe provided essential upgrades to a roster that was showing signs of stress. GM Sandy Alderson deserves kudos for improving the club while working within tight constraints. To me, this was Rosenthal’s money quote, “Mets fans will not be satisfied – and should not be satisfied – until the team raises its payroll to a level more commensurate with the New York market.“
- Echoing the sentiments of many analysts, both the Phillies and Rangers did well in the Hamels trade. With the Phillies taking on Matt Harrison and chipping in cash, the Rangers will pay Hamels an average of $13MM to $14MM per season if his option vests. They also hung onto top prospects Joey Gallo and Nomar Mazara. On Philadelphia’s end, acquiring three quality prospects will do much to bolster their future.
- The Blue Jays, unlike the Dodgers, are often described as a cash strapped organization. Instead of taking on payroll like L.A., the Blue Jays dealt 11 prospects and Jose Reyes to acquire Troy Tulowitzki, David Price, Ben Revere, Mark Lowe, and LaTroy Hawkins. They’re 6.5 games back in the AL East and 1.5 games behind the Twins for the second Wild Card slot.
- The Astros also spent their prospect chips for major league upgrades. They made the first deadline strike by acquiring Scott Kazmir then paid a princely sum for Carlos Gomez and Mike Fiers. Interestingly, mid-market teams like the Astros, Blue Jays, Mets, and Royals used prospects in their search for October baseball. The Yankees and Dodgers opted to use money or stand pat.
bostonarmy
With the Toronto transactions, they will look absolutely foolish if they can’t pull ahead in the wildcard or divisional standings.
22Leo
Thanks for stating the obvious regarding the Dodgers. Good job.
cscd1111
Time will tell of what the Dodgers were thinking.
BlueSkyLA
We don’t need time. We already know what they were thinking.
citizen
Note in all these trades,hardly any big name top prospects were traded.
Brixton
I don’t know what classifies as a big name prospect. Multiple top 100 prospects moved in many deals.
3 in the Hamels
1 in Zobrist
1 in Cueto
1 in Price
1 in Cespedes
1 in Alex Wood
1 in Tulo
2 in Gomez
Brixton
1 guy who should be in the top 100 next year in the brandon moss deal
johansantana17
Olivera, Finnegan and Norris are pretty big names. Maybe Alfaro too
citizen
Finnegan is a big name but none of mlb trade rumors big names, like servino, judge, saeger, Baez.
mikejju
If only Amaro was traded to Texas, the Phillies might actually do well next year.
Brixton
Amaro has hit in the 1st and 2nd round in the 2013 and 2014 drafts to this point, made 5 really good rebuilding trades over the last couple months and hasn’t given out a bad contract in almost 4 years. Amaro really isn’t as bad as everyone thinks.
Matt St.
Except that he can’t stop himself from saying stupid things to the media.
mikejju
Exactly!
Vandals Took The Handles
Saying stupid things to the media does not make one a bad GM.
I’ve been following quite a few GM’s and team presidents that are wonderful to the media – quotable, co-operative, feed them inside information – and while they get good pub and their teams are written up well, those teams seem to underperform a lot.
All the complaining on here about Amaro “waiting too long” regarding Hamels that seems to go on multiple times a day for over a year now, seems to have been wrong. Amaro did as well with Hamels as possible.
johns-11
Toronto is the 4th largest city in NA. Hardly mid market. Owned by a billion dollar corporation.
Vandals Took The Handles
Sterotypes are hard to break.
mwk89
philly-rangers deal was a classic win-win
FrozenRopes
Jays are owned by Rogers, maybe the wealthiest of all the team owners. Money is not an issue.
As for the Dodgers, they did well. They, like so many others, are looking into this off season which will provide gigantic pay days for some.
whitesquirrel
Except Rogers has often MADE it an issue. Ever heard of being cheap?
Lance
Interesting that Rosenthal describes Houston as a “mid-market” team when they are a top ten TV market.
sturt
EXACTLY, Lance. By any measure, HOU is among the largest markets in baseball. Yet the owner has gotten away for all these years with the illusion that it’s payroll was commensurate with the market.