All else being equal (health, salary, etc.), for whom would you be most willing to trade Roy Halladay, even up?
Erik Bedard | 2 (0.60%) |
Jeremy Bonderman | 6 (1.80%) |
Danny Haren | 3 (0.90%) |
Roy Oswalt | 8 (2.40%) |
Johan Santana | 220 (65.87%) |
Brandon Webb | 5 (1.50%) |
Dontrelle Willis | 9 (2.69%) |
Carlos Zambrano | 6 (1.80%) |
Other (please specify) | 9 (2.69%) |
Nobody, ever, forget it! | 66 (19.76%) |
I'm worried by Doc's declining K rate and Santana has proven to be less of a health risk.
Although in my dreams the Jays would have Santana and Doc in the rotation. Both are elite pitchers.
I voted nobody ever, forget it.
I just have one question for those who would vote otherwise.
When do you get the rare combination of supreme talent at such a vital position and such a commitment to the organization that the Doc has shown?
I'd say about once in a generation.
Personally I wouldn't trade Halladay until the end of this current deal and only if he consented to the deal with no coersion. And then only if the organization is going into re-build mode. Loyalty is a two way street and ought to be encouraged within an organization.
But then this is the 21st century, I guess loyalty and respect is old school.
But then this is the 21st century, I guess loyalty and respect is old school.
The Doctor is living proof that it certainly isn't.
20 years from now someone's gonna ask "Mr. Blue Jay?", and the unanimous name blurted out will be Roy Halladay. Forget about the marginal advantage Santana has over Doc. Doc's everything in a player the Jays want, and he's given more off the field than anyone could ask. You can't put a price on identity.
Assuming Doc and Santana both were locked up long term at the same amount of money, I would be disappointed if I found out JP turned down Doc for Santana.
For the most part, loyalty is a bunch of hogwash. It usually comes down to money. Let's see how loyal Doc is if the Jays didn't offer their huge extension but instead offered him a 3yr/9 million extension. I bet you he wouldn't have signed.
Yeah usually it does come down to money. In fact Halladay could have flocked off to the Yankee's and their phoney team and phoney fans. But he hasn't has he? So it kind of makes that argument hogwash.
He gave this team the oppportunity to re-up at a very competitive price. So obviously its not all about money is it? Both Burnett and Lilly have recently lauded the Halladay example as influencial of their recent success. Lilly even went so far as to say "we" and "our staff" when turning his mind to next year. So maybe loyalty is infectious.
Remember, we're talking about Roy Halladay here, not Roger Clemens or David Wells. The benefits Halladay brings to this club are priceless.
Don't worry, when Santana is a free agent I fully expect him to sign with your beloved Yankee's. Percentages dictate that he is unlikey to be one of those rare selfless players.
As for Santana, he gave up 2 years of free agency when he signed the 4 year extension. With the Twins getting a new stadium, I expect Santana to re-up with the Twins once his current deal runs out.
Halladay (01-06) :
82-30, 1105 IP, 195 BB, 703 K, 82 HR, xERA 3.47
Santana (02-06)
74-27, 947 IP, 239 BB, 1046 K, 93 HR, xERA 2.91
Not that marginal really.
As I said, it's pretty incredible watching the differences there.
Felix Hernandez.........he will still be great.
So if you trade Doc straight up for Felix Hernandez you have him pitching for a fraction of the cost and enough money left over to go and sign a Barry ZIto type. And with the Jays current budget you have enough to sign another pitcher with the current money...The money not quite be there for that but it would be doable
Staff
Zito,Burnett,Schmidt, Hernandez, Chacin
Uhmm... they are basically the exact opposite pitcher.
Zambrano walks and strikes out a ton of guys, doesnt allow many hits, and you wouldnt use all the fingers on onehand counting the number of pitchers who throw more than him.
Doc doesnt walk many, has average k rates, allows a hit an inning, and is one of the two or three most effective pitchers in baseball when he's on.
Brandon Webb is Halladay Jr., and maybe more so.