January 14, 2008

Braves front office

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Andruw Jones replacement?

Today in the infinite wisdom of Frank Wren(new general manager). The Braves traded away a potential top closer/set-up man in RP Joey Devine for a guy who’s coming off the worst season of his incredibly average career in CF Mark Kotsay. I knew they were desperate for a CF but Kotsay? Bad, bad move. I hope he fails his physical, thus killing the trade dead.

Filed under: Sports — LilCube @ 9:53 pm

November 20, 2007

Glavine back with the Braves

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Not sure if I should be happy or not. I mean I’m happy he’s gonna finish his career as a Brave, as he should, but realistically how much does he have left? He’s definitely an upgrade at the position, but almost anybody would be an upgrade considering how bad and inconsistent the three, four, and five starters were. Atleast there’s a good chance I’ll get to see a hall of fame pitcher when we go to Atlanta in April.

Official press release…
ATLANTA — In a perfect world, Tom Glavine and the Braves never would have parted ways. Fortunately, fate and a strong mutual desire have reunited them and given the celebrated southpaw the opportunity to conclude his storied career where it began.

Years, months and days of anticipation were replaced with definite satisfaction late Sunday evening, when Glavine agreed to the terms of a one-year, $8 million deal offered by the Braves. Glavine’s agent, Gregg Clifton, confirmed the terms of the deal, which the Braves announced on Monday.

“He’s very excited, most importantly because he’s going to be able to be close to his family again and be a full-time dad while continuing his playing career,” Clifton said.

In early October, when Glavine declined the $13 million option the Mets owed him, all indications were he’d return to the Braves, who drafted him in the second round of the 1984 First-Year Player Draft and employed him at the Major League level from 1987-2002. During that span, he notched 242 of his 303 career victories and was awarded with his two National League Cy Young Awards (1991 and 1998).

Once Clifton saw the Braves’ initial offer — a one-year deal worth $6.5 million — he knew things would progress quickly. Knowing he might receive more money elsewhere, Glavine entered these negotiations with the intention of signing with the Braves as long as he deemed their offer to be fair.

The Nationals and Phillies were among the other teams believed to be interested in Glavine, who made it known he wouldn’t seriously listen to any other offers until he exhausted every opportunity to sign with the Braves.

“I think the Braves were happy to know Tom was willing to provide them a bit of a discount, and I think they paid a little more than they had planned,” Clifton said. “But I think it’s a fair deal for both sides.”

Braves general manager Frank Wren can take great satisfaction in the fact he was able to get the man he targeted to fill his team’s need for a reliable and durable starter. Glavine, who will turn 42 in March, has won at least 13 games and completed at least 198 innings each of the past three seasons.

With John Smoltz and Tim Hudson already serving as the anchors of the rotation, the Braves simply were looking for a pitcher who would provide regular quality innings. With Glavine, they got a pitcher whose 23 quality starts ranked fifth in the National League last year, a leader, whose clubhouse value is immeasurable, and a mentor, who can have a definite impact on young starting pitchers like Chuck James and Jo-Jo Reyes.

“We think adding Tommy would clearly make our rotation a lot better,” Wren said earlier this month.

Critics argue the 4.45 ERA Glavine posted this past season and the fact he allowed 17 earned runs and worked just 10 1/3 innings in his final three starts are indications his skills are quickly eroding. But in the 10 starts he made preceding that forgettable finish, he was 5-0 with a 2.66 ERA.

Hot Stove

Glavine’s greatest contribution to the Braves might come from the fact he’s completed at least 200 innings in 14 of the past 16 seasons that haven’t been shortened by a players’ strike.

As long as he can provide something similar this season, he will relieve some of the stress Smoltz and Hudson felt this past season and at the same time likely have a positive effect on a bullpen that might not have to eat as many innings as it did this past year while backing an Atlanta rotation that was filled with inexperience.

Clifton has stressed Glavine’s desire to return to the Braves primarily centered around the opportunity to spend much more time with his wife, Christine, and their four children. While he pitched for the Mets during the past five seasons, he’d say goodbye to the family at the start of Spring Training with the knowledge they wouldn’t be reunited in New York until the school year in suburban Atlanta ended in late May.

Many have told stories about how Glavine felt he made a mistake within a day of opting to reject the Braves and sign with the Mets after the 2002 season. Last winter, he was hoping to make a return that would’ve allowed him the chance to join the 300-win club with his original organization.

When the Braves didn’t even provide an offer, a discouraged Glavine had reason to believe he may never pitch for Atlanta again. But now there’s no longer reason to wonder. His dream has become a reality, and now the task is to make sure this homecoming is a memorable one.

Filed under: Sports — LilCube @ 2:57 pm

October 29, 2007

Another veteran player gone…

The Braves today traded away Edgar Renteria to the Tigers for 2 highly-touted prospects. I hope Yunel Escobar is as good as he appeared last year.

Official release…
The Braves picked up one of the top outfield prospects in baseball and a talented young starter Monday, acquiring outfielder Gorkys Hernandez and right-handed pitcher Jair Jurrjens from the Detroit Tigers in exchange for shortstop Edgar Renteria and cash considerations.

Hernandez, a 20-year-old center fielder with speed, was the Class A Midwest League Most Valuable Player in 2007, his first full professional season, batting .293 with 84 runs, 25 doubles, four home runs and 50 RBI in 124 games.

Jurrjens, 21, went 7-5 with a 3.20 ERA in 19 starts at Double-A Erie in 2007 before making his Major League debut with Detroit in August. He went 3-1 with a 4.70 ERA in seven starts for the Tigers, including 3-0 with a 0.78 ERA and 24 strikeouts and just one walk in his last three outings.

Hernandez is considered one of the top outfield prospects in all of baseball, Jurrjens, 21, was rated by Baseball America to be the Eastern League’s sixth-best Major League prospect this past season.

Filed under: Sports — LilCube @ 5:36 pm

October 4, 2007

Braves not re-signing Andruw Jones…

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It figures, I’m finally gonna go to a Braves game and I won’t get to see my favorite player patrol the outfield. Braves made it official a few days ago that they wasn’t going to re-sign Andruw. I expected it, but doesn’t make it suck any less. Yeah, he had an abysmal year at the plate but still hit 26 homerun’s and nearly 100 R.B.I.’s and nobody does it better in CF imo. I have a feeling he’s gonna seriously step it up for whatever team gets him next year.

Luckily the Mets and Phillies are set at CF. Looks like the Marlin’s could use a CF though…lucky for the Braves the Marlins are cheap and won’t be able to afford Andruw. How odd would that be though? Andruw Jones a Marlin?

So who’s on deck to play CF for the Braves now? Willie Harris? That’s not a comforting thought. He stepped it up big this year but I have a feeling it was a fluke season. He’s a career .247 hitter. Gonna be strange not seeing Andruw in a Braves uniform next year.

Filed under: Sports — LilCube @ 10:26 am