775A57464150470704350 wrote: Guys # not too bad ...He can spend the next year in AAA .Then we see what we have . I like the trade . :-/
No harm no foul in my book.
Something in my gut tells me SROD has started to figure things out ala Joey Bats but at a later age ..I dont care how old he is ...If we can get 3 top years i will take it ...We let him go we might be missing 25 -35 Hr per year down the line . The guy has a nice swing. ::) and if we let him settle on a starting position WOW stuff may happen
But where does he fit?
I seriously doubt he will fit into the coveted financial flexibility so worshiped by this regime. At least I think that's how we fans are supposed to look at it. Hey, finish under .500? Who cares! Toronto has to pay Liriano. Whoopie!!! Everybody's happy!
Good chance that Toronto will be happy too. Possibly get a starter who does better than Hutchison has done with Blue Jays along with a couple prospects.
I'm sure Toronto considers it a win. Hutchinson is garbage. A bad Liriano might equal a decent Hutchinson. Toronto doesn't care about financial flexibility. Look at the $$$ they have shelled out the last few years. We got a lousy pitcher, but saved 13.5 million ... they got two prospects and someone better than Hutchinson.
SCBucco, you nailed it!
The one thing about it though, its hard to justify paying a #5 13.5 million or whatever he is owed next year in this time and age. Liriano has been an enigma for a while. He resurrected his career in Pittsburgh, but still was an enigma. You really don't know which one you get with each start. The one that can be masterful and strikeout 13 in seven innings, or the one that gets shelled in four. He isn't one that I would have faith to go deep in games.
Frankie was terrible this year after his first start. He really didn't seem to care this year in Pittsburgh. His body language told me everything I knew. Finding a dance partner to unload him narrowed the field. There are only so many that would even consider the notion of taking him.
He is 8-13 with a 4.88 ERA and a 1.50 WHIP right now, which includes a 2-2 mark and a 3.35 ERA and 1.19 WHIP in Toronto. That tells you how bad he was here.
Toronto didn't give up anything of consequence to get him ... added two prospects that could provide depth in the organization and all it did was essentially give up 13.5 million for next year. That is no big deal to a franchise that craves a play-off spot and a division title. If Liriano comes in and pitches like he is capable of, the trade is deemed a success. Because chances are Toronto gets to the play-offs.