[報導] Anatomy of a trade - by Ken Rosenthal
雖然Ludwick的交易讓板上不少人都氣的要死, 但是交易的原因理由為何,
卻沒有一篇文章比下面這篇寫的更加清楚, 無論理由是否能夠被紅鳥迷們
認同, 至少可以更深入的了解為何Mo要把Westbrook 交易過來. 很抱歉
沒有時間翻譯, 重點摘要如下:
背景
1. 紅雀不知道教士一開始爭取的是Westbrook, 而不是Ludwick
2. 紅雀的農場空虛
紅雀交易限制(目標)
1. 儘量不要使用新秀交易
2. 維持現有薪資支出水準
促成交易的原因
1. Westbrook放棄合約中所規範如果被交易, 印地安人必須要付230萬美金的部分金錢
2. Ludwick受傷讓Jon Jay有表現機會
紅雀如不交易的不確定因素
1. Wainwright, Carpenter, Garcia三人的局數已經太多, 照現在的速度Wainy要投
247局, Carp要投241局, Garcia又是新秀(加上去年才動手術)必須控制局數
2. Loshe, Penny 不確定何時可以回到陣中, 等到兩人傷癒三巨頭可能已經過勞
3. Ludwick 明年的薪資必將大漲, 留下來可能不夠錢, 放出去可能不好交易
Anatomy of a trade
By Ken Rosenthal
August 3,2010
http://www.foxsportsmidwest.com/08/03/10/Anatomy-of-a-trade/
landing_stlcardinals.html?blockID=282555&feedID=3617
The most fascinating aspect of the Jake Westbrook-Ryan Ludwick trade is
how two teams assigned completely different values to the same players.
A big bat added to the middle of the order, Ryan Ludwick already is a hit
with Everth Cabrera and the first-place Padres.
The Padres preferred Ludwick to Westbrook. The Cardinals preferred Westbrook
to Ludwick. Yet the three-team deal that also included the Indians made sense
for each team involved.
Judging from local media reactions in each city, the trade is toughest to
sell in St. Louis, and understandably so: The Cardinals’ offense largely
has performed below expectations, and subtracting Ludwick won’t help.
Still, the Cardinals had their reasons for preferring a starting pitcher to
a hitter. The decision to turn over right field to Jon Jay, whose major-
league resume essentially consists of one hot month, was only part of the
equation.
But first, some background.
Interviews with e xecutives from each of the three clubs and others about
the trade produced a number of revelations:
* * The Padres, not the Cardinals, made the harder initial push for
Westbrook. In fact, the Cardinals did not express much interest,
and the Indians viewed them as a poor trading partner because of
the depleted state of the St. Louis farm system.
*
* * The Padres’ early objective, unbeknown to the Cardinals, was to
acquire Westbrook and stick him in their rotation. But they shifted
course in the final days before the nonwaiver deadline, telling the
Cardinals: If we can get Westbrook, we would trade him and a prospect
for Ludwick.
*
* * The Cardinals had two goals in their quest to add a starting pitcher:
to complete a trade without sacrificing prospects and to keep their
payroll at approximately the same level. Ludwick, earning $5.45
million, was perhaps their only player who could help them achieve
both ends.
*
* * The Indians were not aware they were involved in a three-team deal
until late Friday night, the eve of the deadline. For the Indians,
the basic framework was the same: They were trading Westbrook and
cash for Padres Double-A right-hander Corey Kluber. The money instead
wound up going to the Cardinals, who also received Single-A left-
hander Nick Greenwood from the Padres.
*
* * If Westbrook had not agreed to a reduction in his trade bonuses
amounting to about $2.3 million, the Indians would have needed to
include so much cash that they almost would have lost money in the
deal.
The amount Westbrook forfeited is not known, but the union allowed him to
take less because he did not actually reduce the value of his contract; he
would not have received any bonuses if he had stayed with the Indians.
In the end, the Indians wound up with a better prospect than they might have
received if they had traded directly with either club; the Padres were willing
to give up more for Ludwick, who is under club control through next season,
than they were for Westbrook, a potential free agent. The Padres also believed
Ludwick would make a greater impact than Westbrook, a back-of-the-rotation
innings-eater.
Ludwick projects to earn $7.5 million to $8 million salary in his final year
of arbitration, but the Padres do not necessarily see that as a negative.
Attracting free-agent hitters to pitcher-friendly Petco Park is difficult,
and the Padres probably would not find better value on the open market.
The Cardinals, on the other hand, took an entirely different view.
Ludwick was sidelined from June 26 to July 23 with a strained left calf. For
the first week he was out, Nick Stavinoha mostly played right. But then manager
Tony La Russa turned to Jay, who responded by getting ridiculously hot. The
Cardinals went 14-10 in Ludwick’s absence, including an eight-game winning
streak.
If not for Ludwick’s injury, Jay never would have gotten his chance. And if
not for Jay getting his chance, this trade never would have happened.
Do the Cardinals believe that Jay, a left-handed hitter, will continue his
torrid pace? Of course not. But Jay, 25, was a career .301/.367/.432 hitter
in the minors. He hit at every level, and the Cardinals consider that a good
barometer of future major-league performance.
If the Cardinals are right about Jay, they can find a platoon partner for him
and get production comparable to Ludwick’s. So, Ludwick’s rising salary
actually was a greater issue for the Cardinals than it was for the Padres,
even though the Cardinals ranked 12th in opening-day payroll and the Padres
29th.
Jay, a rookie, will be far more affordable than Ludwick going forward.
Ludwick, if he had stayed with the Cardinals, would have entered the
offseason as a potential nontender, significantly reducing his trade value.
Then there was the pitching aspect.
Right-hander Kyle Lohse is close to returning from a forearm injury. Righty
Brad Penny could return from a back problem in September. But the Cardinals
were concerned not only about their depth, but also the season-long strain
on their top three starters: right-handers Adam Wainwright and Chris
Carpenter and rookie left-hander Jaime Garcia.
The addition of Westbrook, who allowed two runs in six innings against the
Astros on Monday night in his Cardinals debut, should make it easier for
the team to skip Garcia in August. Wainwright, projected to pitch a career
-high 247 innings, and Carpenter, projected to pitch 241, also might benefit
from breathers.
The three are a combined 35-13 with a 2.49 ERA. Such a level of performance
will be difficult to sustain all season. The Cardinals, without adding a
starting pitcher, without knowing what to expect from Lohse and Penny,
would have been on edge.
So there you have it.
The Cardinals needed Westbrook. The Padres needed Ludwick. The Indians needed
a prospect.
A deep, fascinating trade.
--
出國就是為了回國
入團就是為了脫團 (煙~)
--
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◆ From: 122.126.96.78
※ 編輯: azure0920 來自: 122.126.96.78 (08/04 02:12)
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