2010-11 MLB Hot Stove

You should read the "comments" posted by numb-nuts Red Sox fans every time a free agent signs elsewhere. By about ten to one, they lambaste the Red Sox ownership for being too cheap to outbid each and every teams for each and every available, desirable player.

The Red Sox are committed to having the best possible baseball team that the second largest payroll can buy, but too many of their fans don't understand that.
 
Last year, the Red Sox lost MVP Pedroia for half the season, All-Star Youkilis for 1/3 of the season, and .300 hitting and 70 base stealing Ellsbury for 90% of the season, and Beckett, Lackey, and Papelbon had substandard years, yet they stayed in contention right up until the last couple of weeks of the season. They can reasonably expect those three position players to average 150+ games next year and for those three pitchers to pitch better than they did last year. Why do their stupid fans think they are in a rebuilding year? Their fifth starter will be a guy who went 18-3 a couple of years ago, and Bard is a closer in waiting.
 
You should read the "comments" posted by numb-nuts Red Sox fans every time a free agent signs elsewhere. By about ten to one, they lambaste the Red Sox ownership for being too cheap to outbid each and every teams for each and every available, desirable player.

The Red Sox are committed to having the best possible baseball team that the second largest payroll can buy, but too many of their fans don't understand that.


You must be reading the comments on the Red Sox site, "Sons of Sam Horn". Incredibly knowledgeable fans, BUT knee jerk is like a religion there!
 
MORE genius will be if they get Crawford OR Werth AFTER this huge move.
I'd much rather Crawford. IMO, the additions of Gonzo and Crawford would make this offense dynamic. However, the Sox could use another righty bat.

Currently they have Gonzo, Ortiz, Drew and Ellsbury from the left side. Adding Werth to Youks and Pedroia would somewhat balance that.
 
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Does getting Gonzalez offset the Jason Bay departure last year?

(Imagine how frightening they'd be in 2011 if they still had Bay today...)
 
Jason Bay's production last year was roughly equal to that of the Red Sox scrubs who took what would have been his at bats. I'm not kidding. Someone actually went through the box scores and added it up.
 
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That took everyone by surprise. I was going to ask why in the hell would he want to sign with the Nats. Now after seeing what they are paying him, I know the answer
 
Looks like the Gonzales deal is dead now.

According to SI's Jon Heyman on Twitter, the deal IS done- Gonzalez is Beantown bound, with a press conference expected tomorrow.

Where did you hear that Ramy ?


Sources: Adrian Gonzalez to Red Sox


By Jerry Crasnick
ESPN.com
Archive

The Boston Red Sox have scheduled a news conference for Monday to announce they have completed a deal with the San Diego Padres for All-Star first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, a baseball source said. But it will happen without a long-term deal for Gonzalez, after talks broke off Sunday with no agreement in place.

The source said that the two sides have left open the possibility of continued discussions toward a long-term deal for Gonzalez after the trade is in place. That extra time will give Boston a greater opportunity to assess Gonzalez's health in the aftermath of his recent shoulder surgery.

A source said that while Gonzalez is seeking a contract in the range of Mark Teixeira's eight-year, $180-million deal with the New York Yankees, the Red Sox have been holding the line at six years and $120 million.

The Red Sox negotiated intensely with Gonzalez's agent, John Boggs, during a 48-hour stretch before the talks finally broke off Sunday.

n exchange, the Padres will receive three prospects in pitcher Casey Kelly, first baseman Anthony Rizzo and outfielder Reymond Fuentes, according to a baseball source. The Padres also will receive a player to be named later, a source told ESPNBoston.com's Gordon Edes.

A few technicalities need to be finished, which the teams hope to do by Monday, according to The Associated Press. It's believed the three prospects heading to the Padres must still pass physical exams.

More On The Red Sox

Gordon Edes and the rest of the ESPNBoston.com team have the Red Sox covered for you. Blog

Gonzalez had one year left on his contract with San Diego, worth about $6 million.

Padres general manager Jed Hoyer -- who used to work in Boston's front office -- has said for some time that the Padres wouldn't be able to afford the kind of big-money contract Gonzalez would command if he hit the free-agent market.

The Padres recently exercised Gonzalez's $6.2 million option for 2011, the final year of a team-friendly $15 million, five-year contract he signed in 2007.

Gonzalez's name was in the mix for the Red Sox for more than a year. The Padres' front office is very familiar with Boston's prospects, as general manager Jed Hoyer, assistant general manager Jason McLeod and new top executive Josh Byrnes all once worked for Boston.

Gonzalez was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2000 draft and has spent the past five years in San Diego, his hometown. Over the past four seasons he has had at least 30 home runs and 99 RBIs.

The left-hander hit .298 with 31 homers and 101 RBIs last season.

In five seasons with San Diego, Gonzalez has 161 homers -- two shy of Nate Colbert's club record -- and 501 RBIs. Including parts of two seasons with Texas, he has 168 homers and 525 RBIs.

He set a Padres record with his fourth 30-homer season. His third 100-RBI season tied Phil Nevin for the most in club history.

Gonzalez had surgery to clean up the labrum in his non-throwing right shoulder on Oct. 20. The Padres said then that the three-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove first baseman was expected to be ready for spring training.

The Padres went 90-72 despite opening the season with a payroll of $37.8 million, second-lowest in the majors. San Diego was in contention until the final day, when its loss at San Francisco, coupled with Atlanta's win over Philadelphia, eliminated the Padres from the NL West and wild-card races.

The Padres have said they anticipate a payroll of about $40 million.

Jerry Crasnick is a senior writer for ESPN.com. Information from ESPN.com's Jayson Stark and The Associated Press was used in this report.
 
I think what they reported or should have reported was that they had not reached an agreement in the allotted time frame, but continued to work on an agreement and have come to one as the article states now.
 
WOW! Werth signs with the NATS..... 7 years, $126 million!:eek:

Werth's career through age 31 compares unfavorably to that of J.D. Drew. According to Baseball-Reference, it most closely matches that of Brad Hawpe, whoever he is.

I think Washington choked on this one. They think they are on the bring of becoming Washington's teram with Strasburg and the rookie with the Kiss makeup, but they panicked when they got some adverse fan reaction from losing Dunn to free agency. I remember when the Washington Wizards got lambasted for "losing" Juan Howard to Miami, so when the league struck down his contract, Washington took advantage of that opportunity to overpay Howard by tens of millions of dollars - a decision they would regret for years to come.
 
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